Ministers and MPs caught on camera sleeping through important speeches have sparked criticism that they are not working.
Kampala, Uganda - At the most recent state-of-the-nation address, Uganda's
second deputy prime minister wore sunglasses too dark to enable anyone to see
whether his eyes were open or closed.
Moses Ali, 74, is one of the
cabinet ministers who seem to have improvised a way to escape the scrutiny of
nosy media cameras that have on several occasions caught senior government
officials and MPs dozing when the president is delivering his address and
when the national budget is read.
It all started four years ago when
a local tabloid splashed the pictures of sleeping ministers and MPs on its
front page as President Yoweri Museveni delivered his address to the country.
The paper's headline on the day
was "Sleeping Nation".
The public has since come to covet
these events as much as the politicians seem to dread them. TV cameras are
always out for who is napping, and photographs of ministers and MPs sleeping
though these important speeches - delivered annually in June - end up on
social media, with many lampooning the politicians.
"When I served in Museveni's
government things were exciting and one would have no reason to sleep,"
said Professor Edward Kakonge, who served as the first minister of
local government when Museveni became president in 1986.
"What is happening now is a
clear pointer that there is nothing exciting in there any more."
Snoring away
Whether MPs and ministers simply
sleep through these events has become a key focus for the media. Some
commentators have said that if government officials can doze while attending
important events they know are being covered live, they can do anything in
the privacy of their offices.
"Sleeping is not a bad thing.
Sleeping on the job is," Bernard Tabaire, a columnist for the Sunday
Monitor, wrote.
"No one has yet done the
count that I am aware of, but the number of our big men and women who snored
away as the president delivered his annual state-of-the-nation speech ... was
possibly the largest in five years."
The media's prying eyes into the
matter is creating problems for journalists.
Last month, NTV, a local
broadcaster, beamed images that appeared to show the president himself dozing
while listening to the budget speech, prompting a government spokesman to say
he was "meditating".
The station's reporters who had
been accredited to cover the president's press conference days later were
turned away, sparking speculation as to whether the station was banned from
covering events presided over by Museveni.
The NTV crew on June 30 was again
unable to cover the president as he presided over an event at
parliament.
Hellen Kaweesa, the parliament's
spokeswoman, however, says that the reporters from the station missed the
event because they arrived late.
"The reporters came to my
office and I gave them footage. We have not banned anybody from covering
[presidential events at parliament]," Kaweesa told Al Jazeera.
Officials at NTV station declined
to comment on the incidents for this article.
Kaweesa came under fire from
Museveni's spokesperson, who accused her of failing to "regulate"
the media during parliamentary events.
Tamale Mirundi, the president's
spokesperson, said that the TV station was not banned from covering
presidential events but that "it should stand warned".
"The president is the
fountain of honour and he must be respected; under no circumstances can the
president of the republic be depicted in such a manner," Mirundi
said.
Government critics such as Betty
Nambooze, an opposition legislator, say old age is taking its toll on the
politicians.
"They are too old and their
attention spans have been reduced," Nambooze, 45, told Al Jazeera.
Deputy prime minister Ali is one
of the most senior members of cabinet, second only to Henry Kajura, 80,
another deputy prime minister and minister of public service. Museveni, in
power since 1986, will hit 70 this September.
However, the president has infused
some youth into his cabinet. Presidency Minister Frank Tumwebaze, one of the
most influential members of the cabinet, is 38.
In a further dig at the
government, Nambooze said: "The president never has anything new to say
and his colleagues know in advance that this is the case [so they doze
off]."
She claims that what the
politicians exhibit in public is not different from what they do in the
comfort of their offices, negatively affecting the productivity of
ministries.
"If the honourable ministers
cannot attentively listen to their boss speaking in parliament, do you expect
them to pay attention to briefs from technocrats in their ministries?"
asked Nambooze.
Rose Namayanja, the government
spokesperson, however, claims that Nambooze's statements are made "out
of ignorance of how [the] government works".
"Those senior members of
cabinet she is trying to disparage make tremendous contributions to the
workings of government," said Namayanja.
She added that it is "natural
that people will close their eyes to process" what is being said.
"Managing [the] government is
a mental process and it must necessarily involve thinking," she
adds.
'Regime of sleep'
Mathias Mpuuga, who shortly after
Museveni's re-election in 2011 led protests against the government over the
rising cost of living, is having a good laugh about the situation.
"President Museveni has never
been delusional about it; he warned Ugandans early enough that his will be a
regime of sleep and he has not disappointed," Mpuuga says.
In the earlier years when Museveni
first competed for the presidency, after his government restored elections
following the bush war, he bragged about pacifying the country and allowing
Ugandans to sleep without worrying about violence.
When he took over power in 1986,
the country had had six different administrations in a space of just six
years since the overthrow of Idi Amin in 1979. He therefore turned the
narrative about "restoring sleep" into a key campaign
catchphrase.
Of the state-of-the-nation address
and budget speech, Mpuuga said, "Museveni is supplying the sleep he
promised Ugandans."
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Source:
Al Jazeera
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Saturday, 6 September 2014
Ugandans baffled by sleeping ministers
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