The social media exhibition is a citizens’ right to participation in government affairs
By Michael Aboneka
One of the
cornerstones for democracy is public participation. Public participation is the
golden thread in the thread of accountability. Article 1, 29, 38 and 52 of the
Constitution of Uganda guarantees the right of citizens to express their opinion as
well as participate in the affairs of government as individuals or through
association. Holding leaders to account is a key principle of democratic
governance to which Uganda subscribes to and that it must guarantee and uphold
these rights at all times. Further, Uganda is signatory to several
international and regional legal instruments such as the International Covenant
on civil political rights (ICCPR), African charter on human rights, African
Charter on Democracy Elections and Good governance which all enjoin Uganda to
protect, promote and guarantee the freedom of expression and public
participation of its citizens.
The recent
exhibition is not new; we have over the past protested, presented petitions,
lodged complaints to our leaders but all in vain. The recent gesture by Dr.
Spire Sentongo to rally citizens to Exhibit the state of roads and now the
state of our health care system is commendable, for it is buttressing the
principle of accountability and public participation. One of the enigmas we
have suffered for long is a non-responsive government where demands are made
and no feedback is given at all and if you are lucky, the usual rhetoric of “no
budget for this and that” will be the only response. As citizens, we give
government power and taxes and what we expect is adequate and efficient service
delivery in all sectors and a prudent government is one that listens to its
citizens and acts upon their demands.
The
exhibition(s) of the state of our public services from the Entebbe
international Airport, to potholes in Kampala have yielded results with the
President ordering for a supplementary budget to KCCA to fix the potholes. One
wonders if this mass citizen action wasn’t taken what would be the state of our
facilities. It is the duty of every citizen to hold their leader accountable
and also participate in the affairs of their country. Despite the illegal
closure of Facebook, which is 3 years ever since; Ugandans have built
resilience and used all avenues available to express their dissatisfactions and
approvals. According to Datareportal 2023, there are over 4.76Billion people on
social media and 2.05 million Ugandans and 20.16 million mobile connections in
Uganda and it is will be foolhardy for any leader to ignore those voices
because they are not limited to Uganda alone but to billions of people in the
world. The best for the leader to do is to receive feedback, take it in good
faith and act upon the situation(s). I have seen many government officials
spending a lot of time planning how to counteract citizens’ voices. This is
itself self-defeating and unfortunate-for a pro-people government as it is
described, listening to citizens is an expectation. Government officials should
take this as an opportunity for constructive feedback and even when the feedback
cuts through the skin, it is also oke; for it’s for the betterment of our
society.
What
government leaders must do is to receive this feedback and treat it as free
citizen monitoring and evaluation exercise to which instant results are
published on daily basis. It will be unfortunate and undemocratic for
government to start planning on how thwart citizens’ efforts and even if this
is done, the resilience that citizens have built will lead them to new avenues
of innovation and we shall still go on with the exhibition.
In the spirit
of love for the country, the citizen exhibition should be a daily activity
where every public sector is monitored and evaluated for action to be done. As
citizens, it is our right to demand for accountability from those we entrusted
our country with-this might be the only noble thing you can ever do for your
country. Let us continue with daily exhibitions of all the public sectors until
our voices are heard and acted upon-for it is our right and the government must
protect this right and also provide feedback, for we are doing this for the
love of our country!
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