The purpose
of an Attorney General (AG) is to be the chief representative of the
state, especially in court-related legal matters.
This is considered so important that
sometimes the person holding the post is also the minister of Justice
and Constitutional Affairs.
This is laughable because justice and
constitutionalism are difficult things to achieve in the colonial
contraption known as Uganda, and especially while under the control of
this National Resistance Movement (NRM) government which perpetually
boasts of having captured state power through terrorism, and arguably
crimes against humanity, disguised as a popular insurrection led by the
National Resistance Army (NRA).
The claim by the state of Uganda to be a
legal, legitimate and law-abiding entity is fraudulent. It was
fraudulent from when the state was created by trickery, force and theft
in 1894 as the Uganda Protectorate, and became fraudulent again after
the death of the attempted hopes of the Independence Constitution in
1967.
But that is one thing. The real issue
here is the office of the AG because, in it, we see the state’s active
claim to legitimacy and lawfulness. It cannot be gainsaid that the
office of the AG is immensely important. As the principal legal
representative of government, the AG is the head of the Bar and
automatically becomes Senior Counsel.
These titles are a little tedious, and
relics of the late-feudal manners of the royal palace courts of England.
But coming out of that, there is actually a need to examine if, indeed,
we need such an office, banding together many types of power, as
derived from its original Euro-feudal origins. Why, for example, does
the lawyer representing one side in a court case have to defer to the
lawyer for the other side because they are “senior counsel”?
And why should the AG be seen also as
head of the Bar? How then will other lawyers dispute with such a lawyer
in court or at the bar association, when the lawyer heads the
association to which all lawyers are answerable? And, moreover, the
“senior counsel” thing is already hanging over their heads?
FOR GOVT OR FOR STATE
The bottom line is that “everyone needs a
lawyer”, to paraphrase the human rights guru Ladislaus Rwakafuuzi. Even
governments, and the state. The question of “which is which” is what
has basically destroyed the standing of the AG’s office in Ugandan eyes.
Is the AG a lawyer for the government of
the day, or a lawyer for the state? If what the government is doing is
not in the best interests of the state, and the people who are supposed
to be its owners, then where should the AG place their obligation? To
help the government, or to protect the state?
In 1966/7, two constitutions were
written in quick succession and imposed on a cowed population: one
overnight and then voted for by a parliament facing guns and without
reading it, and another after the parliament’s term had expired.
The latter was then amended quite a bit
to make it even more dictatorial. Since then, this has really been
bandit country. For example, the Local Governments Act was amended twice
by the end of 1967 to undermine the powers of districts to elect their
own chairpersons and transfer that power to the Minister.
But to cover up this essentially
structural crisis of democracy, Uganda has always had an AG, purporting
to be the legal face of a legal state, and law-abiding government.
DRESSING A NAKED STATE
All governments of Uganda (including the
present junta) have had a constitution without constitutionalism. The
effect of each of these constitutions has been to rebuild the whole
state around the Presidency, just as the whole colonial state was built
around the throne of the Imperial British Empire, represented locally by
the Governor.
Ugandan presidents have been replacement
governors ever since. An Attorney General is an official appointed by
such presidents and working under their authority.
Instead of curating justice and
fostering constitutionalism by helping enforce proper laws, they have
often instead provided the legal cover-up for not just the illegal and
unconstitutional acts of their respective presidents, but also the basic
illegality and illegitimacy of the Uganda state itself.
Kiryowa Kiwanuka (R) representing Museveni earlier in an election petition
Uganda has had an interesting array of
them: Godfrey Binaisa, who helped President Milton Obote write those two
aforementioned constitutions (the first one within 24 hours). He
resigned in 1968 over disagreements with Obote regarding the
presidential powers of detention (among other constitutional matters),
and went into private legal practice.
Binaisa later became president under the
anti-Amin Uganda National Liberation Front (UNLF) coalition of
1979-1980, but his lack of focus and ideological dithering contributed
to its being overthrown militarily.
