Yoweri Museveni took the oath for a seventh term today. A man who once promised to be a different kind of African leader now embodies the continent's oldest political disease: the leader who cannot leave. The Commonwealth, that peculiar club of former colonies, watched from the sidelines. Its observers, dispatched to lend credibility to a process that had none, will now file polite reports about 'irregularities' and 'concerns.' Nobody expects sanctions. Nobody expects a suspension. The Commonwealth has become a theatre of the absurd, where rituals of democracy are performed for international consumption while the substance rots.
Museveni's grip on power has been total for 39 years. This latest election was a foregone conclusion. His main opponent, Bobi Wine, was placed under house arrest days before the vote. Security forces sealed off social media. The opposition's lawyers were arrested. These are not the hallmarks of a free and fair election. They are the tactics of a regime that has mastered the art of electoral autocracy.
But here is the kicker for Whitehall and Downing Street: Uganda matters. It is a key partner in the fight against Al-Shabaab. It hosts the largest refugee population in Africa. It buys British arms. So the Foreign Office will issue a carefully worded statement expressing 'deep concern' while continuing business as usual. The special relationship with Kampala is too valuable to sacrifice for principles.
What does this mean for the Prime Minister? Boris Johnson, a man who rode to power on a wave of populist discontent, finds himself in a bind. He wants to project Britain as a global leader on democracy. But realpolitik demands he keep Museveni sweet. The likely outcome is more of the same: high-minded rhetoric, low-impact action. A classic British fudge.
Behind the scenes, the backbench revolt is building. Tory MPs with a conscience are demanding a tougher line. They have been briefed by activists on the ground. They know Bobi Wine represents a genuine movement for change. But the whips will lean on them. National interest, they will say. Stability. The war on terror.
The optics are terrible. As Museveni raised his hand to swear on the Bible, Commonwealth observers snapped photos for their reports. Those reports will gather dust. The real story is the quiet resignation among diplomats. They know the game. They play it. And they hate themselves for it.
For Uganda, the future is bleak. Museveni has shown no appetite for reform. He is surrounded by a cabal of loyalists who have enriched themselves on his watch. The young population, frustrated and unemployed, will not wait forever. Bobi Wine's movement may be crushed today, but the grievances that fuel it will not disappear.
The Commonwealth has a choice. It can continue to be a fig leaf for dictators, or it can find its spine. But spines are in short supply in international diplomacy. The betting is that Museveni will serve his term, die in office, or bequeath power to a chosen successor. The system is too deeply entrenched.
This story is developing, but the trajectory is clear. Another African strongman consolidates power. The West tuts. The world moves on. And in Kampala, a population that dared to hope for change learns that hope is a dangerous thing.
