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Museveni won yet another mandate to extend 30 year rule …an election or shambolic exercise in executive fraud?

&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpcnt">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpa">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<span class&equals;"wpa-about">Advertisements<&sol;span>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"u top&lowbar;amp">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<amp-ad width&equals;"300" height&equals;"265"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; type&equals;"pubmine"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-siteid&equals;"109460728"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-section&equals;"1">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;amp-ad>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div><p><span style&equals;"color&colon;&num;999999&semi;"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-large&semi;">&&num;8220&semi;Ugandans are desperate for democracy&comma; Yoweri Museveni only gives them tyranny&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;span><&sol;span><br &sol;><img alt&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;ichef-1&period;bbci&period;co&period;uk&sol;news&sol;660&sol;cpsprodpb&sol;145CE&sol;production&sol;&lowbar;88360438&lowbar;88360437&period;jpg" height&equals;"359" src&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;ichef-1&period;bbci&period;co&period;uk&sol;news&sol;660&sol;cpsprodpb&sol;145CE&sol;production&sol;&lowbar;88360438&lowbar;88360437&period;jpg" width&equals;"640" &sol;><br &sol;><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i>Photo&colon; Reuters<&sol;i><&sol;span><span class&equals;"media-caption&lowbar;&lowbar;text"><br &sol;><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;small&semi;"><span><b>Yoweri Museveni Large margin of victory&period; Landslide or stolen mandate&quest; <&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;span><br &sol;><span style&equals;"color&colon;&num;351c75&semi;"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;">&&num;8216&semi;Uganda’s national electoral commission &lpar;EC&rpar; is once again under intense scrutiny after a messy presidential election that effectively locked out hundreds of thousands of voters in opposition strongholds – to the benefit of Yoweri Museveni&comma; the incumbent&period;<br &sol;>Museveni&comma; in power for the past 30 years&comma; campaigned on a slogan of &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Steady progress”&comma; but&comma; according to many observers&comma; Thursday’s election reeked of democratic stagnation or even regression&period;&&num;8217&semi;<&sol;span><&sol;span><br &sol;><b>&&num;8211&semi;<a href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theguardian&period;com&sol;global-development&sol;2016&sol;feb&sol;22&sol;ugandan-elections-polls-fraud-yoweri-museveni" target&equals;"&lowbar;blank"> Guardian<&sol;a><&sol;b>   Read more&&num;8230&semi;&period;<br &sol;><img alt&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;i&period;guim&period;co&period;uk&sol;img&sol;media&sol;3a8b162b8c9e7ee2a86449bb94a551eab423f165&sol;0&lowbar;166&lowbar;3500&lowbar;2100&sol;master&sol;3500&period;jpg&quest;w&equals;620&amp&semi;q&equals;85&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;sharp&equals;10&amp&semi;s&equals;573dab28f9aeea7b28654175a99dc98c" height&equals;"384" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;i&period;guim&period;co&period;uk&sol;img&sol;media&sol;3a8b162b8c9e7ee2a86449bb94a551eab423f165&sol;0&lowbar;166&lowbar;3500&lowbar;2100&sol;master&sol;3500&period;jpg&quest;w&equals;620&amp&semi;q&equals;85&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;sharp&equals;10&amp&semi;s&equals;573dab28f9aeea7b28654175a99dc98c" width&equals;"640" &sol;><br &sol;><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i>Photo&colon; Goran Tomasevic&sol;Reuters<&sol;i><&sol;span><br &sol;><span><b>Supporters of Yoweri Museveni celebrate his election victory in Kampala on 20 February 2016&period;<&sol;b><&sol;span><br &sol;><a name&equals;'more'><&sol;a>More than Museveni’s widely expected victory&comma; the shambolic exercise has raised questions about the efficacy of elections as a means of choosing leaders in post-military political systems&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>National Resistance Movement candidate Museveni won the elections with 60&period;8&percnt;&comma; against 35&period;4&percnt; for Dr Kizza Besigye&comma; of the Forum for Democratic Change &lpar;FDC&rpar;&period; Former prime minister Amama Mbabazi came third with 1&period;4&percnt;&period;<br &sol;>As