Uganda is no longer pretending. What unfolded after the election was not a security operation, not crowd control, and certainly not democracy — it was a raw, authoritarian crackdown carried out with the arrogance of a regime that knows it will not be held accountable. As votes were counted, police and security forces moved swiftly to encircle and isolate opposition leader Bobi Wine, sealing off his home, cutting communications, blocking journalists, and issuing brazen denials while the country watched the reality unfold in real time. This was not law enforcement. It was political containment — the silencing of a challenger whose popularity threatens a ruler entrenched in power for decades. Let’s dispense with euphemisms: surrounding an opposition leader with armed forces after an election is not “maintaining order.” It is intimidation. It is the behavior of a state that fears its own people. President Yoweri Museveni’s latest “victory” comes after nearly forty years of systematically d...
Donald Trump has once again dragged global diplomacy into the gutter — this time by openly sulking over not receiving a Nobel Peace Prize while floating threats against allied nations over Greenland. What should alarm the world is not merely the narcissism on display, but the chilling implication that Trump views peace, sovereignty, and international law as conditional on personal flattery. According to the exchange reported, Trump suggested that because Norway’s Nobel Committee did not reward him with the Nobel Peace Prize, he no longer felt bound to “think purely of peace.” This is not the language of a statesman. It is the rhetoric of a man who treats global stability as a transactional reward system designed to stroke his ego. Let’s be clear: the Nobel Peace Prize is not a bribe, and peace is not a favor. The suggestion that restraint and diplomacy are optional — contingent on personal accolades — is an extraordinary confession of moral bankruptcy. Even more disturbing is Trump’s...