Nkambo Mugerwa, Godfrey Lule, and Mathia
Matovu undergirded Field Marshal Idi Amin’s reign of terror, before
decamping and settling for private practice. Prof George Kanyeihamba,
who is a critic of President Museveni nowadays.
But he was swiftly defenestrated from
the cabinet room when he opined that Ugandans (like Democratic Party
stalwart Mzee Byanyima, the father of Winnie Byanyima) whose ranches had
been seized by “the government he served” should be compensated.
Ironically, Kanyeihamba had worked tirelessly in the early days of the
NRM/NRA rule to create a “legal” basis for some of the basically
unnatural (in constitutional terms) ways in which the junta was
governing.
For instance, having President Museveni
function also as the “chair” – effectively Speaker – of the putative
parliament, the so-called National Resistance Council; and explaining
the one- party system as a constitutional system, etc. He went on to
become a Supreme court judge and infamously refused to recuse himself in
the case of a high-ranking military officer challenging the terms of
his employment as a soldier, even though the NRM/NRA – of which
Kanyeihamba was a fervent supporter – had a clear interest in the
matter.
Joseph Ekemu, along with his personal
assistant were jailed for two years at Luzira prison over the theft of
Shs 113 million that was meant for compensation of Teso people from whom
the NRA had stolen cattle during the insurgency of 1987-1990. He was
instantly disbarred, but later reinstated on the roll of advocates after
satisfying the Law Council that he was “repentant”.
In May 2018, Ekemu and a coterie of
poverty-stricken former MPs stormed Parliament House with a begging
bowl, lobbying for pension, gratuity, jobs and sinecures in government
because they had failed to find employment in the private sector.
Bart Katureebe, resigned the seat at the
time many controversial constitutional changes were afoot. He went on
to be a Supreme court judge and continued its legacy of ignoring
evidence of election fraud in presidential election cases. In his
valedictory as Chief Justice, he was the tie-breaker in a 4:3 verdict
that condoned the desecration of the present constitution, to secure a
life presidency for Museveni, through a military invasion of parliament
and the erosion of participatory democracy.
Prof Khiddu Makubuya, was believed by
many to be the pre-eminent legal mind of his time until a spectacular
fall from grace on 16 February 2012 when he was forced to resign from
the cabinet so as to avoid parliamentary censure for corruption.
He is notoriously remembered for trying
to persuade the Electoral Commission that opposition supremo Dr Kizza
Besigye should not be nominated as a candidate in the 2006 presidential
elections, because an ongoing court case against him made him still not
guilty but nevertheless “less innocent” in the eyes of the law.
Peter Nyombi, who replaced Makubuya,
fared no better. In August 2013, the Uganda Law Society (ULS) issued him
with a “certificate of incompetence” and suspended him from its
membership for two years, after he had rendered a series of opinions
that contravened conventional legal understanding and brought disrepute
to the bar.
He is remembered for trying to persuade
the Speaker of Parliament that rebel NRM MPs could not keep their
parliamentary seats after the party had expelled them, and for endorsing
the appointment of a serving military officer to the cabinet, and the
retention of Chief Justice Benjamin Odoki in office beyond the mandatory
retirement age.
In January 2014, a young lawyer
embarrassed AG Nyombi at the dais when he was addressing a bar-bench
gathering by relieving him of his speech. The activist, who I had the
privilege of representing at Buganda Road Chief Magistrates’ court, was
later acquitted of all charges, despite Nyombi’s passionate plea for a
conviction. He was subsequently dropped from the cabinet in 2015
following concerns by US authorities that he was involved in trafficking
Ugandan children for adoption abroad.
Sam Kutesa, about whom the less said,
before, during and certainly after his stint as AG, the better. There is
simply not enough space to list all his embarrassments.
Then there was also William Byaruhanga,
pleasant and anodyne, who put in some largely uneventful shift as the
immediate past government defender. Prior to that, he was first seen
some two decades earlier, when briefly sucked into the infamous junk
helicopter scandal through an alleged association with one of the key
suspects.
