The meeting last week between President Yoweri Museveni and a delegation of opposition politicians has generated predictable outrage in some quarters. Social media has been awash with accusations of betrayal, opportunism and capitulation. Yet stripped of emotion and partisan reflex, a simple democratic truth remains: it is not only healthy for opposition leaders to meet the President — it is often necessary.
Every citizen of Uganda has the right to seek an audience with the Head of State. That right does not evaporate because one belongs to an opposition party. If anything, political leaders carry an even heavier obligation to engage whoever holds executive power. They represent constituents with real problems — roads that need tarmacking, hospitals that need medicine, youth who need jobs, and in the current climate, families desperate for the release of loved ones in detention.
The delegation led by Mawokota South MP Yusuf Nsibambi met the President at State House Entebbe to discuss national stability and reconciliation following the January 2026 elections. According to Nsibambi, the fate of hundreds of political prisoners was first on the agenda. They appealed for pardons and raised concerns about the incarceration of Butambala County MP Muhammad Muwanga Kivumbi, calling for an independent inquest into his case.
These are not trivial matters. The wives and children of Eddie Mutwe, Achileo Kivumbi and many others currently detained are not interested in ideological grandstanding. They want their loved ones back home. In moments when the number of detainees appears to be rising and tempers remain high after a charged electoral season, genuine efforts to strike a conciliatory tone are not weakness — they are responsibility.
It is easy for those commenting from the comfort of phones in winter capitals in Europe and North America to denounce dialogue as betrayal. But those who bear the brunt of political division understand that shouting from opposite ends of the spectrum has not delivered results. If the objective is to secure releases, de-escalate tensions and create space for national conversation, then someone must knock on the door.
Even critics of the meeting acknowledge this nuance. Newly elected Kira Municipality MP George Musisi described it as “foolhardy” to assume President Museveni has suddenly embraced good-faith cooperation after four decades in power. His skepticism reflects widespread distrust rooted in history. Yet Musisi was unequivocal on one point: he would celebrate the release of political prisoners without hesitation. That distinction matters. One can question motives while still recognizing the value of engagement if it produces tangible outcomes.
Political analyst Christopher Lubogo has correctly observed that dialogue between political actors is a cornerstone of democracy and does not automatically constitute betrayal. Democracies function not because adversaries refuse to speak, but because they speak — sometimes bitterly, often cautiously, but ultimately constructively.
Comparative politics reinforces this point. In Kenya, Raila Odinga shook hands with Daniel arap Moi, Mwai Kibaki, Uhuru Kenyatta and William Ruto — leaders he believed had presided over flawed elections. The 2007 election crisis alone cost Kenya more than 1,000 lives. Yet Odinga’s engagements did not erase his principles. He continued to advocate for his supporters while recognizing that national stability required dialogue. Kenyans debated his “handshake politics,” but they did not treat every meeting as treason.
In the United States, political rivalry is fierce, but institutional engagement persists. After contentious elections, governors and mayors routinely meet presidents of opposing parties to secure federal support for their states and cities. It is understood that governance does not pause because campaigns were bitter. No serious democracy expects permanent estrangement between elected officials.
Across Africa — in South Africa, Nigeria and elsewhere — opposition leaders meet incumbent presidents as part of negotiation, consultation or national dialogue processes. Sometimes those engagements yield little. Sometimes they lead to appointments, which in Uganda have fueled suspicion after figures such as Betti Kamya and Norbert Mao later accepted government roles. But the risk that engagement may evolve into co-option does not invalidate dialogue itself. It merely demands clarity of purpose and transparency.
Moses Kabuusu of the People’s Front for Freedom framed the recent meeting as non-transactional and aimed at exploring reconciliation. He emphasized the need for a platform where Ugandans can talk openly. That aspiration should not be controversial. A country emerging from polarizing elections requires spaces for conversation, not hardened trenches.
Uganda’s politics, however, often treats engagement as a matter of life and death — a zero-sum contest in which even a handshake is suspect. The roots of this culture are deep. The public fallout between President Museveni and his former ally Dr. Kizza Besigye marked a turning point in adversarial politics. Over the years, the two rarely shared moments of visible warmth or sustained engagement. Their rivalry shaped a generation of political confrontation, entrenching the idea that legitimacy requires distance and hostility. The opportunity to model a different tone — one in which fierce competitors could still acknowledge shared nationhood — was largely missed.
The consequence is a political environment where compromise is viewed as surrender and dialogue as weakness. Yet Uganda now faces a delicate historical moment. After four decades under one leader, conversations about eventual transition — whenever it comes — are no longer abstract. A safe corridor for post-Museveni Uganda will not be built in the heat of permanent antagonism. It will require trust-building, incremental engagement and channels of communication that remain open even in disagreement.
None of this absolves the government of responsibility. Engagement must be accompanied by action. The real test of last week’s meeting will not be photographs at State House but developments on the ground — particularly the fate of detainees and respect for civil liberties. Skepticism is understandable; cynicism is not constructive.
Meeting the President does not mean abandoning opposition. It does not erase ideological differences or electoral grievances. It means recognising that leadership sometimes demands uncomfortable conversations in pursuit of national interest. For MPs elected to serve their constituents, refusing to engage the country’s chief executive on matters of peace, development and human rights would be a dereliction of duty.
Uganda must mature beyond the politics of permanent estrangement. Dialogue is not betrayal. It is democracy’s oxygen.
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