Opinion

EU MUST BE CAUTIOUS OF TRYING TO EMBROIL UGANDA INTO A STATE OF POLITICAL QUAGMIRE.

By Angela Nyakuni 

European Union must be cautious of trying to embroil Uganda into a state of political chaos. The delegation should be careful and mindful.  Why interfere with political affairs of another country? is it not included in the International Charter?

All their actions are a reflection of partisan politics, supporting NUP and Kyagulanyi to destabilize Uganda because they want to officiate Homosexuality, hiding under the umbrella of Human Rights observance and protection.

If you did not know; know it now that the leadership of Attilio Pacific – EU funds media houses, CSOs and NGOs here in Uganda to enable them go against the government as a way of spoiling it’s legitimacy, forgetting that your duty is not to jeopardize the tranquility of our country neither embroiling it into a state of political chaos!

So please European Union and the entire Diplomatic Quo, act in accordance to your obligations in the charters with the Independent Republic of Uganda, although you are so much interested in turning Uganda like Libya, Somalia, Afghanistan and Iraq among other similar countries as you are well aware!

The scale of democracies here is balancing with the changing societal strata unlike in your countries where it is contemporarily under quotes!

We are Africans and Ugandans who respect the heritage of our cultural values and norms and ready to protect the sanctity of our constitution on that aspect.

So whatever pressure you’ll implode on our legitimate NRM and Yoweri Kagutta Museveni government through NUP, Kyagulanyi and others, we as the majority Ugandans shall not decline neither reiterate our stand.

The African Charter helped to steer Africa from the age of human wrongs into a new age of human rights. It opened up Africa to supra-national accountability. The Charter sets standards and establishes the groundwork for the promotion and protection of human rights in Africa.

Since its adoption 30 years ago, the Charter has formed the basis for individuals to claim rights in an international forum. The Charter also dealt a blow to state sovereignty by emphasising that human rights violations could no longer be swept under the carpet of ‘internal affairs’.