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Zmeselo
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Posts: 36744
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Zmeselo » 17 Nov 2025, 21:54



Africa
A new front in East Africa’s sea obsession

By Philmon Mesfin

https://mesobjournal.com/post/museveni- ... frica?s=09

Nov 17, 2025


Composite: Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni

Speaking on a radio show in Mbale this week, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni moved from economic complaints to open strategic language. He argued that Uganda is “entitled” to the Indian Ocean, using a condominium analogy: if Africa is a block of flats, he said, the compound — in this case, the sea — belongs to all, not just those on the “ground floor.”

He went further, warning that if landlocked states like Uganda do not receive firm guarantees of access, future wars could follow. Kenyan and regional media quoted him saying the ocean “belongs to me” and hinting that blocking Uganda could one day provoke armed conflict.

Within hours, his son and senior military figure, Gen. Muhoozi Kainerugaba, picked up the theme. In comments widely shared on social platforms and local outlets, Muhoozi said he agreed with his father and insisted Kenya must
quickly give us access to the Indian Ocean because it rightfully belongs to us,
warning of
very big problems
if that “right” is not respected.

For a relationship long defined by trade corridors, shared security interests and sometimes tense but contained disputes over oil and tariffs, this was the first time Kampala’s leadership framed access to the sea in the language of potential war with Kenya.

Kenya’s double response: diplomatic calm, online comedy

Official Nairobi chose de-escalation. Foreign Affairs Principal Secretary Korir Sing’Oei told journalists that Kenya “trusts” Museveni understands sovereignty and natural resources, effectively signalling that Nairobi does not view the remarks as a real policy shift — at least not yet.

But while the state stayed calm, Kenyan social media did what Kenyan social media does: it turned the tension into a running joke.

On X (formerly Twitter), Kenyans mocked the “my ocean” rhetoric with memes, edited maps and jokes about “dropping Kampala” or lending Uganda a bucket of Indian Ocean water so it could
build its own ocean at home.
Others dismissed the president as “daydreaming” and his warning as an “empty threat,” framing the remarks as political theatre rather than a credible war plan.

Kenyan outlets compiled these reactions into explainers and editorials, underlining two things at once: the country’s online culture of sharp humour — and a real undercurrent of unease that Africa’s maritime corridors are becoming props in domestic political dramas.

What the law actually says about seas and the landlocked

Behind the noise lies a basic legal fact: landlocked countries do have rights — but not the ones Museveni seemed to suggest.

Under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea and earlier conventions on landlocked states, countries like Uganda are entitled to transit through neighbouring territories to reach the sea and to negotiate fair arrangements for trade corridors and ports. But those instruments do not grant ownership of another country’s coastline, nor do they justify threats of war to enforce “entitlement” to someone else’s territorial waters.

In practice, Uganda already relies heavily on Kenya’s port of Mombasa for around 90% of its imports and exports, including fuel and strategic supplies. Most disputes have been handled via tariffs, pipelines, and sometimes tense negotiations — not sabre-rattling over “whose ocean” it is. Museveni’s analogy may play well to nationalist frustration, but it blurs the line between legitimate transit rights and revisionist territorial claims.

Abiy Ahmed’s Red Sea script — now playing on the Indian Ocean

If Museveni’s words sound familiar, it’s because East Africa has already spent two years grappling with a more dangerous version of the same script.

In 2023, Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed described the Red Sea as Ethiopia’s “natural border” and framed loss of direct sea access as an “existential issue” for his country. Since then, his government has:

• Signed a controversial MoU with Somaliland to lease coastline for a naval base and commercial port, triggering a crisis with Somalia over sovereignty.

• Repeatedly justified maritime claims in historical and civilizational terms — “restoring” access rather than negotiating new routes.

• Deployed troops and hardware closer to Eritrea’s coast, fuelling fears that sea rhetoric is not just talk but a pretext for future confrontation.

International coverage has largely treated Abiy’s remarks as a Red Sea problem. Museveni’s “my ocean” moment shows it is bigger than that. From Assab to Mombasa, a pattern is emerging: landlocked states using the language of historical entitlement and “existential threats” to justify maximalist claims on neighbours’ coasts.