expected&comma; 71-year-old Museveni is reveling in his win&comma; praising the voters and thanking the electoral commission for a good job&period; In a gloating speech on Sunday&comma; Museveni promised to use the next five years to fight poverty and corruption&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>However&comma; both Besigye – Museveni’s former physician – and Mbabazi rejected the results&period; There was also a terse statement from Maj Gen Mugisha Muntu&comma; Museveni’s former army commander now heading the FDC&comma; who asked Ugandans and the international community to reject the results&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><img alt&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;i&period;guim&period;co&period;uk&sol;img&sol;media&sol;f60d66a7fd5a92c1f15d717b1040226784142ee6&sol;0&lowbar;0&lowbar;6144&lowbar;3690&sol;master&sol;6144&period;jpg&quest;w&equals;620&amp&semi;q&equals;85&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;sharp&equals;10&amp&semi;s&equals;66c2df96e61466b0aedde2a5c62204d9" height&equals;"384" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;i&period;guim&period;co&period;uk&sol;img&sol;media&sol;f60d66a7fd5a92c1f15d717b1040226784142ee6&sol;0&lowbar;0&lowbar;6144&lowbar;3690&sol;master&sol;6144&period;jpg&quest;w&equals;620&amp&semi;q&equals;85&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;sharp&equals;10&amp&semi;s&equals;66c2df96e61466b0aedde2a5c62204d9" width&equals;"640" &sol;> <br &sol;><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;"><i>Photo&colon; Ben Curtis&sol;AP <&sol;i><&sol;span><br &sol;><span><b>Kizza Besigye was arrested by police outside his home in Kasangati on 22 February&period; <&sol;b><&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Besigye&comma; who was detained and placed under house arrest as he planned to expose &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;discrepancies” between the official results and those from FDC polling agents&comma; spoke of &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;the most fraudulent electoral process in Uganda”&period; <&sol;p>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"js-ad-slot ad-slot ad-slot--dfp ad-slot--inline ad-slot--inline1" id&equals;"dfp-ad--inline1">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"ad-slot&lowbar;&lowbar;label">Advertisement<&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>Mbabazi cited several irregularities&comma; including alleged marking of ballot papers in favour of Museveni&comma; inaccurate tallying by presiding officers&comma; concealment of results declaration forms and late arrival of election materials at polling stations&period;<br &sol;>The latter was the most eye-catching and inexplicable flaw&comma; especially because it mostly affected opposition strongholds in districts around the capital&comma; Kampala&comma; and key municipalities&period; <br &sol;>These are highly urban areas where&comma; according to opinion polls&comma; Besigye had his highest approval ratings and Museveni his lowest&period; <br &sol;>In some polling stations within 4km of the headquarters of the electoral commission&comma; voting started as much as five or six hours late&period; This led to suspicion by voters – and statements by party leaders – that the flaw was a ploy by authorities to disenfranchise predominantly opposition voters&period;<br &sol;>The EC chairman&comma; Dr Badru Kiggundu&comma; apologized for the delays and belatedly extended voting hours&comma; but&comma; by then&comma; many voters had either given up and left or were still turned away at the original 4pm deadline&period;<br &sol;><a class&equals;"article&lowbar;&lowbar;img-container js-gallerythumbs" href&equals;"http&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theguardian&period;com&sol;global-development&sol;2016&sol;feb&sol;22&sol;ugandan-elections-polls-fraud-yoweri-museveni&num;img-3"><img alt&equals;"Many Ugandans queued for hours to cast their vote on 18 February&period;" class&equals;"gu-image" height&equals;"384" src&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;i&period;guim&period;co&period;uk&sol;img&sol;media&sol;e45aa3c6f767cdf2bfb186ead9a0fdd76c30a2c6&sol;0&lowbar;0&lowbar;4928&lowbar;2959&sol;master&sol;4928&period;jpg&quest;w&equals;300&amp&semi;q&equals;85&amp&semi;auto&equals;format&amp&semi;sharp&equals;10&amp&semi;s&equals;d4c908d28e9e7228a9f70ee16c6c2135" width&equals;"640" &sol;><&sol;a><br &sol;><i><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;x-small&semi;">Carl de Souza&sol;AFP&sol;Getty Images <&sol;span><&sol;i><br &sol;><span><b>Many Ugandans queued for hours to cast their vote on 18 February&period; Photograph&colon;<&sol;b><&sol;span><br &sol;>Moreover&comma; as