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Issue 404

Front Page

News Headlines

Somaliland Representative In France Undergoes Surgery

Sultan Abdirizaq Sultan Abdillahi Arrives In Somaliland

Southern Leader Accuses Puntland Of Being The Mother Of Piracy

Saeed Abdi Gabobe Talks About Al-Falah’s Programs

COOPI & Borama Hospital’s Management Honor Staff

Somaliland Readies For Presidential Election

Rising Numbers Of Illegal Immigrants Enter Somaliland

Residents Of Eastern Somaliland Town Express Concern About Low Flying Planes

Local and Regional Affairs

Water Flows Again For A Somaliland Community

Al-Shabaab Threatens To Attack Uganda, Burundi Capitals

US Drones Protecting Ships From Somali Pirates

African Union Adopts Treaty On Internal Refugees

Rapists, Hunger And Hyenas Attack Somalia's Displaced Women

Somali General Confirms Kenya Recruiting Soldiers

Somali Prime Minister And UN Top Official Open New High Level Committee

Billy Ray To Write Movie On Captain Richard Phillips

Somalia: Puntland Investigating "Flying Poachers"

Kenya: Stop Recruitment Of Somalis In Refugee Camps

Somalia Says Forces Ready To Take Capital, South

Funding Shortfalls May Threaten Critical Humanitarian Assistance In Somalia

World Press Freedom Index - Somalia In 2009

Djibouti Rejects Alleged Destabilization Role In Somalia

Shift Aid Base From Nairobi To Somaliland, Puntland And Other "Safe" Areas, Urges UN Official

Pakistan Tied With Somalia For Highest Deaths Of Journalists

Editorial

Somaliland Inches Closer To Presidential Election

Features & Commentary

Somaliland, The Unrecognized State

Educating Students Worldwide

The New U.S. Sudan Policy: A Preliminary Review

The Horn Of Africa - Prologue To A Tumultuous Year

A Window Into East African Refugees’ Pain

In Somalia, A New Template For Fighting Terrorism

International News

Microsoft Rolls Out Windows 7

US 'Overshoot' Plane Data Checked

Ghana: Ace Journalist Wins Natali Award

Former Nurse's Aide In US Becomes Ugandan King

NATO Allies Back Obama's Revised Missile Defense Plans

Opinion

London: UDUB, Somaliland’s Ruling Party, In Disarray

Somaliland: The Impartial Vantage Point Of The Registration Fiasco

Somalia: Al-Shabaab—“If Your Breasts Ain’t Bouncing, You Must Get Whipped”

Remembrance Day For Those Who Lost Their Lives For The Sake Of SL Independence

Illegal Immigration (Tahriib); A Journey Through Hell Without Hope!!!

Downsize Cabinet: Suggestions To The TG In Somalia

Open Letter To President Obama

Re: 2010 Terror Plot

Former Nurse's Aide In US Becomes Ugandan King

Kasese, Uganda, October 24, 2009 – For years, Charles Wesley Mumbere worked as a nurse's aide in Maryland and Pennsylvania, caring for the elderly and sick. No one there suspected that he had inherited a royal title in his African homeland when he was just 13.

On Monday, after years of political upheaval and financial struggle, Mumbere, 56, was finally crowned king of his people to the sound of drumbeats and thousands of cheering supporters wearing cloth printed with his portraits.

At a public rally later in the day, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveniofficially recognized the 300,000-strong Rwenzururu Kingdom. Museveni restored the traditional kingdoms his predecessor banned in 1967, but has been adamant that kings restrict themselves to cultural duties and keep out of politics.

"It is a great moment to know that finally the central government has understood the demands of the Bakonzo people who have been seeking very hard for recognition of their identity," Mumbere told The Associated Press in the whitewashed single-story building that serves as a palace.

The Rwenzururu parliament sits nearby, in a much larger structure made of reeds. It was here the traditional private rituals were held Sunday night and Monday morning to crown Mumbere king.

Thousands walked several miles (kilometers) to see Mumbere, dressed in flowing green robes and a colorful hat, be officially recognized.

Old men clutching canes shuffled up the hill beside women in colorful Ugandan dresses called "gomesi." Among them was Masereka Tadai, 43, proudly overseeing practice for a march that retired scouts and girl guides would perform before the king.

"Everyone is very happy because the president has accepted to come here and officially recognize the Rwenzururu Kingdom," Tadai said over a nearby drumbeat.

The new King of Uganda's Mountains of the Moon has undergone many transformations — from teenage leader of a rebel force to impoverished student to a nursing home assistant working two jobs in the U.S., where he lived for nearly 25 years.

Mumbere's royal roots only became public in Pennsylvania this July, when he granted an interview to The Patriot-News of Harrisburg as he was preparing to return to Uganda.

He inherited the title when his father, Isaya Mukirania Kibanzanga, died while leading a secessionist group in the Rwenzori Mountains, otherwise known as the Mountains of the Moon. The rebels were protesting the oppression of their Bakonzo ethnic group by their then-rulers, the Toro Kingdom.

The Bakonzo demanded to be recognized as a separate entity and named Kibanzanga, a former primary school teacher, as their king in 1963.

"It was very difficult growing up in the bush," remembered Mumbere, who was 9 years old when his father took the family into the mountains. Although he received military training, Mumbere did not fight.

"Our country has been independent (from the British) for 40-something years but in Rwenzururu you may not find running water, there are no hospitals," Mumbere said.

Shortly after Kibanzanga died, his son led the fighters down from the mountains to hand in their weapons. Mumbere went to the United States in 1984 on a Uganda government scholarship, attending a business school until Uganda's leadership changed and the stipend was stopped. He gained political asylum in 1987, trained as a nurse's aide and took a job in a suburban Washington nursing home to pay his bills, said The Patriot-News of Harrisburg in a July 2009 story.

In 1999, he moved to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania's capital, where he worked for at least two health care facilities.

He was "very loyal, a very hard worker, a very private person," said Johnna Marx, executive director of the Golden Living Center-Blue Ridge Mountain on the outskirts of Harrisburg.

Mumbere said he chose to train as a nurse's aide because the work, "was more reliable. Other jobs you can be laid off easily."

Living in the U.S., however, was "a very difficult experience," he said. "Sometimes you have two jobs. You go to college in the morning, between 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Then you go prepare to go to work at 3 p.m. and then return at 11 p.m."

He is now a green card holder, and his son and daughter live in Harrisburg. But he never forgot the people he left behind. When the Ugandan government decided to reinstate the traditional kingdoms, Mumbere lobbied the Rwenzururu Kingdom to be among them.

After 10 years of negotiation, President Museveni announced in August the government would recognize the Rwenzururu Kingdom as Uganda's seventh kingdom. Government recognition does not grant any executive power but allows the monarchs to determine cultural and social issues affecting their people.

On the Net: http://www.rwenzururu.com

Source: The Associated Press, Oct 19, 2009











 

 


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