KAMPALA, June 2 (Xinhua) -- Uganda's long-awaited
cabinet was sworn in on Friday with a lineup showing President Yoweri Museveni's
determination to spur the east African country to the next level of economic
growth.
On the cabinet list released on Thursday night, Museveni retained his right hand man Ezra Suruma, Minister of
Finance Planning and Economic development, to champion his vision of
transforming the country from one of the most underdeveloped to a thriving
regional power.
The retention of Suruma, who is critical of the
liberalization process and dependency on foreign aid fronted by the developed
countries, has been hailed by analyst as Museveni's spirited move to develop the
country's economy.
Museveni also introduced the Ministry of Information
Communication and Technology, which will in conjunction with the finance
ministry create an arena for IT-led economic growth.
In regional vision, Museveni, an advocate for East
African Federation, introduced a ministry in charge of east African affairs to
advance Uganda's interest in the future regional group,including Uganda, Kenya
and Tanzania.
"The east African goal of creating an East African
Federation is sweet music to revolutionaries of Uganda," Museveni said in
hisinaugural speech on May 12 for his third elected term.
The Ugandan leader believed a federation will solve
strategic and economic bottlenecks of not only East Africa but of the rest of
Africa.
"In the next five years it will be much easier to
move faster so that we aim at completely transforming our society from a
thirdworld one to a first world one, in the medium, to use the words ofLee Kuan
Yew, the former Prime Minister of Singapore," he proclaimed.
Uganda's economic growth has more than tripled to
about 10 billion US dollars since 1986 with an average growth rate of 6.3
percent per year, according to the statistics of Finance Ministry.
However, challenges have set in undermining the
success alreadyscored when experts warned the economy growth would drop to 4.9
percent, largely because of the biting power crisis.
Industrial production, due to power crisis, in next
financial year, according to the National Budget Framework Paper for Financial
Year 2006/7--2008/9, is projected to slow down to 5.2 percent from 10.6 percent
last year.
With the economy seemingly under siege, Museveni has
vowed to make a change.
He blamed the donors' holding back for current power
crisis whobelieved Uganda would face a problem of surplus energy if more dams
were built at the same time.
"I want to assure Ugandans that such mistakes will
never occur again. We are going to build two new dams in the next 42 months with
or without the participation of outsiders in financing," Museveni said.
Museveni has also indicated that in the next five
years, government will accept foreign aid selectively and the role of
development partners should be limited to supporting the country'seconomic
vision.
"Their role is to support the vision of Uganda -
nothing more, nothing less," he said, "Any aid-led vision rather than
vision-ledstrategy is bound to fail or, at best, produce mediocre results."
As these vows are being made, observers say Uganda
will face hard times if it decides to ignore foreign aid that takes over half of
its national budget.
Another vice the Museveni-led government would have
to fight iscorruption, which analysts say has engulfed most government
departments.
By dropping the three ministers in the Ministry of
Health in the new cabinet, who were accused of negligence in the misuse of the
Global Fund, Museveni sent signals that he has started a campaign against
corruption. Enditem