Mbabazi pointed out&comma; the EC announced the final results without considering nearly 1&comma;800 polling stations&comma; reasoning that Museveni had already surpassed the 50&percnt; of votes required for victory&period; <&sol;p>&NewLine;<div class&equals;"js-ad-slot ad-slot ad-slot--dfp ad-slot--inline ad-slot--inline2" id&equals;"dfp-ad--inline2">&NewLine;<div class&equals;"ad-slot&lowbar;&lowbar;label">Advertisement<&sol;div>&NewLine;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<p>In their preliminary reports&comma; election observers from the EU and the Commonwealth&comma; as well as from Ugandan civil society&comma; were critical of the EC&period; They said the commission lacked transparency and independence&period; The US embassy said the election fell short of international standards&period; However&comma; many observers from Africa-centred missions generally defended the performance of the commission&period;<br &sol;>Between 2011 and 2015&comma; Ugandan civil society and political opposition parties carried out nationwide campaigns for electoral reforms&period; Among other things&comma; they wanted a statutory body – rather than the president – to appoint electoral commissioners for one non-renewable term&period; They argued that the commission ends up working for and at the behest of the ruling party and the president&period;<br &sol;>Those proposals were rejected by parliament&comma; which is dominated by Museveni’s NRM party&period;<br &sol;>With the performance of the EC again under scrutiny&comma; some observers have been quick to refer to the rejected proposals&comma; as well as earlier questions – by the courts – about the EC’s performance in the 2001 and the 2006 elections&period;<br &sol;>Mwambutsya Ndebesa&comma; a political historian at Makerere University in Kampala&comma; says most of the present complaints about the EC were raised after earlier elections&period; He says the latest elections showed that as a democracy Uganda had &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;stagnated or even regressed”&period;<br &sol;><span style&equals;"color&colon;&num;999999&semi;"><span style&equals;"font-size&colon;large&semi;"><i> &&num;8220&semi;Because elections are not the way they obtained power&comma; elections cannot be the way they lose power &&num;8220&semi;<&sol;i><&sol;span><br &sol;><b><span><span style&equals;"color&colon;black&semi;">&&num;8211&semi; Dr Kabumba Busingye&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;span><&sol;span><&sol;b><&sol;span><br &sol;>According to a nationwide independent opinion poll in January&comma; only 40&percnt; thought the elections would be free and fair&comma; and 41&percnt; believed elections could remove a sitting president&period; Ndebesa suggests that the performance of the EC will not improve that perception&period; <br &sol;>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;All the past mistakes have been repeated&period; This is intransigence and it does not augur well for our democracy&comma;” Ndebesa says&period; &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;It means the problem is not technical&semi; the problem is deliberate&period; Management of elections is done in such a way that it is unfair to the opposition&period;”<br &sol;>For Dr Kabumba Busingye&comma; a leading lawyer at Makerere University&comma; to understand the shambolic election one has to remember something that Museveni repeated in his victory speech on Sunday&colon; that the NRM is a revolutionary party&period; This&comma; Kabumba says&comma; puts Museveni in the same philosophical bracket as former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi or Ethiopia’s Meles Zenawi&period;<br &sol;>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;For such leaders&comma; because elections are not the way they obtained power&comma; elections cannot be the way they lose power&comma;” Kabumba says&comma; adding that&comma; for people like Museveni&comma; elections serve only to legitimise their stay in power&period;<br &sol;>Kabumba points out that at least 5 million registered voters did not vote this year&comma; around the same number as did not vote in 2011&period;<br &sol;>However&comma; he refuses to blame this figure on apathy&comma; saying the stay-away voters include many who desire change – just like those who voted for the opposition&period; <br &sol;>&OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;They protest against the status quo by refusing to participate&comma;” he says&period; His prognosis is that after this election&comma; Uganda could see more pro-change voters losing faith in elections&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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