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How many good men will we lose?

December 24, 2009 by Suubi Trust

Dr. Ian Clarke writes about the loss of Moses Munezero, copied from The Sunday Vision:

As I write this column I am sorrowful, because I have lost a good friend and a good man. Moses Munezero was killed in the night bus ambush which happened on the Mbarara- Kabale road this week.

He was a young doctor working in Lira who first worked on a community HIV project in Hima and then moved to Lira to help me set up a clinic, where we not only treat those who can pay, but hundreds of charity patients and those with HIV.

I visited him four weeks ago and he was excited about the possibility of extending the clinic to have a theatre to carry out emergency caesarean sections and other operations. Moses was the kind of person whom one depended on, because he was steady and never let people down. He was that rare breed of person who was truly unselfish and spent his life helping others. He wanted to be good at what he did and considered the patients more important than his own personal needs.

Moses represented the very best of Uganda, in these days when we hear a lot about corruption and Ugandans who are in a hurry to get rich quick by any means. He was a role model, the kind of person you would be happy for your daughter to marry — competent, serious-minded and compassionate. He was a Ugandan who restored hope when one was tempted to feel the society was rotten. It is this which makes his death all the more tragic — because he was killed by Ugandans who illustrate the level to which our society has fallen.

The thieves placed big stones across the road, which the bus crashed into and then overturned, killing at least five people and injuring many. The thieves were not appalled by what they had done, but boarded the bus and systematically robbed the dead and the dying. The worst of society had killed the best in society. Is this the kind of place that Uganda has become?

We have so many good people, but they are being pushed aside by those who have no conscience, feel no tenderness and show no mercy. Uganda has been here before — when the State Research Bureau disposed of people as if they were pieces of meat; we have only just got rid of the menace of Kony, but now it has become dangerous to do everyday things, like taking a bus ride at night.

One of the main purposes of government and civil society structures is to maintain law and order, so that people can go about their daily lives without fear of molestation. The death of Moses is an indictment of these organs of society. His death was due to a combination of lack of law and order and lack of care by the driver and the operators of the bus company. If the driver had been going more slowly within the speed limits, he could probably have seen the stones and stopped. If policing is now so weak, that thieves can operate with impunity along a major highway, then the system is ineffective.

The combination of these two deficiencies resulted in the death of a fine young Ugandan, and let us not kid ourselves, this death could have been avoided. But will anyone take responsibility? Will the Police, who have failed to enforce speed regulations on the buses and to patrol the road? Will the government, who have allowed an incipient lawlessness to take hold, which breeds violence and death? Or will everyone just shake their heads and agree that it was a tragedy, while we wait for the next hold-up or next bus accident to happen?

We are losing the good people in our society, because we are failing to control the worst elements.

Published on: Saturday, 19th December, 2009

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Posted in Charis - IMC Lira, Dr. Ian Clarke, Staff | Tagged Moses Munezero | 1 Comment

One Response

  1. on December 25, 2009 at 10:09 am Grace Nakate

    This just breaks my heart. To act so callously over lives is just so disheartening. Indeed how many more must we loose before the actions of such atrocities are redressed by us all?



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