I have nothing bad on Joseph Mulenga,
Abu Mayanja and Francis Ayume, and the jury is still out on the others.
However, my point is: that there has been no time since 1966 when we can
be said to have been governed “legally”. In good faith? Possibly,
during the immediate post-Amin period. But legally and constitutionally:
no.
All these AGs have been part of that
process. Many left either corrupted, or disappointed, or both. Perhaps
some, like Ayume, Mayanja and Mulenga, re-emerged unscathed. But was
that because of an absence of controversial issues at the time, or a
matter of integrity?
What makes the newcomer different is
that he has gone in when already part of a very corrupted system. It is,
therefore, a case of a monkey meeting its mating partner: a charlatan
of a lawyer, occupying a charlatan of a law job.
PEOPLE, AND “PEOPLE” (ABAANA N’EBYANA)
To understand this, we must now
understand the person. We have already explained the job. Born in rural
Gombe, Mpigi district on 8 June 1973 but raised in exile in the leafy
suburbs of Kenya’s capital Nairobi, Kiryowa Kiwanuka Nsumikambi Mugambe
comes from a long line of what is now an established tradition of NRM
patronage and affinity for descendants of “noble families”, especially
for Ugandans from outside Western Uganda.
Essentially, in every NRM-backed
appointment for this category of Ugandans, there is a trade with a
prominent name, often one associated with either the triumphs or
tragedies of Uganda’s political journey.
In his song Mac Onywalo Buru (Fire
Begets Ash) that brought him trouble, the singer Bosmic Otim castigates
the sons of many historically prominent leaders from northern Uganda for
ending up working nominally for this regime. He names James Akena,
Okello Oryem and Taban Amin, among others.
But this has not been just a northern
Uganda problem. Many similar families from the south and east have seen
their “suitable” sons and daughters served up to be regime hacks,
apologists and hatchet men and women.
In this category of regime surrogates,
one may cite people like Maurice Kiwanuka, son of the legendary Ben
Kiwanuka, who ended up losing the family home in some bid to raise money
to retain his parliamentary seat; Wasswa Lule, son of the first post-
Amin president and NRM figurehead and activist in the war years; Zimula
Mugwanya, grandson of Matayo Mugwanya, one-time regent to Kabaka Cwa,
and founder of the Democratic Party; Ahmed Kinene, cousin to martyred
bush war veteran and social campaigner Abbas Kibazo; Beatrice Magoola,
granddaughter of Zirabamuzaale, a war companion of the
British-supporting General Semei Kakungulu; Beti Kamya, daughter of Lt
Col George Wilson Kamya, Paymaster General of the Uganda Army in the
Amin era; Syda Bbumba, also a descendant of Mugwanya; Maria Kiwanuka,
granddaughter of former Katikkiro Martin Nsibirwa; and many more.
The purpose of such inclusions has been
to, of course, draw on whatever localised legitimacy those names carry
in the communities of the families concerned, but also to extinguish any
independent political potency the name may carry.
In other words, it is an act of taming
the offspring of the otherwise free parent animal, the same way man
domesticated wolves to create pet dogs that are only wolf-like on
command of the master. Many have been approached, few have resisted.
NO REPUTATION TO LOSE
The new Attorney General is, as I say,
different again. If indeed few previous appointees have managed to leave
this post with their reputations intact, then what makes Kiryowa
Kiwanuka special is that he goes to the post with no reputation of worth
to lose in the first place.
Orphaned at 18 following the tragic
motor accident that claimed the life of his father Jimmy Mugambe (a
government pensioner) in 1991, KK, as he is fondly called by friends and
hangers-on, comes to this position from nearly 20 years of working with
the first family, the NRM, and a cast of greedy and shady characters
like his brother-in-law Apollo Senkeeto, the convicted mastermind of the
Mukono- Kyetume-Katosi road procurement scam that robbed Uganda of
billions of shillings.
