Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T15:43:52.009Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Of Extensive and Elusive Corruption in Uganda: Neo-Patronage, Power, and Narrow Interests

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 August 2013

Godfrey B. Asiimwe*
Affiliation:
Godfrey B. Asiimwe is a senior lecturer in development studies at Makerere University. E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract:

This article explores the prevalence of high-level political and bureaucratic corruption in postindependence Uganda, with particular focus on the narrow interests it serves and its impact on development and service delivery. It argues that high-level political corruption endures largely because it is situated within the framework of “neo”-patron-clientelism and skewed power relations. The article shows how institutions have not been able to effectively engage the inner-circle ruling elite due to a skewed power structure that serves narrow political interests. Grand bureaucratic and petty forms of corruption are equally extensive and challenging, though only the former have been affected by “zero tolerance” policies. The article concludes, however, that through its interplay of inclusion and exclusion, political corruption has generated contestations which undermine it and challenge the National Resistance Movement (NRM) regime.

Résumé:

Cet article explore la prévalence de corruption bureaucratique et politique à haut niveau en Ouganda depuis l’indépendance. Il se concentre en particulier sur les intérêts limités que la corruption sert ainsi que son impact sur le développement du pays et la qualité du service public. Cet article soutient que la corruption politique à haut niveau perdure principalement à cause du “nouveau” contexte de patronage/clientélisme en place et de relations de pouvoir biaisées. Il montre aussi comment les institutions n’ont pas été capables d’engager de manière efficace l’élite interne au pouvoir à cause d’une structure de pouvoir qui sert des intérêts politiques étroits. La corruption bureaucratique systémique côtoie une corruption quotidienne mineure, toutes deux sont vastement répandues et difficiles à combattre, bien que seule la première aie été affectée par des mesures de “tolérance zéro.” Cet article conclut cependant que la corruption politique, par l’intermédiaire du phénomène d’inclusion et d’exclusion, a généré des contestations qui la remettent en question et qui lancent un défi au régime du Mouvement de Résistance Nationale (MRN).

Type
ASR FORUM: HOMOPHOBIC AFRICA?
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ackerman, Susan R. 1999. Corruption and Government: Causes, Consequences, and Reform. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aisu, Omongole. 1998. “Report, Uganda Parliament” (Kampala). December 8.Google Scholar
Allio, Emmy. 2002. “Chopper Panel Cleared Mbonye but Not Saleh.” The New Vision (Kampala), December 14.Google Scholar
Amazia, Dradenya. 2009. “Shs. 130m Spent on Maracha District Ghost Council–AG.” The New Vision (Kampala), December 9.Google Scholar
Among, Barbara. 2009. “Mwondha Dropped?” The New Vision (Kampala), April 11.Google Scholar
Asiimwe, Godfrey. 2009. “Aid and State‒Society Relations: The Case of Anti-Corruption Civil Society Organisations in Uganda.” Bergen: University of Bergen, Nile Basin Research Programme.Google Scholar
Atuhaire, Alex B. 2005. “Kutesa’s Daughter Linked to 1.2b/= Deal.” The Monitor (Kampala), May 26.Google Scholar
Bakoko, Bakoru Zoe. 2009 “Big People Wanted to Steal NSSF Money and I Refused.” The Observer (Kampala), April 20.Google Scholar
Bareebe, Gerald. 2011. “FDC Man Offered Shs 1.5b to Quit.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), January 11.Google Scholar
Bekunda, Catherine, and Namutebi, Joyce. 2010. “Parliament Clears Mbabazi on CHOGM.” The New Vision (Kampala), November 18.Google Scholar
Birdsall, Nancy. 2007. “Do No Harm: Aid, Weak Institutions and the Missing Middle in Africa.” Development Policy Review 25 (5): 575–98.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blundo, G., and Olivier de Sardan, J. P.. 2006. Everyday Corruption and the State: Citizens and Public Officials in Africa. London: Zed Books.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boadi, E. Gyimah. 1996. “Civil Society in Africa.” Journal of Democracy 7 (2): 118–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butagira, Tabu. 2010. “Museveni Orders Chogm Arrests.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), May 20.Google Scholar
