Crusher & Mill The New Vision - Uganda's Leading Website Easter Package

Sunday March 21, 2010 Discussion Board | Archive | Advertising | About Us | Staff | Contact Us  

THE NEW VISION |  BUKEDDE |  ORUMURI |  RUPINY |  ETOP |  SUNDAY VISION |  BUKEDDE KU SSANDE

FRONT PAGE
NATIONAL
EDITORIAL
COLUMNISTS
SPORT
WOMAN
BUSINESS VISION
HEALTH AND BEAUTY
EDUCATION
ENVIRONMENT
WEEKEND
HAVE YOU HEARD
CRAZY WORLD
BOOKS AND ART
SCIENCE AND TECH
RELATIONSHIPS
VISION STYLE
INTIMATE
GROOMING
ENTERTAINMENT
SOCIETY
HOMES
ESSENCE
TOTAL MAN
WOMAN ACHIEVER 2009
OUR COMMUNITY
WEDDINGS
COURT VERDICT
FROM MY HEART
ASK THE EXPERTS
TENDERS
NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTS
FOR SALE
JOBS NEW
Regional tier is not same as federalism
Wednesday, 21st December, 2005
E-mail article E-mail article   Print article Print article

SIR — An all-inclusive federal system is achievable. On the establishment of federalism in Uganda, the Movement government had the political capital to do so, but lost the golden opportunity to unite the country and to resolve the federo issue for good. The Movement waffled and pushed through some sort of half-baked federo also known as kifederofedero.

Now, the parties (CP, FDC and DP) are promising a much better arrangement — an all-inclusive federal system of governance. Under the regional tier, which the Movement government is offering, the regions are not allowed to write their own constitution, and, in the absence of taxation powers, are almost entirely dependent on central government transfers.

The tier is simply a modified decentralisation scheme — a top-down approach with the central government dictating the powers and operational limits of the regions hence turning the regions into mere agents of the centre.

The regional tier is clearly not federalism. If the regional tier is such a good thing why is it only being pushed in Buganda? Federalism is not complicated at all.

F. N. Lugemwa
Kampala

The Promota
Click
UNRA
Uganda Canvas
© Copyright The New Vision 2000-2010. All rights reserved.