"We shall manage you": Oil, NGOs and journalists in Uganda
- By Magnus Taylor
Posted on
<
http://africanarguments.org/2014/04/28/we-shall-manage-you-oil-ngos-and-jou
rnalists-in-uganda-by-magnus-taylor/> April 29, 2014
As part of a recent research trip to Kampala I spent some time tracking down
and talking to representatives of civil society and the media working on the
country's developing oil industry. Since oil was found in Uganda in 2006, at
which point the government predicted they would be producing by 2010, there
has been increasing engagement in the sector by a raft of non-government
organisations (NGOs). The overall objective of such organisations can be
simply expressed: that the exploitation of the resource takes place in an
effective and transparent manner and ordinary Ugandans benefit from this
natural resource windfall. A familiar goal for Africa's new oil producers.
East Africa, apart from Uganda's northern neighbour South Sudan, is new to
the oil game. Since Uganda announced its find in the Albertine Graben,
Tullow Oil (one of 3 players in Uganda) has also had success in Kenya's
Turkana Province which, <
http://allafrica.com/stories/201402190062.html> if
reports are to be believed, may produce before Uganda. Knowledgeable people
in Kampala now predict that Uganda's wells will not produce until around
2022. But the delay in Ugandan production is a different story, involving
accusations of
<
http://www.independent.co.ug/ugandatalks/2011/10/ugandan-top-ministers-took
-bribes-from-tullow-oil-%E2%80%93-parliament-told/> elite corruption and
well-documented wrangles over the
<
http://blogs.ft.com/beyond-brics/2014/02/10/uganda-and-oil-companies-everyo
ne-happy/> construction of a refinery, for a different day. The story I want
to tell is how those Ugandans who have not been the beneficiaries of the big
money deals view a resource which, in economically developing countries, is
often associated with the word 'curse'.
The way in which civil society organisations interact with government on the
question of oil also reveals something bigger about how government
approaches protest and views those who engage in organised dissent within
the country.
The first country people speak of when they talk about oil in Uganda is
often not Ugandan itself. It is Nigeria. Nigeria is Africa's biggest oil
producer and the country on whose history the presence of the continent's
oil is most obviously writ large. Unequal regional development, inequality,
environmental degradation and corruption can all be linked to oil, as can
the fact that the country now has officially the largest economy in Africa.
Oil is scary. But it also makes you rich.
Even if they wanted to, Ugandans could not wish away the reality of becoming
an oil producer. Instead, many have started working on how to educate both
the population and the political class on how they can best manage the
process of oil extraction. One Ugandan representative of a large
international NGO told me that "as much as possible we take this word 'oil'
and really explain". Understandably, almost everyone in Uganda has had to
come from a standing start as regards knowledge of how the industry works.
But my interviewee was positive in his assessment that his NGO (and others)
have made a significant contribution to both upstream and downstream laws.
They are regularly invited to consult on these matters by the legislature
and, due to this diligence and engagement, "we're getting more reformers
into the ministries".
A second representative of a Ugandan energy-focused NGO says that his
organisation's work with district leadership in the oil region, other NGOs
and MPs on oil, has been popular. MPs (with an eye for a junket) like the
fact that the NGO will organise (and pay for) meetings and trips up to the
oil region. He tells me that the NGO was also a pioneer in getting those
working on oil to get out of Kampala and visit the oil region. And this is
where problems for NGOs often start.
Powerful politicians in the leadership of the ruling National Resistance
Movement (NRM) are reasonably comfortable with NGOs operating as
'legislative consultants' in Kampala, but a source tells me: "you can
organise meetings in Kampala and the government will not care, but if you do
it in the communities they do." He has first hand experience of this, having
recently been summoned to the Ministry of Internal Affairs, headed by the
powerful General Aronda, whose security officials warned him that "we shall
manage you."
My source predicts that things are only likely to get harder operationally
for NGOs operating in Uganda: "the government is going to do everything to
make it extremely difficult for us to operate."
