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Uganda’s foreign policy under President Museveni over roughly four decades blends diplomacy with regional military actions, shaping politics, security, and the economy. Key points: - Evolution from isolation (Amin era) to a regional security provider, refugee host, and active intermediary among major powers. - Diplomacy framed as integration and non-alignment: Uganda pursues regional integration (EAC) and balanced engagement with global powers to keep investment and trade ch
2026-05-24Uganda is at a pivotal moment as President Museveni begins a seventh term amid regional diplomacy and domestic tensions. Key points: - Inauguration drew regional heavyweights (DR Congo, Tanzania, Nigeria, Kenya), signaling strong regional diplomatic standing. - The January election saw Museveni win about 72% amid reports of intimidation and abductions of opposition figures. - Supporters point to peace and steady economic growth: World Bank notes over 6% GDP growth in 2024; G
2026-05-24Ambassador Adonia Ayebare urged Uganda to resist great-power ideological rivalries and pursue an interest-driven, non-aligned foreign policy aimed at rapid economic transformation. At the Kyankwanzi retreat, he framed diplomacy as a tool to secure capital, technology, markets, and investment, not just political relations. Key points include: - Prioritize pragmatic, interest-based diplomacy to unlock investment, markets, and technology. - Avoid binary alignment and ideologica
2026-05-24Uganda’s president Yoweri Museveni was sworn in for a seventh term (May 12, 2026) at Kololo. In his inaugural address, he framed the term as a push for “Kisanja no More Sleep/No Corruption,” targeting total economic transformation and a shift from subsistence farming to commercialization and industrialization. He highlighted: - Continued focus on the Parish Development Model (PDM) and expanded presidential skilling hubs. - Emphasis on leveraging oil production for infrastruct
2026-05-24Summary: - Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni called on Parliament to review the Protection of Sovereignty Bill, 2026 after public uproar, arguing the bill currently “meanders” into areas like private enterprise transfers, private money transfers, and church donations. - The government says the bill aims to safeguard national interests and self-governance by regulating foreign influence and funding. - Museveni emphasized that Uganda should preserve freedom of movement of cap
2026-05-24