On paper, both Ethiopia and Uganda talk about regional integration and corridors. In practice, their leaders are normalising the idea that if negotiated access is not satisfactory, war could be a legitimate tool of maritime policy. That is a dangerous shift in political culture, even if the immediate risk of invasion looks low.

Exporting internal fragility to external fronts

What ties Addis Ababa and Kampala together is not just geography. It is political timing.

Ethiopia is still wrestling with unresolved conflicts and armed uprisings in Amhara and Oromia, a fragile post-Pretoria settlement in Tigray, and an economy under severe strain. Analysts have described the country as
teetering on the edge… of renewed rupture.
Uganda’s long-ruling president faces his own legitimacy questions at home: a restless youth population, opposition crackdowns, and a looming succession debate centred precisely on the son now echoing his ocean rhetoric.

In both cases, sea access offers an attractive external storyline: instead of talking about inflation, protests or governance, leaders can rally opinion around national “rights” being denied by neighbours. That does not mean war is inevitable. It does mean that maritime claims are being instrumentalised by systems under pressure.

The risk is that once language like “my ocean,” “natural border” and “existential issue” enters mainstream politics, walking it back becomes harder. Domestic audiences are primed to see compromise as betrayal. Neighbours, meanwhile, are forced to read every troop movement and every speech as a potential prelude to escalation.

Kenyans are laughing. They are also watching.

The immediate Kenyan reaction — jokes, memes, and casual swagger about how fast the KDF could “reach Kampala” — may look like simple online culture, but it performs a deeper function. It punctures the balloon of performative bravado. It reminds would-be strongmen that threats can be ridiculed, not just feared.

Still, satire is not a security doctrine. Kenya has quietly moved to reassure markets and citizens that it does not see war on the horizon. Officials have framed Museveni’s remarks as “unfortunate” but not a trigger for crisis, stressing continued cooperation on trade and transit.

That calm response is important. So is the legal clarity: access yes, annexation no; corridors yes, coercion no. East Africa’s stability depends on keeping that line bright — in Mombasa, in Assab, and in every capital tempted to turn historical frustration into territorial fantasies.

A regional warning sign

Museveni’s speech will probably fade from the news cycle faster than Abiy’s Red Sea campaign. But the two belong in the same file. They show how quickly the language of integration can be flipped into the language of entitlement; how
we are one people
can become a cover for erasing borders rather than cooperating across them.

For now, the Indian Ocean remains firmly under Kenyan sovereignty, just as the Red Sea coastlines remain with Eritrea, Djibouti, Sudan, Egypt, Yemen and Saudi Arabia. No analogy, no historical map, no talk show line changes that. What is changing is the threshold at which leaders feel comfortable threatening conflict over routes that international law already regulates.

If the African Union and regional bodies want to prevent tomorrow’s wars, they cannot wait for tanks at the border. They need to respond when the narrative shifts — when access is rebranded as ownership, and neighbours become obstacles to be “taught a lesson” rather than partners to be negotiated with.

Kenya’s online users have already delivered their verdict on “my ocean”: a mix of laughter, irritation and quiet resolve. The rest of the region should pay attention — not to the memes, but to the trend that produced them.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 36744
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Zmeselo » 17 Nov 2025, 22:11



Opinion
Enough Is Enough: Abiy Ahmed’s March Toward War — and the African Union’s Unforgivable Silence

By Ternafi

https://mesobjournal.com/post/abiy-ahme ... a-warnings

Nov 16, 2025


Art Composite: Ethiopia threatening and the AU is silent - Eritrea guards.

There are moments in African politics when the truth must be said without varnish, without diplomatic hedging, without the cowardice of “neutrality.” We are in one of those moments now. Ethiopia’s rulers — from Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed to his Foreign Minister, generals, propagandists, and state-aligned media — are openly, consistently, and aggressively preparing the ground for a full-scale war against Eritrea. That is not an opinion. That is their own documented language.

And the African Union, sitting in the very capital where these threats are manufactured, has chosen silence.

Not caution.
Not mediation.
Silence.

A silence that is becoming complicity.

A Regime Saying the Quiet Part Out Loud

For over two years, the Ethiopian leadership has escalated rhetoric that would, anywhere else in the world, trigger immediate warnings from regional blocs and the UN Security Council.

