Spectacle Of Idi Amin
The emergence and fall of famous heroes and villains is a key feature of world
history. The cheers and condemnations of the past resound through the
passageways of time. Idi Amin, who was simultaneously praised and condemned, a
hero and a villain, was merged into the contradiction of heroic evil. He
represented despotism as a villain. Thousands of thousands of his countrymen
perished during his tyranny. Amin has four connotations for Africa and the Third
World as a hero. In terms of the economy, he sought to combat reliance on
outside sources and foreign dominance. In terms of culture, he represented a
reaffirmation of cultural authenticity.
For better or worse, he encouraged Africans' cultural self-discovery.
Politically, Amin frequently rebelled against the 20th-century power system that
was dominated by the north. He poked fun of the powerful and occasionally aided
in boosting the confidence of Third World soldiers. Amin represented a morally
fundamental balancing act between the nationalistic interests of most of the
Third World and the liberal values of the west. Before we study the dialectical
irregularities of Amin's heroism, let's first look at Amin the villain.
Autocracy Versus Anarchy
The old contrast between tyranny and anarchy must be kept in mind. How much of
Uganda's suffering between 1971 and April 1979 was brought on by Idi Amin's
tyranny? How much of it was a result of pure anarchy and the breakdown of norms?
Anarchy is decentralized violence, while tyranny involves force that is directed
centrally. The two procedures might support one another. Governments that are
afraid of what they perceive to be anarchic trends may become more repressive.
On the other side, organizations that are unsatisfied with a government's
credentials and refuse to recognize its legitimacy risk destabilizing society.
Thirdly, there is the danger that certain groups will increase the level of
arbitrariness and insecurity in society by taking advantage of either
governmental inefficiency or a widespread decline in morality. Every Third World
nation strikes a different balance between despotism and anarchy. Because of Idi
Amin's flamboyant personality and ability to garner global attention, the
authoritarian aspect of Uganda under Amin received by far the most media
attention.
But, by 1977, Uganda had turned into a situation that exemplified both
deliberate authoritarianism and pure decentralized brutality. This does not
refute the argument that many of the more well-known killings were certainly
centrally planned and frequently started by Field Marshal Idi Amin himself. The
murder of Chief Justice Kiwanuka in 1972, the murder of Vice Chancellor Kalimuzo
of Makerere University in the same year, and the murder of Archbishop Luwum in
1977 along with two cabinet ministers, were almost certainly ordered by Idi Amin
himself.
The Inviolable and the Profane
There was a third issue in the Ugandan context, one of separating the religious
from the secular, in addition to the issues of separating fact from fiction and
dictatorship from anarchy. In what ways did Idi Amin's actions reflect Islam?
How important is religion in comprehending the larger social dynamics in Uganda?
The importance of religion in politics has been widely discussed by observers.
Some of those commentators appear to have forgotten that just a small fraction
of Ugandan Muslims is actually Nubia, Kakwa, or from Sudan, the three
intertwining communities that were meant to be the foundation of Amin's rule.
Most Muslims in Uganda don't fit into any of these three groups. Are these
scholars right to attribute a significant part of the tensions and brutality in
Uganda under Amin on religion? In this case, a comparison viewpoint is
necessary. While Muslims and Christians in Uganda have been 'confronting' each
other, what has been going on elsewhere in Africa in terms of religion?
The month of February 1977 witnessed two highly publicized acts of brutality
reportedly committed by Africans against the clergy. First came the news that
seven white Roman Catholic missionaries including four nuns, had been gunned
down in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia. The sole survivor, Father Dunston Myerscough, 65
years old, was convinced that the murderers were African nationalist guerrillas.
The second event less than two weeks later was indeed the murder of the Most
Reverend Janani Luwum, Anglican Archbishop of Uganda, while in custody under the
charge of plotting to overthrow the government of President Amin. The government
claimed that the archbishop and two of Amin's own Cabinet Ministers under a
similar charge were killed in a car crash, but most of the world was
understandably skeptical. In the case of the murder of the seven missionaries in
Zimbabwe, it was assumed that they died as casualties of a racial war - rather
than as martyrs in a religious crusade.