In a special report titled “Museveni’s Nyekundire resurrects for 2011 polls”, published as a cover story by The Independent
on 16 June 2009, Kiryowa Kiwanuka was cited as “one of the key
organisers” of Nyekundire (Runyankore for ‘volunteers’) – a covert
assembly of nouveaux riche campaigners for an old and lonely president.
The group allegedly included relatives
of President Museveni and a cabal of fat cats secretively drawn from the
military, intelligence, business and government sectors.
They were “mainly driven by a sense of
gratitude and fear because many of them have largely benefited from the
NRM government and feel that it is only Museveni who can guarantee their
continued success. They are insecure and fear that any other leader
could possibly jeopardize their ‘successes’”.
Riding again on a family name (as the
grandson of a famous newspaper publisher, nightclub owner, soccer patron
and Uganda Peoples’ Congress co-founder Joseph William “Jolly Joe”
Kiwanuka, who was allegedly killed by President Idi Amin), KK acquired
high-level connections in the court of Museveni’s make-believe kingdom
initially as a nephew of long-time State House stenographer and former
trade minister Amelia Kyambadde, and later as a legal associate of first
son-in-law Edwin Karugire.
KK’s aunt, Amelia Kyambadde, is herself a
daughter of Omuwanika (Kabaka’s finance minister) Serwano Ssenseko
Wofunira Kulubya (CBE), the Anglican oligarch who served as the first
African mayor of the city of Kampala from 1959 to 1961.
THE KNIFE-SHARPENER
KK’s loyalty and service as an errand
boy of the president and his family, and later hired gun for the ruling
party, have been recognised and rewarded with the highest political
honour. The lanky lawyer has wormed his way into cabinet without the
bane of a pernicious election. The implication is clear that KK has come
to complete the fusion of family, party and government under a de facto
Kingdom.
Kiryowa Kiwanuka’s appointment as AG is
particularly problematic for the judiciary, and the legal profession.
First of all, his main client – the septuagenarian president – has been
in power for so long that he has now appointed every member of the
“independent” judicial service commission, and every judicial officer
from registrar to the judges and justices of the superior courts.
However, all these appointments have
been shrouded in mystery. A cabal of powerful and well-connected law
firms and other lobbyists is known to assist many hopefuls to get the
call, and to obstruct “the undesirables”. Accusations persist of packing
the superior courts with “cadre judges”, and the lower courts with
“DNRA” – i.e. the Descendants of NRA fighters and comrades.
Since KK has long been suspected of
having the president’s ear and serving as a judiciary sleuth of sorts,
he is poised to appear before many judges that may feel obliged to
sheepishly agree with him or walk on egg shells for fear of reprisal.
A few may actually want to punish him
for their perceived career stagnation or his complicity in the general
lawlessness. The KK-factor will certainly be inescapable. Secondly, it
is an open secret that the president has turned the government of Uganda
into a money-making operation for his family, his friends and himself.
This is a complete betrayal of the
constitutional design, in which K&K Advocates (formerly Kiwanuka
& Karugire Advocates) is inextricably entangled. However, it is
unclear whether the incoming AG relinquished his interests in the
aforementioned law firm before taking the oath of office on 8 July 2021.
The firm’s website continues to
advertise him as one of its practice leaders. He certainly said nothing
about stepping aside from private legal practice a week ago when hosted
on Zoom by the ULS Young Lawyers’ Committee ostensibly for some kind of
mentorship on “pathways to success in the legal profession”.
Despite basking in the media spotlight
since his nomination was announced more than a month ago, Kiryowa
Kiwanuka has not explained how he will simultaneously serve as the
nation’s chief legal officer and maintain his interests in a
full-service law firm that represents both private and public sector
clients in a wide range of fields, including media, telecoms, finance,
transport, energy, construction and medical supplies.
How does he plan to insulate himself
from potential conflicts of interest? KK’s failure to lead other
political appointees by demonstrably clarifying such ethical imperatives
for high state office contradicts any pretense that he is a
well-intentioned reformer, an anti-corruption Czar or champion of clean
and open government.
