There is no need to introduce to Ugandan men of letters who Mr John Nagenda is. Yet, since this publication is also read by non-Ugandans, a word or two about the gentleman is appropriate.
Nagenda is known more as a regular columnist in one of the Ugandan dailies, Saturday Vision. It is through his column that I also got to know him or rather about him.
Apparently, Mr Nagenda juggles as a regular columnist with his other important job: he is a Senior Adviser on Media and Public Relations to President Yoweri Museveni.
This venerable citizen of Uganda, who has impressed me as a man steeped in English literature as well as the history of Africa, later disappointed me with what appears to be a blind endorsement of every measure taken by Mr Museveni. That’s why I disagree with a description of his writing as “candid, compassionate, critical”, e.t.c by a BlogSpot Onemansweek.
Instead of criticising the heavy-handedness of the military and police against demonstrators during the Walk to Work protests, Nagenda described the people who were rightfully aggrieved as a “bunch of lumpens.”
He did not show outrage when another venerable citizen of Uganda was mercilessly roughed up in front of glaring cameras! Instead; he ridiculed the man on several occasions. Recently though, Nagenda caught everybody by surprise. In an extensive interview he gave to the Sunday Monitor, a newspaper he used to despise so much, he described his boss, Mr Museveni, as “autocratic.” Well, never too old to learn and never too late to turn.
Now, let us go to the other gentleman; Mr Argaw Ashine. Ashine is my fellow countryman, an Ethiopian who used to work in the state-owned media as a journalist. He somehow managed to extricate himself from the propaganda machinery of the state and joined the ever shrinking independent media.
He also secured a job as correspondent for the Kenyan-headquartered Nation Media Group and his stories have appeared in NMG publications such as Daily Nation of Kenya, The East African, Daily Monitor, Africa Review and The Citizen of Tanzania, in addition to being the chairman of the Ethiopian Environment Journalists Association.
Until recently-- except being Africans in the same business called media-- there is not much in common between Ashine and Nagenda. Yet, WikiLeaks, the whistleblower website changed all that and prompted me to compare the good fortune of one against the fate of another.
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