But in the case of the Ugandan Archbishop, the world jumped to the conclusion
that he was a martyr to his faith as a Christian. Was the world justified in
assuming that Archbishop Luwum died for religious reasons? In contemporary
Africa, tensions between religious groups are never purely religious. Religious
tensions are usually an aspect of either ideological conflict between militants
and moderates (as in parts of Ethiopia), racial conflict between white and black
(as in Southern Africa), ethno-cultural conflict between different African
tribes and communities (as in Uganda), or class conflict between the haves and
have-nots (as illustrated in virtually all cases). publicized acts of brutality
reportedly committed by Africans against the clergy First came the news that
seven white Roman Catholic missionaries including four nuns, had been gunned
down in Zimbabwe-Rhodesia. The sole survivor, Father Dunston Myerscough, 65
years old, was convinced that the murderers were African nationalist guerrillas.
The second event less than two weeks later was indeed the murder of the Most
Reverend Janani Luwum, Anglican Archbishop of Uganda, while in custody under the
charge of plotting to overthrow the government of President Amin. The government
claimed that the archbishop and two of Amin's own Cabinet Ministers under a
similar charge were killed in a car crash, but most of the world was
understandably skeptical. In the case of the murder of the seven missionaries in
Zimbabwe, it was assumed that they died a casualty of a racial war rather than
as martyrs in a religious crusade. But in the case of the Ugandan Archbishop,
the world jumped to the conclusion that he was a martyr to his faith as a
Christian.
Was the world justified in assuming that Archbishop Luwum died for religious
reasons? In contemporary Africa, tensions between religious groups are never
purely religious. Religious tensions are usually an aspect of either ideological
conflict between militants and moderates (as in parts of Ethiopia), racial
conflict between white and black (as in Southern Africa), ethno-cultural
conflict between different African tribes and communities (as in Uganda), or
class conflict between the haves and have-nots (as illustrated in virtually all
cases).
Amin's Hopeful Prospect
However, there is a silver lining in the story of someone like Idi Amin. No one
could have been completely evil who captured the imagination of so many millions
of oppressed people in many regions of the world. Amin was a towering symbol of
na�ve but valiant opposition against the world's strong powers for at least the
first few years of his rule. He represented the disadvantaged fighting the
powerful and the semiliterate opposing the pretenses of sophistication.
However, this same Amin was one of the 1970s' most violent leaders. He was
undoubtedly Uganda's villain, on the one hand; he appeared to have ascended to
become a Third World hero.
The 'New International Moral Order':
What did this teach us? Was there really a moral divide between the
industrialized and developed nations of Europe, North America, and Japan on the
one hand, and the underdeveloped nations of the rest of Asia, Africa, and Latin
America on the other? Of course, it would be false to imply that the Third World
supported Amin's atrocities against his own people. What needs more explaining
is the ambivalence of the Third World about Idi Amin, rather than any
unqualified approval of him. Much of the West was quite clear in its verdict -
the man was evil and should disappear from the scene as soon as possible.
For much of the Third World Idi Amin, at least for part of his period in office,
was not a case of unmitigated evil. He had that profoundly dialectical quality
of heroic evil. And whether one applauded the heroism or lamented or denounced
the evil depended upon one's priorities. In other words, Amin had more of an
impact on foreign than internal issues during the 1970s.
The degree to which the Third World was occasionally willing to overlook his
domestic excesses so long as he continued to oppose the powerful was symptomatic
of a significant moral divide between the southern hemisphere of the exploited
and impoverished and the northern hemisphere of the wealthy. President Carter
came to power in the US nearly six years after Amin seized control of Uganda.
Carter made the decision to take on a more moral role in the North. He declared
to be on a global crusade for human rights in many parts of the world.
