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MUSEVENI’S DIGITAL SHACKLES: INTERNET BLACKOUTS FOREGONE

by Writer
August 4, 2024
in Featured, Opinions, Politics, Uganda
Museveni’s desperation for survival in the digital age has reached such a pathetic low that he can no longer afford the luxury of an internet blackout. Image maybe subject to copyright.

Museveni’s desperation for survival in the digital age has reached such a pathetic low that he can no longer afford the luxury of an internet blackout. Image maybe subject to copyright.

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The recent anti-corruption protests in Kampala, dubbed the “March to Parliament,” have once again exposed the crumbling facade of internet freedom under President Yoweri Museveni’s despotic rule. Historically, Museveni’s regime has not hesitated to cut off Uganda from the digital world during periods of political unrest, using the infamous 2021 general elections shutdown as a tyrannical tool to silence dissent and muzzle the truth.

However, Kira Municipality MP Ibrahim Ssemujju Nganda, a relentless critic of Museveni’s brutal reign, suggests that the dictator’s iron grip on the internet may be loosening. Nganda, whose voice resonates with the frustrations of a nation strangled by decades of oppression, contends that Museveni’s desperation for survival in the digital age has reached such a pathetic low that he can no longer afford the luxury of an internet blackout. The same man who once wielded internet shutdowns with the ruthless efficiency of a guillotine now finds himself ensnared in a digital labyrinth of his own making.

Nganda’s analysis shatters the veneer of control that Museveni has long projected. On one side, the regime quakes in fear of the internet’s power to organize dissent and expose government atrocities. The “March to Parliament” was a damning demonstration of how social media can galvanize a populace against a tyrant. On the other side, Museveni’s decrepit regime clings to the internet like a crutch, relying on a sordid army of state-sponsored trolls and liars to poison public discourse and drown out the cries for freedom.

This shift in tactics is not a mark of evolution, but of desperation. Museveni’s government, too terrified to face the backlash of another blackout, opts for the more insidious route of digital warfare. By flooding social media with venomous propaganda and orchestrating vile misinformation campaigns, the regime seeks to tighten its stranglehold on the narrative while avoiding the outrage that would accompany another blatant act of censorship.

Nganda’s assertion that Museveni “needs [social media] for his survival” is a scathing indictment of a dictator on his last legs. It lays bare the regime’s crumbling foundation, revealing a leader whose terror of irrelevance in the digital age has driven him to embrace the very tools he once sought to crush. Museveni’s abandonment of internet blackouts is not a sign of restraint, but a damning testament to his cowardice and his fear of facing a nation that is increasingly aware of his impotence. The president’s pitiful reliance on the very platforms he once demonized exposes the rot at the heart of his regime, revealing a despot clinging to power by the thinnest of threads, haunted by the specter of his own demise.

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