But in Ethiopia, it’s treated as normal political discourse.

Abiy Ahmed has declared repeatedly — in public speeches, in parliament, on national television — that Eritrea’s sovereign territory, specifically the Port of Assab, is something Ethiopia must obtain
peacefully or by force.
He has drawn grotesque comparisons, hinting that Eritrea could be made to resemble Gaza or Ukraine — a threat genocidal in tone and reckless in intent.

His generals go further. Some have pleaded with FANO militias and the Tigray Defense Forces to halt their battles because “the bigger mission” is to seize Eritrea’s ports. Others have pushed narratives claiming Assab was “stolen,” that it “belongs to Ethiopia,” and that reclaiming it is a national duty.

This is the architecture of war.
Not metaphorical war.
Not Twitter war.
Real war.

And it’s unfolding in plain view.

The AU’s Silence — A Moral Failure

What is the African Union’s response to one of its member states threatening another with invasion?

Nothing.

Absolutely nothing.

This is the same AU that issues statements on conflicts thousands of miles away — including Ukraine — but cannot muster even a whisper when the host state of its headquarters, engulfed in multiple civil wars, displacement, and mass starvation, threatens to redraw internationally recognized borders through force.

Where is the concern for the African Charter?
For sovereignty?
For regional stability?
For peace?

When Eritrea is threatened, the AU suddenly remembers how to mute itself.

This is not reluctance.
This is abdication.

The UN’s Familiar Blind Spot

The United Nations, too, is falling back into its old habits: respond only when the bullets start flying, only when the displacement begins, only when the humanitarian catastrophe becomes too big to ignore. Then, and only then, do we get the ritualistic appeals for calm, the speeches about “both sides,” the calls for restraint.

But as I wrote on June 8:
Silence now will not excuse false neutrality later — there is no moral equivalence here.


Eritrea has not threatened Ethiopia.
Eritrea has not mobilized for an invasion.
Eritrea has not declared another state’s territory as “existential” for its own survival.

There is one expansionist party in this equation, and it is Ethiopia’s ruling party.

The UN knows this.
The AU knows this.
The region knows this.

But the loudest alarm bells are coming from ordinary people on X, not from the organizations designed — and funded — to prevent war.

A Region on the Brink Because One Man Wants a Coastline

Ethiopia’s internal situation is collapsing.
Multiple civil wars.
FANO insurgency.
TPLF re-militarization.
Oromo protests.
A devastated economy.
Millions displaced.
Famine conditions in several regions.

No amount of UAE money, PR consultants, or militarized propaganda can hide the truth: Abiy Ahmed leads the weakest, most fragmented federal government Ethiopia has seen in decades.

And history has taught us what desperate leaders sometimes do:

they reach for an external enemy.

Eritrea is being cast as that manufactured enemy — a convenient scapegoat for internal failure.

The port rhetoric is not about economics.
It is not about development.
It is about rewriting the political narrative inside Ethiopia.

But the cost will be unimaginable.

Where Are the “Human Rights Defenders” Now?

NGOs, activists, analysts — the same chorus that once camped on Eritrea’s doorsteps — are suddenly asleep. They will reappear the minute conflict erupts, lectures prepared, reports half-drafted, ready to explain why Eritrea must show restraint or why
both sides escalated.
But today, when actual war threats are coming from Addis Ababa’s highest offices?

Silence.

You don’t get to play referee after cheering during the warm-up.

What Is at Stake? Everything.

Another Horn of Africa war will not be a border skirmish. It will be catastrophic:

• Millions displaced across Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Sudan

• Total collapse of regional infrastructure

• Naval insecurity in the Red Sea

• A humanitarian collapse spanning multiple countries

• A region already bleeding pushed into generational instability

This is preventable — today.

Tomorrow it may not be.

The Warning Stands.

My message in June was not hyperbole. It was a warning grounded in evidence:
The world must be put on notice.
Ethiopia’s leaders are saying, clearly and repeatedly, that they want war. They are naming the target. They are naming the objective. They are preparing their public. They are mobilizing their military rhetoric.

The AU and UN have a choice:

• Act now, or

• Pretend to be shocked later.

And to the AU, headquartered in a state threatening to annex its neighbor:

Stand with the people of Africa — not the ambitions of one government.

