Deutsche Welle, 4 June 2013
Germany's
development minister Dirk Niebel has promised continuing support for Rwanda and
Uganda, despite concerns about corruption and human rights. Berlin will promote
selected projects and help with auditing.
Perhaps it
really was the visit of Germany's development minister Dirk Niebel that
prompted the authorities in Uganda to allow the country's most important
independent newspaper to resume publication. The police abandoned their
blockade of the Daily Monitor's premises on 30 May 2013 – the very day of
Niebel's arrival. They had shut down the paper ten days earlier because it had
published a letter casting the government in a highly unfavorable light.
Niebel's
visit to Rwanda and Uganda came to a close on Tuesday. The development
minister's visit came as relations between Germany and Uganda were going
through a difficult phase.
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| Staff from the Daily Monitor protesting against the paper's closure by the Ugandan authorities |
Six months
previously, Niebel had frozen direct budget aid to Uganda. The reasons were
corruption scandals and allegations, made in a UN report, that Uganda was
supporting rebels in the neighboring Democratic Republic of Congo and thereby
violating international law. Uganda's abysmal record on gay rights was also a
contributory factor. A draft bill in Uganda in 2012 intended to make homosexual
acts punishable by death.
Such
concerns were not swept to one side during this visit, even though Niebel did laud
Uganda as "an important partner in East Africa." He underlined at the
conclusion of bilateral talks that it was important "that the state
respects all human rights – the right to a free press, the right to free
assembly and the rights of minorities."
We are not
colonialists!
German aid
to Uganda will start flowing again – 120 million euros ($157 million) over
three years – though it will now be tied to specific projects. Instead of
direct budget aid, the two delegations agreed on assistance for Uganda's
Auditor General and finance ministry. Proper accounting and transparency were
essential for development, Niebel said.
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| Western nations have repeatedly criticized homophobia in Uganda |
The
decision to fund individual Ugandan institutions directly was a consequence of
reports of embezzlement on a large scale in Ugandan ministries. Uganda's
Auditor General, who will become a recipient of German aid, had contributed to
the exposure of the scandal.
But Niebel
stressed Germany was seeking just to help Uganda so it could develop its own
tools for the country's progress. "We are not colonialists," he told
the recently re-opened Daily Monitor.
Uganda was
one of the few remaining countries receiving direct budget aid from Germany
that was not linked to specific projects or sectors. Germany's opposition
parties consider the decision to abandon it counter-productive. Ute
Koczy,development spokesperson for the German Greens, said that direct aid
flows into the budgets of partner countries fostered independence and a sense
of responsibility.
Rwanda
feels reassured
Rwanda was
also pleased to be able to count on assistance from Germany once again – albeit
in a different form. Germany's ministry for co-operation and development had
decided back in February to convert suspended direct budget assistance into aid
tied to specific projects.
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| Rwanda's local government minister James Musoni says he received a promise of support from Niebel |
Germany was
one of several countries to halt assistance to Rwanda in the summer of 2012. A
panel of UN experts had reported that Rwanda was supporting the M23 rebels in
their conflict with government troops in the Democratic Republic of Congo
(DRC). Rwanda has repeatedly denied these allegations.
In the
coming Rwandan fiscal year, Germany intends to contribute seven million euros
for projects to promote decentralization. Rwanda's minister of local
government, James Musoni said that "after countries have recognized the
truth, the aid will flow again – Germany has made a good start!" He added
that Niebel had told him he would try and persuade other countries to
recommence aid to Rwanda.
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| Development minister Dirk Niebel is dropping direct budget aid in favor of assistance for selected projects |
In February
Rwanda was one of the signatories to a Great Lakes framework agreement on peace
and security in the DRC. Yet Rwanda's role in resolving the conflict is fraught
with difficulties. "Rwanda appears ready to negotiate, but is not prepared
make compromises," says Alex Viet at the Institute for Intercultural and
International Studies at the University of Bremen. The country has political,
security and economic interests in the DRC. Many observers believe that peace in
the DRC without the participation of Rwanda would be impossible. The rights
group Human Rights Watch warned in February that any loosening of sanctions
could send the wrong signal to Rwanda.





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