20101210 Honorary cooperator of Amin quoted Daily monitor
Washington yesterday scrambled to placate African leaders with a message of “mutual respect” after Wikileaks, Julian Assange’s whistleblower website, released more disquieting details of their critical assessment by the US government.
Ambassador Johnnie Carson, the top diplomat for Africa, held a teleconference with journalists from some 20 African countries, including Uganda, assuring them that the “sensitive” cables wired by its envoys do not necessarily mirror “the policy of the US”.
“The embassies carry out candid, sensitive discussions with Washington officials but no one cable or group of cables reflect the policy of the US,” he said.
“They are a snapshot in time but do not reflect the totality of the interests we have.” Wikileaks yesterday dumped more dossiers on African leaders on its website, indicating for instance that Mr Jerry Lanier, the US ambassador in Kampala, notified his superiors in Washington last October, a month after taking his posting here, that President Museveni has “autocratic tendencies”.
Asked during yesterday’s teleconference if he felt embarrassed by the disclosures, Ambassador Carson who spoke from Washington D.C., without offering direct apology described Uganda’s relations with his country as “deep and complex”.
He said: “It is a relationship which we value and we are working to strengthen. We will continue to carry on our relationship with Uganda in the manner which is designed to promote our mutual interest and advance our policy objectives.”
He, however, said the leaks were akin to a husband’s secret, uncharitable remarks about an in-law being made public. Mr Lanier did not attend the teleconference held at the US Kampala Mission in Nsambya, a city suburb.
Ambassador Carson demanded Uganda holds a “free, fair and open” ballot next year on a level playing field. “The period for stealing African elections is over. Theft of elections should not be part of the democratic (practice).
This should be a lesson to the whole of Africa,” he said, referring to the hung situation in Ivory Coast where both incumbent Laurent Gbagbo and Mr Allasane Ouattara claim to have won the presidential re-run.
Meanwhile, Ambassador Carson yesterday flagged strengthening democracy, supporting economic growth, addressing public health, conflict prevention and tackling transnational threats such as terrorism, human and drug-trafficking as priority areas of engagement with Africa.
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