In a rather prescient interview
published by The Independent on 3 May 2016, Kiryowa Kiwanuka underscored
his fanatical support for President Museveni, and confessed to
suffering from hubris (arrogance and excessive pride) and telling lies
on occasion “for survival” and “when it is necessary”.
When asked about his most marked
characteristic, the future AG replied: “I am too dismissive.” Regarding
the one thing he wished to change about himself, he replied: “Increase
on humility; if I could just be there without being in anyone’s face.”
Of his greatest achievement, KK stated:
“Insisting on myself.” And his personal motto: “Insist on yourself.”
Clearly, this interview revealed a lot about the mind map of our next
AG. It personally reminded me of another brilliant lawyer, fanatical
supporter and former errand boy of President Museveni, the late Brig
Noble Mayombo, whose personal motto was a famous quip attributed to
French King Louis XIV: “L’etat, c’est moi”, which means “I myself am the
State.”
Does Museveni the tyrant hypnotize all his legal acolytes?
Hence the new AG is “an ardent supporter
of President Museveni”, and “a liar” who is “too dismissive” and
wanting in humility. He has a tendency of “insisting on himself”, and
his entire professional purpose has been to help fuse the private
affairs and interests of the first family (and by extension his own)
with those of the state.
In a nutshell, Kiryowa Kiwanuka is a
useful idiot. He has not been appointed for his juridical opinion but,
rather, for his obedience to the House of Kaguta. When the great
questions of the day come (and they are coming pretty soon), we will
surely see the glorified errand boy who suffers from hubris and
mendacity completely exposed to the elements.
EATING LAND
This brings us to the questions likely
to arise between 2021 and 2026, and why KK was thought fit for the job
in the perspective of the appointing authority. The first one, but
perhaps not the most important, is the question of mailo land tenure
system, which the president has vowed to obliterate.
Mailo is a tricky and very emotive issue
among the Baganda, and for good reason. Mailo as a land tenure system
is unique not just to Uganda, but especially to Buganda. Grounded in the
1900 Buganda Agreement with the British, it created private land
(private mailo) far beyond the reach of state actors.
In fact, in the entire British Empire,
as was, Buganda and the archipelago of Tonga were the only two colonised
places where land was left in the hands of natives in some fashion, by
law, i.e. the new colonial arrangements. In Buganda’s case, it was a
result of the concessions the conquering Brits had had to make to the
Anglican warlords who had helped secure their victory.
Mailo has since become part of the
identity issues in Buganda. Critics will point out that the land was
given to elite families and it created dual ownership (squatters and
landlords), but there is very little dissent (if any) for the system
among the Baganda (be they elite or ordinary citizens).
Kiryowa Kiwanuka the golfer
In Buganda, we look askance at this
government’s intentions for mailo land because we have had enough of the
wolf guarding the sheep, and the fox guarding the hen house. As
Katikkiro Charles Peter Mayiga has pointed out, the disputes that have
emerged on a large scale over mailo land are disputes peculiar to
Museveni’s reign and Museveni’s people.
To the extent that mailo land is, or may
become a problem, shouldn’t this be a matter for those concerned, i.e.
the people of the Kingdom of Buganda, and its institutions, to resolve?
Few issues define Buganda — the monarchy, language, clan structure, traditions like kwanjula
and of course mailo. Dismantling mailo is, therefore, political
dynamite. It then helps (visually at least) if the arguments against
mailo are going to be made not just by any Muganda, but the “much
learned” grandson of Jolly Joe Kiwanuka who rose to prominence in the
1950s and 1960s as the spokesman of anti- Bulange forces.
Bulange House, in Mengo, is the true
pride of Buganda Kingdom, and its Capitol. In this regard, KK is
“better” than previous AGs who lacked this pedigree. It is also helpful
if the movers of such a patently unpopular motion have no political
constituency to hold them back from committing political suicide. Both
KK and the incoming state minister for Lands Dr Sam Mayanja, another
Museveni- hypnotized anti-Bulange Muganda and wonkish lawyer, are both
unelected and unelectable eunuchs.
