Small Thread| I will miss Nasser Ntege Ssebagala. They don't make them like that anymore. Just this week I was starting to write about the contradiction he embodied in relation to the debate about "academic papers" and qualifications btn supporters of Bobi Wine and YK Museveni
If there are two forces competing for moral and material space in the life of a #Ugandan it is the struggle to "buy a plot of land and build a house" alongside the busy activity involving the acquisition of "more papers", degrees, diplomas and certificates.
Combined as a singular ambition, they dominate entire lifetimes. The pursuit of plots of land and fresh papers for the latest profession ( there are many in my area of study #oil) set the upper limits of success. Then there is the Old School of Seya and the Hustler Club.
He once told me of visiting Africa Hall ( and benching future VP Dr Specioza Kazibwe) I suspect because despite his success as a trader and scion of a landed trading family - Seya was constantly forced to associate with "higher education". He faked it as much as he could.
In his day, as with the rest of the 1940's generation, a little education went a great distance but it is ambition, courage and commonsense that allowed someone to learn what he/she needed to make money and build a fortune ( before GoFundMe).
Seya was already a respected businessman, community leader and family man when he entered politics ( he recognized that organized politics was just another racket to make money) when upper society questioned his learning ( alongside his ethics).
Before Bobi Wine, he was pressured to remake himself as a British Educated progressive ( after a stint in jail) to return to politics even if his constituency saw him as a man of the street whose success showed any one from the street could rise.
He did not have a head of letters but he had been leading, making money and reinventing himself before universal primary and secondary education. Like all other innovators before him who are certified by their success not by the learning institution they attended.
I did not support him for Mayor ( on account of his ethics) but worked briefly and privately with him on his vision for an expanded Kampala and a beautification and building project he later never implemented because he was perfectly capable of understanding the city's problems.
The problem with the qualifications debate are several. Firstly I think there is a constitutional issue. Where power belongs to the people, the right to choose who to represent them should not be edited by statutes that impose qualifications they do not care for.
This applies to Bobi wine as well as Museveni or the late Seya. The second is that institutionalized learning ( the school system, tertiary institutions) are recent instruments to streamline and organize learning. They however don't represent all learning.
The spirit of learning, to be apprenticed to finding new knowledge, exists to those who want and need it everywhere including in classrooms. Ambition, courage, and commonsense are often enough to set anyone on their course. It would be sad to postpone ones dreams on account
Of not having the right papers. The deriding of street born successes has also lead some to question how useful education is leading to a dangerous anti-intellectualism. If Seya succeeded without much education some think it is not necessary.
This is also wrong. Those who mock " the ones who speak too much English" make the same mistake. To be educated is to value knowledge and to use it diligently in pursuit of your dreams. Getting more papers is great as long as they are tools you need on your journey.
I would never think YK Museveni underqualified for example because I have not seen his degree certificate. I can arrive at my own reasons for why he is not the leader we need right now that his degree or lack there of would not inform me.
In the same vein, do I need to hear that Bobi Wine requires new papers to merit his support? Should that fact determine how I estimate his performance in the highest office? Riyale! #RIPSeya
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#1 Real-estate prices in Uganda continue to dumbfound me. If only because it is a constant reminder of the capital sunk in brick and stone that could go into some other part of the productive economy. (a thread)
#2 A friend reached out the other day to say a relative was selling a couple of acres of prime land near Kampala for 450M an acre. While I have encountered high prices, it still shocks me that the local market can sustain such high prices.
#3 After reading the NRA ( National Risk Assessment) for money-laundering and other sources I understand why real estate is part of the fear economy. Investors understand that buildings carry over better than other assets in a political or economic crisis
A few comments on this story @933kfm. Firstly, it is important to know that Hon. Fungaroo's vision for an Idi Amin Institute is for a tertiary ( in other words academic) degree awarding institution. This is why it came under the ambit of NCHE.
I was initially confused about this and read the Universities and Other Tertiary Institutions Act ( then asked Hon Fungaroo). When he mentioned degree awarding as a goal, I explained that an institution/think tank on the Idi Amin period did not need to award degrees.
If the intention is a critical re-examination of the Idi Amin Presidency in the context of his times, post-independence Uganda and say the Cold War or even military governments in Africa ( this is the key difference between Amin and the rest), why degrees?
1. A few thoughts on the #Coffee debate with regard to what comes next ( a short thread). Government incentives such as tax relief, land etc are essentially equivalent to commercial and monetary value that the state "invests" in the given project
2. In short, incentives are a proprietary tool by the government to give up expected revenue, say from tax or other sources, in order to advance some greater public purpose. In the case of the Vinci deal, the stated purpose is value addition to coffee
3. The decision to extend equity ( through incentives etc) to a project is not only about strategic value of the project. Any public investment must pass a commercial, strategic and political test. Much of the defence of Vinci deal has been only that it is legal.
Samson. I think you are mixing up two things. Paying a mortgage is about ownership ( save via equity accumulated over time). There are folks renting in some places where mortgages are widely available. Renting in Uganda is partly due to the absence of mortgage opportunities (cont
On a mass scale. This also means sadly that mortgages as an instrument of mass participation in the economy is limited. In so called advanced countries home ownership ( paying a mortgage) is a primary score of credit worthiness (contd)
It builds equity that individuals can borrow against and housing construction companies can rely on to also borrow to expand. This activity is backed by Federal Loans in the United States and is a subject of a longer conversation
#2 The 1923 letter by the Commissioner of Mines at Entebbe, E.F Wayland referencing the Anglo-French Middle East Development Corporation doing investigations into oil in Bunyoro, 98 years ago today.
#3 E.S Wayland proposed a policy of the (colonial) government staying concessions for oil exploration in Bunyoro until the government had done its own work. This policy would hold until the 1990’s.
Good morning. Here is a shorter thread on the press conference I attended with @HEBobiwine about the conditions of his detention and his plans, hampered as they are by his confinement. This is a portion when his wife Barbie spoke about how they were coping.
"We have many men in soldiers in various uniforms. Some are in green uniform, some in blue uniforms and some in brown. They seem to be taking turns. There are different faces" Barbie said. She added" There are some standing peeping into the compound. Others are already in."
"A group of men manhandled me ( she was trying to get food from their garden") until I asked for help from the women ( officers). Why am I being handled by men? I did not get any answers apart from being pushed back into the house" Barbie told.