Butagira, Tabu, and Mugerwa, Yasiin. 2010. “Uganda: PAC Evidence on CHOGM Weak–Baku.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), May 20.Google Scholar
Centre for Basic Research (CBR). 2005a. “The Impact of Political Corruption on Resource Allocation and Service Delivery in Local Governments in Uganda.” Kampala: CBR.Google Scholar
Centre for Basic Research (CBR). 2005b. “Mapping Political Corruption in Uganda.” Kampala: CBR.Google Scholar
Chandi Jamwa, David. 2009. “NSSF: Jamwa Exposes Suruma, Nzeyi Trickery.” The Independent (Kampala), February 28.Google Scholar
Cohen, D. L., and Parson, J.. 1973. “The Uganda People’s Congress Branch and Constituency Elections of 1970.” Journal of Commonwealth Political Studies 11 (1): 4466.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gyezaho, Emmanuel. 2008. “Mbabazi Tampered With NSSF Report.” The Monitor (Kampala), October 31.Google Scholar
Hadenius, Axel, and Uggla, Fredrik. 1996. “Making Civil Society Work, Promoting Democratic Development: What Can States and Donors Do?World Development 24 (10):1621–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, Robert. 2003. Political Corruption: In and Beyond the Nation State. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holmquist, Frank. 2002. “Business and Politics in Kenya in the 1990s.” Occasional Paper, Centre of African Studies, University of Copenhagen.Google Scholar
Human Rights Network Uganda (HIRINET-U). 2010. “Counting the Human Rights Costs of the September 2009 Riots in Uganda.” Ntinda, Uganda: HIRINET-U.Google Scholar
The Independent (Kampala). 2009a. “Museveni Government Family Tree.” March 25.Google Scholar
The Independent (Kampala). 2009b. “Who Wants IGG Mwondha Out?” April 15.Google Scholar
Inspector General of Government (Uganda) (IGG). 2002. “Report to Parliament.” Kampala: The Inspectorate of Government.Google Scholar
Inspector General of Government (Uganda) (IGG). 2009. “Report to Parliament.” Kampala: The Inspectorate of Government.Google Scholar
International Bar Association Human Rights Institute (IBAHRA). 2007. “Judicial Independence Undermined: A Report on Uganda.” London: International Bar Association.Google Scholar
Johnston, Michael. 2006. Syndromes of Corruption: Wealth, Power, and Democracy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Kairu, Pauline, and Nalugo, Mercy. 2010. “NRM Is a Party of Thieves, Says Gen. Otafiire.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), May 29.Google Scholar
Kalinaki, Daniel. 2010. “It Is Easier to Create an Army Than Fight Corruption, Says Museveni.” Daily Monitor (Kampala), April 11.Google Scholar
Kamya, Betty. 2008. “Where Is Museveni’s Heart?” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), January 28.Google Scholar
Karamagi, Victor. 2005. “Dubious: Why Would Descent MPs and Ministers Join Mutale’s KAP?” The Monitor (Kampala), May 3.Google Scholar
Kasasira, Risdel. 2008. “More Ghost Soldier Reports Expose UPDF Failure to End Kony War.” The Monitor (Kampala), May 11.Google Scholar
Kasyate, Simon. 2007. “How Vaccine Billions Left Ministry.” The Monitor (Kampala), May 14.Google Scholar
Katureebe, K. Obed. 2009. “Did Gen. Kazini Try to Overthrow Museveni?” The Independent (Kampala), May 12.Google Scholar
Kaufmann, Daniel, Kraay, Aart, and Zoito-Lobaton, Pablo. 1999. “Governance Matters.” World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 2196. http://ideas.repec.org/p/wbk/wbrwps/2196.html.Google Scholar
Kelen, Larry. 2009. “Uganda’s Gen. Museveni Names Wife to Cabinet Post.” Crested Journal (Kampala), February 17.Google Scholar
Kiggundu, Edris. 2008. “Gen. Otafiire’s Love Affair with Controversy.” The Observer (Kampala), February 7.Google Scholar
Kiwawulo, Chris. 2008. “Naguru Estates: Is It a Case of Personal Vendetta or Foul Play?” The New Vision (Kampala), July 25.Google Scholar
Kwesiga, Pascal. 2010. “Three Ghost Health Centres Discovered.” The New Vision (Kampala), April 22.Google Scholar
Luggya, Jude. 2006. “Donors Demand Action on Global Fund Report.” The Monitor (Kampala), October 31.Google Scholar
Matsiko, Grace. 2008. “NSSF Saga–Museveni Investigates Jamwa, Nema.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), October 18.Google Scholar
Matsiko, Grace, and Bogere, H.. 2008. “Kazini’s Fall from Grace to Grass.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), March 28.Google Scholar
Mbaku, John Mukum. 2007. Corruption in Africa: Causes, Consequences and Cleanups. Plymouth, U.K.: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Ministry of Health. 2004. “Uganda Medical Survey Report.” Kampala: Government of Uganda.Google Scholar