BUT WHY WOULD ONE WANT TO DISMANTLE MAILO NOW?
The NRM having made inroads into
previously hostile political territory, notably Teso in the East and
Lango and Acholi in the North, now sees Buganda as dispensable. Use and
dump.
Mailo was of course not always popular
with the ruling elite, but it just could not be done away with in the
past. In his memoir, Sowing The Mustard Seed, the fabled rebel leader
recounts his experiences of the 1981-1986 “bush war”, stressing the
potent support his guerillas received from Buganda which was an
organized and settled ethnic group.
The proposed anti-mailo reforms are,
therefore, aimed at further emasculating Buganda as a potential base of
future resistance, given the very poor showing of the ruling party in
Buganda at the last elections (vote-rigging notwithstanding). However,
KK will soon discover that the anti-mailo brief is actually a riddle,
wrapped in a mystery, inside an enigma.
How can the junta “reform” a land
ownership system that, while they condemn it as “unfair”, has been one
of the most sought-after items of booty (omunyago) by its top brass and
cronies precisely because of its legal value? How will they now avoid
harming their own ill-gotten interests in mailo land? Much as there are
challenges with mailo and indeed other land tenure systems in Buganda
and the rest of Uganda, the one thing KK will not be able to do is use
his new office to develop effective legal remedies.
The entire mission of this regime, since
1986, has actually been the opposite: to take advantage of these
problems. The second reason is that virtually all public land has now
been grabbed by the 1986 “Bush War” Mafia (more commonly known as
“Twateera Embundu” by the public) and the significant lands still
available in the central region are mailo.
Having succeeded in giving away gazetted
forest land, game parks, swamps, wetlands and green spaces to (often
immigrant) squatters, bush war veterans, and lately all manner of
“investors”, the junta now seeks a “legal” way to do this on mailo land.
Historically, regime big shots were able
to grab large tracts of mailo land simply by ignoring laws protecting
squatters on mailo land, while using the same laws as leverage against
non-connected mailo owners to buy them out (since the land space had
become useless to the titular owner, due to the said squatters).
However, there was near unanimous
outrage expressed against the regime at the last elections by the
victims of land grabbing in Buganda. Hence the appointment of a chief
law officer from a prominent family of landowners (the Kulubyas), as
some sort of elixir guaranteed to win back the confidence of both mailo
landowners and squatters.
Unfortunately, given the historical role
of the AG’s office in serving this unconstitutional state, Kiryowa
Kiwanuka will neither stop nor reverse state-backed pillage schemes.
Indeed his brief, based on recent policy statements, is to justify new
legal maneouvres, including constitutional amendments, that will further
ease acquisition of mailo land but this time through eminent domain
(allegedly for public use, with nominal compensation).
PROTECTING THE EATERS
The second issue and perhaps the most
important in KK’s appointment is the question of succession or, as
others call it, transition. Since African countries started getting
independence in the 1950s to-date, about 15 presidents have died in
office, the latest being John Pombe Magufuli of Tanzania and Idriss
Déby Itno of Chad.
In most of the cases, the articles of
transition are very clear, and the structures of state are
democratically governed so that transition is always smooth. This was
the case with Magufuli to Samia Suluhu in Tanzania. In at least two
cases where the constitution was clear (Kenya and Malawi), the “muwogo”
(cassava bread) mafia tried to prevent the vice president from ascending
to the throne. Both were unsuccessful.
In the Kenyan case when Jomo Kenyatta
died in 1978, it was the Attorney General Charles Njonjo who helped
Daniel arap Moi fend off the Kikuyu “muwogo” mafia who wanted to usurp
power. In Malawi, following President Bingu wa Mutharika’s death, there
were plots by his allies to circumvent the constitution and install
their own candidate (the late president’s brother Peter Mutharika) over
Vice-President Joyce Banda.
