This man exposing his failures. He has been in leadership for over a century yet has never made swahili a major language in Uganda. Swahili is major in Kenya and Tanzania only Uganda fails EAC
Don't blame him. He has known all along that it would be futile to impose Swahili upon us in Uganda and that he would be met with stiff resistance. Now that he is trying, he is getting the backlash. That Swahili is not a "major" language in Uganda should not surprise you at all. We have our indigenous languages to develop and promote, instead of entertaining any other foreign language apart from English. We have always done so. One foreign language is enough. If you wish to neglect your indigenous languages in Kenya and Tanzania, opting for some foreign language, that is up to you. Language is culture and so, a lost language is a lost culture. No one in Uganda will suffer the consequences but you.
He is a product of the environment he found himself in ... And on average he has done a relatively good job of it. Compare him to previous Presidents who came before him IN THE SAME COUNTRY.
@@apolokaggwa7619... Swahili is a foreign language. But at least it's a local foreign language that no one can claim to own. Putting English above the other languages messes with our self identity, because it's an acknowledgement that the colonisers still have strong influence on us.
@@wayando If you have read my commentary and understood it, you would not claim that I am "putting English above the other languages" at all. Rather, I stand by my commentary that Swahili is a foreign language not indigenous to Uganda and so, there is no reason at all for anyone to impose it upon us. I have also stated that English, which is a foreign language is enough. That does not imply any "influence" of any kind. It simply means that we will eventually be phasing it out as our official language. Now the debate is underway as to why we should, and that Luganda should be the replacement. Don't be surprised when one day Luganda is the sole official language of Uganda, having replaced English, even though both of them are now acknowledged as such. Hence, Swahili being a "local foreign language" in Kenya and Tanzania does not make it so in Uganda. We have our own indigenous languages to develop and promote instead of Swahili, Luganda being the most popular of them all.
@@apolokaggwa7619 ... Okay. Seems Kenyans are delusional to think the EAC is a common objective among the 3 main countries. From your words, I think the implications is that Uganda wouldn't be bothered with what goes on outside it's borders. As opposed to Kenyans who seem to believe that integration is all but inevitable.
Your not informed. He lived and studied in Tanzania and speaks more Swahili than your self. The official language for the Ugandan Army is Swahili. Jielimishe!
@@kchewere8916 studying in Tanzanian proves him wrong, to have wasted his money yet never heard him speak or Finnish a sentence in swahili 😂😂. Funny how you say swahili is an official language when no subject as swahili in their curricullum, we see who is to jielimishe 😂
That is a blatant absolute lie and indeed a fallacy. Swahili may be "a common language" in neighbouring Kenya and Tanzania, but it has never been "a common language " at all in Uganda, where it has been rejected for over 100 years! Hardly anyone speaks Swahili in Uganda since it is a foreign language and not one of our indigenous languages. Pandering to the Kenyan audience by pretending that it is "a common language" in Uganda does not make it so. Nor is Swahili an "official" language of Uganda at all. The imposition of Swahili upon us in Uganda by force, will be resisted at every turn, until that policy by the dictator of Uganda has been reversed. It is only a matter of time. A language can only be "common" if the people themselves decide that it should be, which is what has happened to the Luganda language in Uganda. It has organically become the lingua franca, the language of commerce, entertainment and now government as well. In fact, Luganda is spoken and understood by an estimated 75% to 80% of the people of Uganda, or an average of 38 million of the entire 49 million population of the country. There is no other indigenous language in Uganda that can make that claim, including the language of his tiny Bahima population in the western Uganda jurisdiction of Ankole. Hence, Luganda has been elevated to national status, to be taught in all our institutions of learning in the country, according to the Ministry of Education policy directive. That was inevitable, given how popular it is throughout the country. Of course, the dictator of Uganda and the rest of the population who are not Baganda resent this a great deal since their indigenous languages have no chance against the Luganda language. Even though the dictator of Uganda has decided that Swahili should be compulsory in our schools, hardly any of them in Uganda have complied simply because they don't see any reason why. Therefore, do not be fooled by what the dictator of Uganda says. Our neighbours may "have" Swahili as "a common language" in those countries, but in Uganda the "common" languages are Luganda and English and nothing else.
Why are you contradicting yourself? You clearly mentioned it is compulsory in school yet you keep insisting on your Luganda language which is only spoken in Central Uganda. Actually, you are only showing that your Luganda is superior than Lunyankole or Luhima. Stop madness and elevate your mind! Maybe wait for your Luganda to be Africa's continental language😢😢😢
@@cadeauheritier980 Actually, I am not. A language cannot be imposed on anyone, including the dictator of Uganda. It can only be accepted by the people as matter of their culture. Had that been the case, English, a European language, which has been taught in our schools for well over 100 years, would have overtaken our indigenous languages to the extent of replacing them as the mother language. But it has never happened anywhere in Uganda or any other African country, even though all Africans today are bi-lingual, as a result of the European incursion into the continent in the last 100 years. Hence, declaring that Swahili should be "compulsory in school" does not make it so. No one has complied with it simply because there is no reason to do so. You are absolutely wrong about the Luganda language. It is not only the indigenous language of the Kingdom of Buganda, which you like to call "Central Uganda," but it is also the only indigenous language of Uganda spoken and understood by the rest of the country. There is no other indigenous language in Uganda that can claim that, including yours if you are not from Buganda. Therefore, no matter how much the popularity of Luganda throughout the country is resented by the non-Baganda, including the dictator of Uganda, there is nothing they can do about it, short of trying to impose upon us a foreign language such as Swahili. It will never catch on, no matter what the dictator of Uganda does.