Ministry of Health. 2006. “Uganda Health Facilities Survey.” Kampala: Government of Uganda.Google Scholar
Ministry of Finance. 2007. “Background to the Budget.” Kampala: Government of Uganda.Google Scholar
Monitor Reporter. 2008a. “How Kazini’s 4th Division Became Home of Ghosts.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), March 30.Google Scholar
Monitor Reporter. 2008b. “UPDF’s Long Battle with Corruption.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), April 20.Google Scholar
Monitor Reporter. 2010a. “300 Ghost Workers on Mulago Payroll.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), August 5.Google Scholar
Monitor Reporter. 2010b. “More Ministers Lose Ruling Party Primaries.” The Monitor (Kampala), September 6.Google Scholar
Mubangizi, Michael, and Lumu, David Tash. 2010. “Museveni Ignores Big ‘Thieves,’ Turns on Junior Officials.” The Observer (Kampala), June 6.Google Scholar
Mubatsi, Asinja Habati. 2010a. “NRM Politics and Tribalism.” The Independent (Kampala), January 26.Google Scholar
Mubatsi, Asinja Habati. 2010b. “The 100 Ghost Hospitals.” The Independent (Kampala), May 31.Google Scholar
Mufumba, Isaac. 2010. “Election Violence: Is It Bursting Its Banks?” The Independent (Kampala), March 23.Google Scholar
Mugerwa, Yasin. 2008. “No Cash to Prosecute Global Fund Culprits.” The Monitor (Kampala), May 2.Google Scholar
Mugerwa, Yasin. 2010. “State House Asks for Extra Shs. 95 Billion.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), December 20.Google Scholar
Mugerwa, Yasin. 2011a. “State House Budget Shoots to Sh160 Billion.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), January 5.Google Scholar
Mugerwa, Yasin. 2011b. “More MPs to Return Sh 20 Million ‘Bribe.’” The Monitor (Kampala), January 21.Google Scholar
Muhumuza, Nyongesa. 2010. “Anti-Corruption Court Convicts Its First CHOGM Theft Suspect.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), June 30.Google Scholar
Nalugo, Mercy. 2009. “Kanyeihamba Accuses Executive of Interfering with Judiciary.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), October 10.Google Scholar
Nalugo, Mercy, and Naturinda, Sheila. 2010. “Delegates Ask Museveni to Explain Sectarianism.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), January 14.Google Scholar
Namutebi, Joyce. 2010. “Uganda: Ghost Health Centres Found in Kampala.” The New Vision (Kampala), February 7.Google Scholar
Naturinda, Sheila, and Nalugo, Mercy. 2008. “Mbabazi Sold Wetland to NSSF, Says Nema.” The Monitor (Kampala), September 24.Google Scholar
Ndikumana, Leonce, and James, Boyce. 2008. “New Estimates of Capital Flight from Sub-Saharan African Countries: Linkages with External Borrowing and Policy Options.” Political Economy Research Institute, Working Paper Series No. 166. Amherst: University of Massachusetts.Google Scholar
Neild, R. 2001. “Scandals as Evidence of Corruption.” Paper presented to the conference “Political Scandals Past and Present, ” University of Salford (Manchester, U.K.), June 21–23.Google Scholar
Njoroge, John. 2010. “Ugandans Idolise Graft, Says Bishop.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), November 6.Google Scholar
Njoroge, John, and Wesonga, Nelson. 2011. “‘I Am Retiring but Not Tired,’ Says Katutsi.” Sunday Monitor (Kampala), March 13.Google Scholar
Nogara, Monica. 2009. “Role of Media in Curbing Corruption: The Case of Uganda under President Yoweri K. Museveni during the ‘No Party’ System.” DESA Working Paper Series No. 72. New York: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nye, J. S. 1967. “Corruption and Political Development: A Cost–Benefit Analysis.” American Political Science Review 61: 417–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Okuku, Juma. 2002. “Ethnicity, State Power and the Democratisation Process in Uganda.” Discussion Paper 17. Uppsala: Nordic African Institute.Google Scholar
Olupot, Milton. 2009. “No Mercy for Thieves, Says Museveni.” The New Vision (Kampala), December 8.Google Scholar
Olupot, Milton, and Karugaba, Mary. 2008. NSSF Inflated Wakiso Land Acreage.” The New Vision (Kampala), August 27.Google Scholar
Parliament Committee on Commissions, Statutory Authorities and State Enterprises (PCCSASE). 2008. “Report.” Kampala: Government of Uganda.Google Scholar
Parliament Select Committee. 2005. “Report of the Parliament Select Committee on National Social Security Fund.” Kampala: Government of Uganda.Google Scholar
The Red Pepper (Kampala). 2010a. “State House Pays Bebe Cool.” August 20.Google Scholar