Both cases, in particular, illustrate
how a constitutional transition requires support from key actors,
particularly the cabinet, military leaders, judiciary, civil society,
and the independent media. The AG is, therefore, one of the cogs that
move the wheels of succession.
The point to take home is this: some of
the chaotic presidential successions have involved sons — Mahamat ibn
Idriss Déby Itno in Chad, Faure Gnassingbé in Togo, Joseph Kabila in
the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Ali Bongo Ondimba in Gabon.
Déby and Kabila were straight-forward
installations by the military. Gnassingbe was initially installed by the
military but was rejected by the international community. He then
resigned and held elections which he won.
Ali Bongo was fronted by his party to
replace his father. None of these sons were first in the line of
succession at the demise of their respective fathers. They were simply
lurking in the wings. You know who else is lurking, don’t you?
So, God forbid, when
succession/transition comes in Uganda, with whom will KK as AG side? The
‘people’ or ‘House of Kaguta’? In other words, the above-described AG
“loyalty dilemma” will raise its head again. In a messy transition, the
AG has one other role to play for which KK was obviously seen as the
only sure bet who can execute it — issuance of legal notices. These are
the instruments of notoriety used by a regime that has overthrown a
constitution.
CHANGING POLITICAL CONFIGURATIONS
As we have said, they have been written
at least five times in this country. We already mentioned the most
famous being in 1966/7. But there have also been legal notices for 1971,
1979, 1985 and 1986.
To get these done, the president or his
family needs more than a subservient AG on their side. As Godfrey
Binaisa was for Obote’s case in 1966, they need one who dogmatically
believes in the infamous Kelsenian theory, and has no qualms about
distancing the courts from the affairs of the military and the state. KK
fits the bill.
The third reason the grandson of
rabble-rouser Kiwanuka was named AG is his eight-year-old Twitter
account which currently boasts of 47,800 followers, including some
high-profile influencers and rank-and-file followers that both push
messages in his direction and promote every online utterance he makes.
Besides the president, few other members
of the cabinet enjoy such visibility on social media. KK’s predecessor
William Byaruhanga did not even have an account on any social media
platform. In his Twitter bio, KK describes himself as “Partner at
K&K Advocates formerly Kiwanuka & Karugire Advocates – Multilaw.
Board Member, Petroleum Authority of Uganda. MAK Council member. C/man
Express FC.” However, his tweets reveal that he has also been a
politician, if not AG, all along. Nodding to supporters. Fending off
challenges by the opposition.
Accepting media engagements. Basically politics!
When human rights lawyer Nicholas Opiyo
was charged with money laundering last year, KK took to Twitter on
Christmas day to defend the state’s action. Recently he denounced false
reporting on the death of a public figure, and his boss followed this up
with a directive. @KiyowaKk is therefore a strategic megaphone where KK
is expected to continue his characteristic scorched-earth,
take-no-prisoners style of dealing with a younger, more tech-savvy and
brasher opposition to a decaying junta.
History repeats itself.
KK’s grandfather, Jolly Joe Kiwanuka, is
widely remembered as a fiery politician who weaponized his Kololo-based
newspapers, The Uganda Post and The Uganda Express, as a power base to
criticize the Kabaka’s government and destroy rivals like DP’s Ben
Kiwanuka and former comrades like Ignatius Kangave Musaazi with whom he
had fallen out, while propping up his latest dalliances like the
sweetheart deal with Apollo Milton Obote.
Despite being the chairman of Musaazi’s
Uganda National Congress, Jolly Joe spearheaded the coalition with
Uganda People’s Union in 1960 to form the Uganda’s People’s Congress
(UPC), through which Obote came into power in 1962. Jolly Joe’s
disruptiveness transcended politics.