On the one hand, it turned out to be a continuation of the ideological conflict
between the Soviet Union and the West; however, Carter led a more positive,
normative crusade in favor of civil liberties, the satisfaction of fundamental
human needs, and the promotion of liberal values and compassion rather than
simply declaring himself to be anti-communist, as the America of John Foster
Dulles tended to do.
Carter's plan certainly had North-South consequences that affected southern
leaders like Idi Amin. Before drawing broader conclusions about these two
leaders' importance for the "New International Moral Order," let's first take a
deeper comparison look at them.
Western Hegemony�s Demise
The role of Amin helped to erode the legitimacy of western hegemony by
challenging it and defying it in a variety of ways. The myth of western
invincibility was receiving severe knocks from Amin's sustained strategy of
irreverence. The biggest act of defiance remained the expulsion of British
Asians and the nationalization of some British firms and property. But there
were other instances of calculated impertinence whose total effect amounted to
the gradual erosion of the western mystique.
He repeatedly disregarded diplomatic procedure. In 1973, against the backdrop of
the October War in the Middle East, he could send a cable to Prime Minister
Golda Meir ordering her to pull up her underpants and another to President
Richard Nixon wishing him a swift recovery from the Watergate scandal. Amin
tried to bring in new defiant myths of black assertiveness while trying to ram
certain outdated imperial beliefs through the exit door by turning the entire
world into a stage.
Rudyard Kipling and his idea of the White Man's Burden were made fun of in his
widely circulated photograph, which was part of Amin's absurdist play. Another
strategy to ridicule the world system was to keep the world guessing. His games
with the world news media in the summer of 1977, in relation to the Commonwealth
Conference of Heads of Government and Heads of State in London, was one such
instance.
Would Amin come to defy the diplomatic ban against his participation at the
Commonwealth Conference which the British government had decided to impose? His
radio in Uganda issued statements which implied that he was about to land in
France, and then go by boat to Britain; or was about to land in Ireland and find
his way to the Commonwealth Conference: A deliberate comedy was unfolded upon
the world stage, poking fun at the world and its ways.
Amin also occasionally used the tactic of holding a hostage or hostages, or he
allowed foreign missionaries and teachers to be considered as a potential source
of future hostages against Western influence inside of Uganda. A large portion
of the Third World is currently being held captive by the northern hemisphere,
and not just in a symbolic sense. In their own competition for hegemony, the
superpowers can wipe off the remainder of humanity. The ability of the northern
hemisphere to determine the futures of the economies of the South holds the
Third World economically hostage.
The North's choice to consume half as much Ugandan coffee might have hastened
his demise, for better or worse. Amin also occasionally used the tactic of
holding a hostage or hostages, or he allowed foreign missionaries and teachers
to be considered as a potential source of future hostages against Western
influence inside of Uganda. A large portion of the Third World is currently
being held captive by the northern hemisphere, and not just in a symbolic sense.
In their own competition for hegemony, the superpowers can wipe off the
remainder of humanity.
The ability of the northern hemisphere to determine the futures of the economies
of the South holds the Third World economically hostage. The North's choice to
consume half as much Ugandan coffee might have hastened his demise, for better
or worse. In short, drinking habits among Western Europeans and North Americans,
or how much chocolate the affluent North is interested in this year as opposed
to last year, could either put economies in the South under severe strain or
create a temporary boom here and there.
Apart from the oil-rich Third World countries, almost all other Third World
countries are, in a fundamental sense, held constantly hostage by the tastes and
consumption patterns of the northern hemisphere. Therefore, when Idi Amin held a
westerner like my friend and former col- league, Denis Hills, hostage, there was
a profound reversal of roles.
Or when Amin threatened to bring all Americans within Uganda to the Entebbe
Airport, there was again a sense of the mighty being held hostage by the whims
of a Third World tyrant, just as the Third World is held to ransom by the
vagaries of western consumption patterns.
Award Winning Article Is Written By: Mr.Tanmay Vijay
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