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 UgandaNew President Brings New HopeThe National Resistance Army (NRA), an anti-Obote group led by Yoweri
Museveni, kept fighting after it had been excluded from the new regime. It
seized Kampala on Jan. 29, 1986, and Museveni was declared president.
Museveni has transformed the ruins of Idi Amin and Milton Obote's Uganda
into an economic miracle, preaching a philosophy of self-sufficiency and
anti-corruption. Western countries have flocked to assist him in the
country's transformation. Nevertheless, it remains one of Africa's poorest
countries. A ban on political parties was lifted in 1996, and the
incumbent Museveni won 72% of the vote, reflecting his popularity due to
the country's economic recovery.
Uganda has waged an enormously successful campaign against AIDS,
dramatically reducing the rate of new infections through an intensive
public health and education campaign. Museveni won reelection in March
2001 with 70% of the vote, following a nasty and spirited campaign.
Close ties with Rwanda (many Rwandan Tutsi exiles helped Museveni come
to power) led to the cooperation of Uganda and Rwanda in the ousting of
Zaire's Mobutu Sese Seko in 1997, and a year later, in efforts to unseat
his successor, Laurent Kabila, whom both countries originally supported
but from whom they grew estranged. But in 1999, Uganda and Rwanda
quarreled over strategy in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and began
fighting each other. The two countries mended their differences in 2002.
Uganda also signed a peace accord with the Congo in Sept. 2002 and finally
withdrew its remaining troops from the country in May 2003.
In July 2005, parliament amended the constitution to eliminate term
limits, thus allowing President Museveni another term in office. In
August, a multi-party political system was reinstituted after a 19-year
absence. In Feb. 2006, Museveni was reelected with 59% of the vote.
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