@@softymoha5484 ni jambo gani la maana ambalo amewafanyia ndugu zetu wa Uganda katika miaka yake zaidi ya ishirini na tano uongozini ila kujinufaisha tu?Uganda ni mojawapo ya nchi maskini zaidi duniani naye Museveni ni mojawapo ya watu tajiri zaidi afrika mashariki. Mwenye macho haambiwi tazama ndugu
Africa needs to Listen to this man. Wisdom Pouring out!
Nonsense
No one like museven much love
This Mzee always makes sense. No useless written speeches. But on point and precision thinking.
Wisdom comes with age.
Hongera museveni kupongeza lugha yetu...
He should make Swahili more integrated into Uganda
Wiseman.thanks for your words
......"When they meet in Brussels, they can't talk" 😂😂😂😂
DONT LIE MUSEVENI TALKS, LOOK FOR ALL OF HIS SPEECHES
President Museveni a well seasoned leader.
Cudoos : Africa heros Gaddafi, kagame, suluhu, salvakir, ramaphosa, Africa Moja.
This man exposing his failures. He has been in leadership for over a century yet has never made swahili a major language in Uganda. Swahili is major in Kenya and Tanzania only Uganda fails EAC
Don't blame him. He has known all along that it would be futile to impose Swahili upon us in Uganda and that he would be met with stiff resistance. Now that he is trying, he is getting the backlash. That Swahili is not a "major" language in Uganda should not surprise you at all. We have our indigenous languages to develop and promote, instead of entertaining any other foreign language apart from English. We have always done so. One foreign language is enough. If you wish to neglect your indigenous languages in Kenya and Tanzania, opting for some foreign language, that is up to you. Language is culture and so, a lost language is a lost culture. No one in Uganda will suffer the consequences but you.
He is a product of the environment he found himself in ... And on average he has done a relatively good job of it.
Compare him to previous Presidents who came before him IN THE SAME COUNTRY.
@@apolokaggwa7619... Swahili is a foreign language. But at least it's a local foreign language that no one can claim to own.
Putting English above the other languages messes with our self identity, because it's an acknowledgement that the colonisers still have strong influence on us.
@@wayando If you have read my commentary and understood it, you would not claim that I am "putting English above the other languages" at all. Rather, I stand by my commentary that Swahili is a foreign language not indigenous to Uganda and so, there is no reason at all for anyone to impose it upon us. I have also stated that English, which is a foreign language is enough. That does not imply any "influence" of any kind. It simply means that we will eventually be phasing it out as our official language. Now the debate is underway as to why we should, and that Luganda should be the replacement. Don't be surprised when one day Luganda is the sole official language of Uganda, having replaced English, even though both of them are now acknowledged as such. Hence, Swahili being a "local foreign language" in Kenya and Tanzania does not make it so in Uganda. We have our own indigenous languages to develop and promote instead of Swahili, Luganda being the most popular of them all.
@@apolokaggwa7619 ... Okay. Seems Kenyans are delusional to think the EAC is a common objective among the 3 main countries.
From your words, I think the implications is that Uganda wouldn't be bothered with what goes on outside it's borders.
As opposed to Kenyans who seem to believe that integration is all but inevitable.
Well said mheshimiwa
Thats a deep composition only the wise can understand
Mnipitieko leo tafasali nafanyako comedy 😂😂
Gen Z hawaelewi hii mambo yoohhhh💀🇰🇪‼️
Kenyans we need a leader like museven,he may be seems like analogue,but he is good
This luos of Kisumu came from south Sudan to throw stones in Kenya
😂
😂😂 we mzee
Show me a City/ town in Rift valley and central Kenya more developed than Kisumu.
Kwamboka, all my way to Uganda, natoroka taxes
Watu wamoja
nampenda huyu baba museveni....yuko na hekima
Kwamboka batonyarire,😂
museveni tena ni mukisii😂😂
M7 funny, smart and wise as usually.
Naomba mnipitieko tafasali nafanyako comedy 😂
Museveni is wise
dikteta
Did I heer my friend his Excellency Raila Odinga
Karisa Giryama
Umekuja Kenya kuambia Ruto afinye tax juu Zaidi
Alaf wakenya hapa tunajivunia lugha za wakoloni... kiswahili ndio tiba hapa east Africa....
Please look for a debate by the British parliament on the Uganda anti homosexual bill
Swahili connects you to East Africa, English to the whole world.
@@peterburale6774 unaambia nani sasa, worry abt east Africa...why don't developed countries bother with english like us poor people...
@@peterburale6774 and we need both
Pongezi Kwako Mzee wetu
But Museveni why don't u add kiswahili in Uganda curriculum aint u being hypocritical sir?
