Museveni begins new term as son gains influence

Summary

Museveni will begin another term as attention shifts to his son, Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, and questions about Uganda’s succession.

Why this matters

The story highlights uncertainty over political succession in Uganda after four decades of Museveni’s rule. It also points to the military’s possible role in any transition in a key U.S. security partner in East Africa.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, 81, will be sworn in Tuesday for another five-year term, extending a rule that began in 1986.

As Museveni starts what many Ugandans see as one of his final terms, attention has shifted to his son, army chief Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, who led rehearsals for the military parade marking Museveni’s eighth inauguration in Kampala.

Kainerugaba, 52, has said he wants to succeed his father, describing that goal as unstoppable. Analysts and political figures say he has become increasingly influential as Museveni ages.

Kainerugaba’s rise in the military has long drawn scrutiny from critics, who called it the “Muhoozi Project” and said it was meant to prepare him for the presidency. Museveni and Kainerugaba often denied that, but the possibility of a family succession has become more pronounced in the last two years.

Parliament Speaker Anita Among said last month that lawmakers would support Kainerugaba’s presidential ambitions.

Museveni has no apparent rivals within the ruling party. But Kainerugaba is seen as facing a difficult electoral path against opponents, including Bobi Wine, the opposition leader who rejected the outcome of the January election that gave Museveni another term.

Museveni first took power by force, saying Africa’s problem was leaders who overstayed. He later said his criticism applied to those who stayed without an electoral mandate. He is credited by supporters with helping bring relative peace and stability, but critics point to the removal of term and age limits, and to rivals being jailed or sidelined.

Lawmakers recently passed legislation aimed at deterring foreign interference. Wine’s National Unity Platform called it “unconstitutional, irrelevant and brought in bad faith to further persecute those with divergent views.”

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