Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Ugandan president’s son jostles to succeed him

‘Wild card’ fires off barrage of late-night provocativ­e tweets

- By Abdi Latif Dahir

KAMPALA, Uganda — He has boasted that he could capture the capital of neighborin­g Kenya in two weeks. He has offered a dowry of 100 cows to marry Italy’s new female prime minister. And he has claimed that the majority of “nonwhite” people around the world supported Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

With a barrage of provocativ­e late-night Twitter posts in the past year, Muhoozi Kainerugab­a — the 48-yearold son of the president of Uganda, and a military general — has unnerved Ugandans and regional allies, and become an embarrassm­ent for President Yoweri Museveni, who has chided his eldest child publicly, apologized on his behalf and promised that his son would leave Twitter altogether.

But Kainerugab­a is still tweeting as he tries to position himself to succeed his father, a close Western military ally whose landlocked nation receives almost $1 billion in developmen­t assistance each year from the United States. Kainerugab­a has vowed not to “stop until we are in complete control” of Uganda.

His father has held an increasing­ly authoritar­ian grip on the country for 37 years, a six-term president who at 78 has already begun receiving endorsemen­ts to run in the 2026 elections. Ugandan political experts say he is unlikely to ever relinquish power.

But as Museveni’s vigor wanes, experts say he is looking to preserve his family’s dominance and trying to line up his son as a successor.

Yet he is coy about fully backing him, in part because of his exasperati­on with the stream of erratic tweets his son has shared with his more than 650,000 followers, according to several Uganda analysts and Western officials.

“Even as he encourages him to become a public figure, Museveni now realizes that he is not in full control of his son,” said a senior Western official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss sensitive matters. “He is not in the same caliber politicall­y as his father, and he is quite self-absorbed and that informs people’s assessment of whether he is suitable for the presidency.”

The question of succession has taken center stage in Uganda, one of many African countries ruled by aging strongmen. Some African leaders have set up their children, wives or other relatives as successors. Other leaders have tried to lay the groundwork for successors, but failed — as in Zimbabwe, Egypt and Angola, where the ruling dos Santos family lost control when its patriarch stepped down.

The Ugandan president has been testing his son’s prospects with the public, political analysts say, as succession tensions build among ruling party cadres and the army. He has dispatched his son on diplomatic visits across Africa, promoted him to a full general and thrown him a lavish state dinner for his birthday last year.

“Due to Museveni’s advancing age, there’s a lot of pressure building on the question of succession and Muhoozi is an insurance policy,” said Michael Mutyaba, a Ugandan researcher and political analyst. “He is meant to act as a shock absorber.”

Kainerugab­a declined requests for an interview through a spokespers­on, and Museveni’s spokespers­on did not respond.

Since coming to power in 1986, Museveni has changed laws to stay in office, suspended nongovernm­ental organizati­ons and subjected activists and opposition members to arbitrary detention, disappeara­nces and torture. Two years ago, the president declared victory after a bloody election replete with accusation­s of vote tampering.

The flood of tweets from Kainerugab­a has revived questions about an alleged scheme, known as the “Muhoozi Project,” to groom the president’s son for power.

The government has denied that there ever was any such plan. But with the recent tweets, there is renewed apprehensi­on about dynastic rule.

Museveni’s family is deeply entrenched in power. His wife, Janet, is the minister of education and sports. His brother Salim Saleh is an influentia­l businessma­n and serves as a military adviser. His son-in-law, Odrek Rwabwogo, is a presidenti­al adviser who harbors political ambitions.

Kainerugab­a has held several strategic positions in the military and is a special adviser to his father.

Last March, the general tweeted his intention to retire from the army, a preconditi­on to running for office in Uganda. The decision caught military officials by surprise. He later retracted it, saying he will retire in eight years.

His offhand tweets about the war in Ukraine have especially discomfite­d his father, according to two people familiar with those discussion­s. Museveni has said he wished to remain neutral about the war in Ukraine. When Kainerugab­a voiced support for President Vladimir Putin, the president stated that his son was “speaking for himself.”

In October, when Kainerugab­a threatened to capture the Kenyan capital, the president asked Kenyans for forgivenes­s. He then fired Kainerugab­a as commander of the country’s land forces — although he promoted him from lieutenant general to a full general — and said he directed him to stay off Twitter and cease commenting on other nations’ internal affairs.

But his son said on Twitter that no one could “ban me from anything.” He has said he will “definitely” become president.

His supporters have plastered his picture on billboards and posted fawning messages on social media. To expand his sphere of influence, experts say, he has privately supported the political candidacie­s of several friends and the appointmen­t of others to critical government posts.

Kainerugab­a was born in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, while his father fought the government of Ugandan dictator Idi Amin. His name, Muhoozi, means “the avenger,” the president has said. He has three younger sisters: Natasha, Patience and Diana.

His pugilistic approach to politics was evident after 2012 when he became the head of the restructur­ed Special Forces Command, an elite private unit tasked with protecting Museveni and his interests. The outfit has been accused of carrying out human rights violations, particular­ly around the 2021 elections.

Kainerugab­a has also personally faced accusation­s. He was named in a complaint alleging a wave of abductions and abuse, filed in the Internatio­nal Criminal Court by Bobi Wine, a musician turned politician who ran for president against Museveni in 2021.

Helen Epstein, the author of “Another Fine Mess: America, Uganda and the War on Terror,” said Kainerugab­a’s intemperat­e tweets remind her of the bombastic rhetoric of Amin, the brutal former ruler of Uganda who killed tens of thousands of people and had threatened to annex parts of Kenya.

“Muhoozi has ambitions to run Uganda one day,” Epstein said. For now, she added, “he is a wild card.”

 ?? ALEXANDER JOE/GETTY-AFP ?? Ugandan President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni greets supporters as he and his wife, Janet, arrive at a final election rally in Kampala in 2006. Museveni, now 78, has served as the nation’s president for 37 years and is in his sixth term.
ALEXANDER JOE/GETTY-AFP Ugandan President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni greets supporters as he and his wife, Janet, arrive at a final election rally in Kampala in 2006. Museveni, now 78, has served as the nation’s president for 37 years and is in his sixth term.

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