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Yoweri Museveni

Yoweri Kaguta Museveni Tibuhaburwa[a] (born 15 September 1944) is a Ugandan politician, military officer and revolutionary who is the ninth and current president of Uganda since 1986. His government is considered autocratic.

"Museveni" redirects here. For other people with the surname, see Museveni (surname).

Yoweri Museveni

Yoweri Kaguta Museveni Tibuhaburwa

(1944-09-15) 15 September 1944
Ntungamo, Uganda
(m. 1973)

4, including Muhoozi

Amos Kaguta (father) Esteri Kokundeka Nganzi (mother)

1971–present

Born in Ntungamo, Museveni studied political science from the University of Dar es Salaam where he initiated the University Students' African Revolutionary Front. In 1972, he participated in the abortive invasion of Uganda against the regime of President Idi Amin. The next year, Museveni established the Front for National Salvation and fought alongside Tanzanian forces in the Tanzania–Uganda War, which overthrew Amin. Museveni contested the subsequent 1980 general election on the platform of Uganda Patriotic Movement, though claimed electoral fraud after losing to the unpopular Milton Obote. Museveni unified the opposition under the National Resistance Movement and started the Ugandan Bush War. In January 1986, after the decisive Battle of Kampala, Museveni was sworn as president.


As president, Museveni suppressed the Ugandan insurgency and oversaw involvement in the Rwandan Civil War and the First Congo War. He ordered an intervention against the Lord's Resistance Army in an effort to halt their insurgency. His rule has been described by scholars as competitive authoritarianism, or illiberal democracy. The press has been under the authority of government. His presidency has been characterized by an upsurge in anti-gay legislation and activity and numerous constitutional amendments like the scrapping of presidential term and age limits in 2005 and 2017, respectively.


On 16 January 2021, Museveni was reelected to a sixth term with 58.6% of the vote, despite many videos and reports showing ballot box stuffing, over 400 polling stations with 100% voter turnout and human rights violations. As of 2022, after 36 years of his authoritarian rule, Uganda has been ranked 166th in GDP (nominal) per capita and 167th by Human Development Index.

Early life and education[edit]

Museveni was estimated to be born on 15 September 1944[3] to parents Mzee Amos Kaguta (1916–2013), a cattle keeper, and Esteri Kokundeka Nganzi (1918–2001), in Ntungamo. He is an ethnic Hima of the kingdom of Mpororo (now part of Ankole).[4][5]


According to Julius Nyerere, Museveni's father, Amos Kaguta, was a soldier in the King's African Rifles' 7th battalion during World War II. Yoweri was born, relatives used to say, "His father was a mu-seven" (meaning "in the seventh"). This is how he obtained the name Museveni.[6]


His family migrated to Ntungamo, then within the British Protectorate of Uganda. Museveni attended Kyamate Elementary School, Mbarara High School, and Ntare School for his primary and secondary education. He attended the University of Dar es Salaam in Tanzania for his tertiary education, where he studied economics and political science. The university at the time was a hot bed of radical pan-African and Marxist political thought. While at university, he formed the University Students' African Revolutionary Front student activist group and led a student delegation to FRELIMO-held territory in Portuguese Mozambique where they received military training. Studying under the leftist Walter Rodney, among others, Museveni wrote a university thesis on the applicability of Frantz Fanon's ideas on revolutionary violence to post-colonial Africa.[7]

Gen. – Born in 1974, General in the Uganda People's Defence Forces (UPDF)[137][138] in the UPDF[139][140]

Muhoozi Kainerugaba

Natasha Karugire – Born in 1976, Fashion designer and consultant. Married to Edwin Karugire. Private Secretary to the for Household Affairs.[141]

President of Uganda

Patience Rwabwogo – Born in 1978, pastor of Covenant Nations Church, Buziga, Kampala. Married to Odrek Rwabwogo.[143]

[142]

Diana Kamuntu – Born in 1980. Married to Geoffrey Kamuntu.

[144]

Museveni is an Anglican and a member of the Church of Uganda.


He is married to Janet Kataaha Museveni, née Kainembabazi, with whom he has four children:

 

 

 

Political parties of Uganda

Politics of Uganda

Tokyo International Conference on African Development

History of Uganda (1979–present)

Uganda Salvation Front

Henry Tumukunde

Avirgan, Tony; Honey, Martha (1983). War in Uganda: The Legacy of Idi Amin. Dar es Salaam: Tanzania Publishing House.  978-9976-1-0056-3.

ISBN

Media related to Yoweri Museveni at Wikimedia Commons

Quotations related to Yoweri Museveni at Wikiquote

Official website

State House official website