POLITICS

Museveni, Former Critic of Extended Rule, Seeks Re-Election After 40 Years in Power

When Museveni first assumed office in 1986, ending years of violent instability under previous regimes, he cautioned against leaders overstaying their welcome a problem he believed plagued much of Africa. Today, nearly 40 years later, he has become part of the trend he once criticized

By : Mweru Mbugua 

Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni, who has been in power longer than most Ugandans have been alive, shows no signs of stepping down, aiming for a seventh term in Thursday’s election

When Museveni first assumed office in 1986, ending years of violent instability under previous regimes, he cautioned against leaders overstaying their welcome a problem he believed plagued much of Africa. Today, nearly 40 years later, he has become part of the trend he once criticized

Known for his folksy demeanor and storytelling, Museveni’s past as a skilled guerrilla fighter and politically ruthless survivor contrasts sharply with his calm public persona

Museveni, Former Critic of Extended Rule, Seeks Re-Election After 40 Years in Power
Museveni, Former Critic of Extended Rule, Seeks Re-Election After 40 Years in Power

Over his four-decade rule, he has consolidated power so completely that meaningful opposition to him or his National Resistance Movement (NRM) is nearly impossible

At 81 years old though some opponents claim he is older Museveni insists he remains fit to lead. Campaigning under the slogan “Protecting the Gains,” he often invokes rural imagery, comparing himself to a farmer leaving a plantation just as it starts to bear fruit

Educated in Dar es Salaam in the 1960s, Museveni was once seen as a revolutionary visionary. British journalist William Pike described him as serious yet humorous, with a confidence that inspired those around him

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Museveni’s early years in office were praised internationally for economic progress, poverty reduction, and efforts to combat HIV/AIDS

He has also positioned himself as a regional elder statesman, even as his forces have intervened in conflicts in eastern Congo and South Sudan

His military actions in Somalia and open refugee policies have earned donor support, despite sparking domestic corruption scandals

However, his approval of one of the world’s harshest anti-gay laws in 2023 drew global criticism

Raised by cattle herders, Museveni once vowed to retire and care for his Ankole cows. Instead, he has outlasted nearly every African leader except Equatorial Guinea’s Teodoro Obiang Nguema and Cameroon’s Paul Biya, cementing his place among the continent’s longest-serving rulers

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