History will remember who spoke when it mattered. And who stayed silent as the drums of war echoed through its own halls.

Temt
Member+
Posts: 5418
Joined: 04 Jun 2013, 22:23

Re: Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Temt » 18 Nov 2025, 00:36

Unfortunately, that is why the AU remains an inept organization that is unwilling to call a spade a spade! This is why there is not much good news coming out from Africa, a continent that is sadly led by humans who are dumber than the African baboons.

Deqi-Arawit
Senior Member
Posts: 15693
Joined: 29 Mar 2009, 11:10
Location: Bujumbura Brundi

Re: Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 18 Nov 2025, 00:55

Temt wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 00:36
Unfortunately, that is why the AU remains an inept organization that is unwilling to call a spade a spade! This is why there is not much good news coming out from Africa, a continent that is sadly led by humans who are dumber than the African baboons.
Wedi Medhin berad cu@@nts.
Are you still repeating the same charade? Your sodomite lord had chances to enhance the country diplomacy with other influential countries in the world, instead, he was stuck with failed countries including the same country he rescued by sacrificing many Eritreans in the process.

Mushmushat!

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 36744
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Zmeselo » 18 Nov 2025, 05:31

A pedophilé crying for decades about an 80 year old man, and we're the mushmushat?


Qiqiqiqiq

Deqi-Arawit wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 00:55
Temt wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 00:36
Unfortunately, that is why the AU remains an inept organization that is unwilling to call a spade a spade! This is why there is not much good news coming out from Africa, a continent that is sadly led by humans who are dumber than the African baboons.
Wedi Medhin berad cu@@nts.
Are you still repeating the same charade? Your sodomite lord had chances to enhance the country diplomacy with other influential countries in the world, instead, he was stuck with failed countries including the same country he rescued by sacrificing many Eritreans in the process.

Mushmushat!

Deqi-Arawit
Senior Member
Posts: 15693
Joined: 29 Mar 2009, 11:10
Location: Bujumbura Brundi

Re: Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Deqi-Arawit » 18 Nov 2025, 05:43

Zmeselo wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 05:31
A pedophilé crying for decades about an 80 year old man, and we're the mushmushat?


Qiqiqiqiq

Deqi-Arawit wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 00:55
Temt wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 00:36
Unfortunately, that is why the AU remains an inept organization that is unwilling to call a spade a spade! This is why there is not much good news coming out from Africa, a continent that is sadly led by humans who are dumber than the African baboons.
Wedi Medhin berad cu@@nts.
Are you still repeating the same charade? Your sodomite lord had chances to enhance the country diplomacy with other influential countries in the world, instead, he was stuck with failed countries including the same country he rescued by sacrificing many Eritreans in the process.

Mushmushat!
Unlike the opportunist whores of wedi medhin berad [ deleted ]$ts, at least, some people have conscience where we call a Spade is a Spade.

Zmeselo
Senior Member+
Posts: 36744
Joined: 30 Jul 2010, 20:43

Re: Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Zmeselo » 18 Nov 2025, 08:26

Shouldn't your non-existent conscience lead you to overthrow him then, puzzzy? :lol:

Deqi-Arawit wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 05:43
Zmeselo wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 05:31
A pedophilé crying for decades about an 80 year old man, and we're the mushmushat?


Qiqiqiqiq

Deqi-Arawit wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 00:55
Temt wrote:
18 Nov 2025, 00:36
Unfortunately, that is why the AU remains an inept organization that is unwilling to call a spade a spade! This is why there is not much good news coming out from Africa, a continent that is sadly led by humans who are dumber than the African baboons.
Wedi Medhin berad cu@@nts.
Are you still repeating the same charade? Your sodomite lord had chances to enhance the country diplomacy with other influential countries in the world, instead, he was stuck with failed countries including the same country he rescued by sacrificing many Eritreans in the process.

Mushmushat!
Unlike the opportunist whores of wedi medhin berad [ deleted ]$ts, at least, some people have conscience where we call a Spade is a Spade.

Fiyameta
Senior Member
Posts: 19734
Joined: 02 Aug 2018, 22:59

Re: Museveni infected by the Abyi virus.

Post by Fiyameta » 18 Nov 2025, 11:10


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