Writing for The Observer on 24
May 2018 in an article titled “How Jolly Joe wooed Nekyon into
football”, sports historian Hassan Badru Zziwa recounts several battles
that KK’s grandfather, the founder of Express FC and untouchable UPC
darling of the day, ruthlessly waged against his football rivals in the
sixties, including Rev Polycarp Kakooza and Bitumastic FC (which he got
banned through parliament for engaging in unsporting activities).
Kiryowa is the current chairman of Express FC
Museveni, a UPC youth-winger and an
errand boy of Obote in those days, must have observed the Machiavellian
methods of KK’s grandfather with much adoration. Having had plentiful
time to groom Jolly Joe’s grandson in the same traditions, the
septuagenarian must be supremely confident, as was Mary Shelley’s
Frankenstein, that now is the time to unleash his monster of an Attorney
General on the nation.
Using a mixture of carrot and stick, the
junta has almost succeeded in shackling civil society and the political
opposition in Uganda. However, there are some relentless and
incorruptible campaigners like KK’s contemporary Lord Mayor Erias
Lukwago, and a new wave of younger radical elites like Dr Ekwaro Obuku
of the Uganda Medical Association, Dr Deus Kamunyu Muhwezi of Makerere
University Academic Staff Association, maverick lawyer Male Mabirizi,
and Bobi Wine’s educated NUP “hooligans”, for whom new and smart forms
of repression must be designed.
The threat posed by this group of
charismatic, radical elites cannot be taken lightly. Our history shows
that they were instrumental in Museveni’s rise to power, having led the
resistance against the dictatorships of Idi Amin and Milton Obote. In
Sudan, the Sudan Professionals Association – a group incorporating
lawyers, doctors, engineers and teachers – helped to organise the
protests against dictator Omar al-Bashir.
Doctors set up camps to treat the
wounded, lawyers rescued the arrested, and when the military tried to
hijack the revolution, their coordinated efforts kept the momentum going
and forced a civilian transitional government to be appointed. Boy
Wonder KK’s brief is, therefore, to help a dysfunctional regime win back
the hearts and minds of Uganda’s middle-class professional elites.
He will attempt to do this by
capitalizing on pseudo-celebrity status as a member of both golf and
soccer royalty, and further as a pseudo-intellectual and philanthropist
who makes emotional or intellectual appeals that mask the junta’s
endemic illegitimacy, brutality and corruption. To his credit, he
understands the game, and can fool many gullible elites.
I confirmed this when I observed him
closely at work as the first lady’s appointee on the Makerere University
Council, where he was a member of its appointments board since January
2019. Several litigations have arisen from his conduct as a council
member, especially his latest stint as chairperson of the all-powerful
search committee mandated to recruit college principals and deputy
principals.
In the College of Health Sciences at
Mulago, KK was accused by a group of nearly 70 senior staff of bending
the rules to favour the spouse of a State House employee. The iconic
Ivory Tower literally burned under his watch. Yet many elites still
think he did a good job of “cleaning up the rot” at the oldest and
largest university in Uganda.
Knowing better, it behooves us to sound
the alarm. Building from Kelsenian beliefs and deep antipathy to
constitutionalism, Kiryowa Kiwanuka will personally appear in court more
often than other AGs before him, defending not the rule of law but rule
by the law. Beholden to the House of Kaguta, KK will not bother himself
with justice and the fight against corruption. There may be a new
sheriff in town, but it is business as usual.
From a jurisprudential perspective, AG
Kiryowa Kiwanuka will espouse legal positivism, interpreting laws so
narrowly as to throw out the spirit in which they were drafted, or the
constitutional values that they were meant to advance.
In short, he will be just another rascal with a wig, a robe, a brief and, of course, a Twitter account.
Twitter: @IsaacSsemakadde
info@mylegalbrain.com
The author is the founder and chief
executive of Legal Brains Trust, a Kampala-based democracy and human
rights watchdog. In March 2018, he was voted by members of the Uganda
Law Society as the “Most Outstanding Advocate” in the category of Public
Interest Lawyering. He is the go-to lawyer for Makerere University
Academic Staff Association among other civic and political
organizations.