The Red Pepper. 2010b. “M7 Gives Kenzo Shs 100m Car.” November 2.Google Scholar
Rob, J. 2007. “The Role of Political Institutions in Promoting Accountability.” Washington, D.C.: World Bank.Google Scholar
Ruzindana, Augustine. 1997. “The Importance of Leadership in Fighting Corruption in Uganda.” In Corruption and the Global Economy, edited by Ann Elliot, Kimberly, 133–46. Washington, D.C.: Institute for International Economics.Google Scholar
Sardan, J. P. Oliver. 1999. “A Moral Economy of Corruption in Africa?” The Journal of Modern African Studies 37 (1): 2552.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sekiika, Edward. 2010. “Corruption Can Be Good—Museveni.” The Observer (Kampala), June 2.Google Scholar
Sharlet, Jeff. 2008. The Family: Power, Politics and Fundamentalism’s Shadow Elite. Queensland, Australia: University of Queensland Press.Google Scholar
Sherk, Donald R. 2005. “The Cultural Dimension of Corruption: Reflections on Nigeria.” In Civil Society and Corruption: Mobilising for Reform, edited by Johnston, Michael, 6170. Lanham, Md.: University Press of America.Google Scholar
Smith, Daniel Jordan. 2008. A Culture of Corruption: Everyday Deception and Popular Discontent in Nigeria. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Ssemujju, Nganda Ibrahim. 2008. “Prof Bukenya, Sam Kutesa Named.” Weekly Observer (Kampala), May 22.Google Scholar
Ssemujju, Nganda Ibrahim. 2009a. “Banyankole Officers Most Qualified, Says Gen. Aronda.” The Observer (Kampala), October 22.Google Scholar
Ssemujju, Nganda Ibrahim. 2009b. “Kazini Faces Life in Jail over Coup.” The Observer (Kampala), April 14.Google Scholar
Ssuuna, Ignatius. 2004. “Judges Favour Ssemo, Says Museveni.” The Monitor (Kampala), June 30.Google Scholar
Szeftel, Morris. 1998. “Misunderstanding African Politics: Corruption and the Governance Agenda.” Review of African Political Economy 25 (76): 221–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Szeftel, Morris. 2000. “Between Governance and Underdevelopment: Accumulation and Africa’s ‘Catastrophic Corruption.’” Review of African Political Economy 27 (84): 287306.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tangri, R. 1999. The Politics of Patronage in Africa: Parastatals, Privatisation and Private Enterprise. Oxford: James Currey.Google Scholar
Tangri, R., and Mwenda, A. M.. 2001. “Corruption and Cronyism in Uganda’s Privatisation in the 1990s.” African Affairs 100 (398): 117–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tangri, R., and Mwenda, A. M.. “Military Corruption and Ugandan Politics since the Late 1990s.” Review of African Political Economy 30 (98): 539–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tangri, R., and Mwenda, A. M.. 2006. “Politics, Donors and the Ineffectiveness of Anti-corruption Institutions in Uganda.” The Journal of Modern African Studies 44 (1): 101–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Transparency International. 2001. “Action for Transparency.” Uganda: Transparency International.Google Scholar
Tripp, Aili Mari. 2010. Museveni’s Uganda: Paradoxes of Power in a Hybrid Regime. Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turyagyenda, Tina. 2006. “Inzikuru Bags Gold, Muhwezi Grilled.” The New Vision (Kampala), March 26.Google Scholar
United Nations. 2001. “Report of the Panel of Experts on the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources and Other Forms of Wealth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo.” New York: United Nations.Google Scholar
Wanambwa, Richard. 2009a. “Museveni Hails Mbabazi, Otafiire as Revolutionaries.” The New Vision (Kampala), August 31.Google Scholar
Wanambwa, Richard. 2009b. “War Heroes: Otafiire Cautions Museveni.” The Daily Monitor (Kampala), August 31.Google Scholar
Wasike, Alfred. 2006. “Keep Out of Trouble, Museveni Warns Saleh.” The New Vision (Kampala), June 9.Google Scholar
Wonbin, Cho. 2009. “What Are the Origins of Corruption in Africa: Culture or Institution?” Paper presented to the convention of the International Studies Association, New York, February 15–18.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1997. “Helping Countries Combat Corruption: The Role of the World Bank.” Washington, D.C.: World Bank.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1998. “Uganda: Recommendations for Strengthening the Government of Uganda’s Anti-corruption Program.” World Bank Poverty Reduction and Social Development Section. Washington, D.C.: World Bank.Google Scholar
Wrong, Michela. 2009. It’s Our Turn to Eat: The Story of a Kenyan Whistle-Blower. New York: HarperCollins.Google Scholar