And in anticipation of this, self censorship from people working in this
sector is clearly already being practised. Another NGO (Africa Institute for
Energy Governance) now plans to represent 86 people, from a total of 7,000,
who were recently compelled to move from their houses on the future site of
the country's yet-be-constructed oil refinery. These 86 refused the
compensation that the government offered, deeming it too small. But I am
told that law firms are reluctant to take on the case for fear of opposing
government plans on this particular matter.
A third representative from a different NGO tells me that, despite the work
of civil society, the current trend in Uganda as regards the oil industry in
not towards transparency and accountability. This particular NGO does much
of its work with local communities, often through religious leaders, who
have a unique connection with their communities. And the communities are
generally quite receptive to the NGOs because "the NGOs are speaking a
language they understand" and listen to their grievances. They also "know
what kind of people we are dealing with" (the government) from long
experience.
Outside of the NGO sector Uganda's vibrant but underfunded media sector has
also shown great interest in the oil story. Several journalists have styled
themselves as focusing on the oil industry. Angelo Izama,
<
http://africanarguments.org/2014/03/04/is-yoweri-museveni-still-the-wests-m
an-in-africa-by-angelo-izama/> a current writer for African Arguments, is
probably the most high profile of these. Izama, an Open Society fellow, also
ran a small human security think tank, Fanaka Kwawote, which took as part of
its focus, the nascent Ugandan oil industry.
Izama, perhaps uniquely,
<
http://www.angeloizama.com/angelo-opi-aiya-izama/2013/12/30/a-centenary-of-
oil-exploration-in-uganda-1913-2013-a-series> positions the "take-off point"
of the history of oil extraction in Uganda as being 1913, not as is usually
accepted, 2006. In short, the potential for Uganda to become an oil producer
has been known since the colonial period, but as Izama argues, violent
political conflict during the independence period has, until now, delayed
oil production in Uganda.
Whilst such extreme conflict in Uganda now seems more like an historical
fact than a contemporary reality (the greatest triumph of the Museveni era),
the state of the country's politics continues to shape the way in which
development of the resource is taking place. Izama's own assessment is that
2 parallel processes are currently unfolding in Uganda: one is political
(the transition from the Museveni era), the second is towards an oil and
mineral based economy. But, due to years of highly concentrated power in the
hands of the NRM elite, the country's institutions and legislative
arrangements "are insufficient by themselves to prevent the traditional
risks posed by oil production" (the Nigeria model). In short, "we are all
headed for a train wreck unless we do something now."
This chimes with what dissident cleric 'Bishop Zac' (a high-profile
opposition figure working with former FDC leader Kizza Besigye)
<
http://africanarguments.org/2014/03/28/ugandas-constituency-of-one-museveni
-faces-challenges-from-within-and-without-by-magnus-taylor/> told me in an
interview: "you can't build institutions while Museveni is still in power -
he is the institution."
Another journalist tells me that "oil is not easy news; they don't just have
a press conference." As a journalist it is often difficult to get good
sources and people, particularly in government, are afraid to talk on
record. Ministers generally only give very basic comments. In journalism,
just like the NGO sector, you have to battle to make progress against people
who would rather you left them alone. Before I arrived in Uganda I was
warned by a representative of a big international NGO that if I tried to
visit the oil region I should "exercise caution" as "I might be arrested".
This view was, however, largely countered by Ugandan journalists and
NGO-ers, who do visit frequently - mostly without too much trouble.
Uganda is, in many ways, learning how to be an oil producer. This is a
challenge for all its institutions, including non-governmental organisations
and the media too. With the latter two sectors (the people I met on this
trip) there is the definite sense that a fast learning-process has taken
place over the last few years. But they remain in a tough place, with great
push-back from the more powerful institutions of government and the security
services.
Magnus Taylor is editor of African Arguments.
Received on Tue Apr 29 2014 - 16:38:50 EDT