It's funny how he praises swahili yet he can't finish a statement or sentence on swahili 😂😂
Your not informed. He lived and studied in Tanzania and speaks more Swahili than your self. The official language for the Ugandan Army is Swahili. Jielimishe!
These are the NUP guys.
@@Christopher-borison apparently NUP is working with UK to fight the anti homosexuality bill in Uganda
@@kchewere8916 studying in Tanzanian proves him wrong, to have wasted his money yet never heard him speak or Finnish a sentence in swahili 😂😂.
Funny how you say swahili is an official language when no subject as swahili in their curricullum, we see who is to jielimishe 😂
@@nadearsmile9675 tafathali tumia mtandao kujielimisha. Usije hapa kujiaibisha. Luga ya Kiswahahili inafunzwa kwa shule za Uganda.
That is a blatant absolute lie and indeed a fallacy. Swahili may be "a common language" in neighbouring Kenya and Tanzania, but it has never been "a common language " at all in Uganda, where it has been rejected for over 100 years! Hardly anyone speaks Swahili in Uganda since it is a foreign language and not one of our indigenous languages. Pandering to the Kenyan audience by pretending that it is "a common language" in Uganda does not make it so. Nor is Swahili an "official" language of Uganda at all. The imposition of Swahili upon us in Uganda by force, will be resisted at every turn, until that policy by the dictator of Uganda has been reversed. It is only a matter of time.
A language can only be "common" if the people themselves decide that it should be, which is what has happened to the Luganda language in Uganda. It has organically become the lingua franca, the language of commerce, entertainment and now government as well. In fact, Luganda is spoken and understood by an estimated 75% to 80% of the people of Uganda, or an average of 38 million of the entire 49 million population of the country. There is no other indigenous language in Uganda that can make that claim, including the language of his tiny Bahima population in the western Uganda jurisdiction of Ankole.
Hence, Luganda has been elevated to national status, to be taught in all our institutions of learning in the country, according to the Ministry of Education policy directive. That was inevitable, given how popular it is throughout the country. Of course, the dictator of Uganda and the rest of the population who are not Baganda resent this a great deal since their indigenous languages have no chance against the Luganda language. Even though the dictator of Uganda has decided that Swahili should be compulsory in our schools, hardly any of them in Uganda have complied simply because they don't see any reason why. Therefore, do not be fooled by what the dictator of Uganda says. Our neighbours may "have" Swahili as "a common language" in those countries, but in Uganda the "common" languages are Luganda and English and nothing else.
Dementia
If I'm not mistaken you've never lived in any other region of Uganda but Central, and therefore think that's UG in summary.
Boss, am Kenyan and Kiswahili is being taught in Ugandan schools in secondary.
Why are you contradicting yourself? You clearly mentioned it is compulsory in school yet you keep insisting on your Luganda language which is only spoken in Central Uganda.
Actually, you are only showing that your Luganda is superior than Lunyankole or Luhima. Stop madness and elevate your mind!
Maybe wait for your Luganda to be Africa's continental language😢😢😢
@@cadeauheritier980 Actually, I am not. A language cannot be imposed on anyone, including the dictator of Uganda. It can only be accepted by the people as matter of their culture. Had that been the case, English, a European language, which has been taught in our schools for well over 100 years, would have overtaken our indigenous languages to the extent of replacing them as the mother language. But it has never happened anywhere in Uganda or any other African country, even though all Africans today are bi-lingual, as a result of the European incursion into the continent in the last 100 years.
Hence, declaring that Swahili should be "compulsory in school" does not make it so. No one has complied with it simply because there is no reason to do so. You are absolutely wrong about the Luganda language. It is not only the indigenous language of the Kingdom of Buganda, which you like to call "Central Uganda," but it is also the only indigenous language of Uganda spoken and understood by the rest of the country. There is no other indigenous language in Uganda that can claim that, including yours if you are not from Buganda.
Therefore, no matter how much the popularity of Luganda throughout the country is resented by the non-Baganda, including the dictator of Uganda, there is nothing they can do about it, short of trying to impose upon us a foreign language such as Swahili. It will never catch on, no matter what the dictator of Uganda does.
Shameless tyrant talking about undugu😆
He is liked by Ugandans
kama ulizaliwa juzi huwejuwa huyu mzee...na inchi ya Uganda....
@@softymoha5484 ni jambo gani la maana ambalo amewafanyia ndugu zetu wa Uganda katika miaka yake zaidi ya ishirini na tano uongozini ila kujinufaisha tu?Uganda ni mojawapo ya nchi maskini zaidi duniani naye Museveni ni mojawapo ya watu tajiri zaidi afrika mashariki. Mwenye macho haambiwi tazama ndugu
@@Watt-er8or Stockholm syndrome
@@victorkamau8629... He is a dictator. But we can't deny that he stabilized Uganda, and ended the chain of coups.
Then why talking English talk swahili😅
JUST UNDERSTAND WHAT HE MEANS, SWAHILI IS ALL OVER EASTAFRICA.
NOT HATRED
Ugandan are tired of you