Uganda’s President Museveni has said he will not take sides in the Kenyan presidential elections scheduled for August, dispelling claims and rumours that Uganda and the ruling National Resistance Movement Party (NRM) support Deputy President William Ruto.
DP Ruto, ODM leader and former prime minister Raila Odinga, ANC party leader Musalia Mudavadi and several others, including former governors and diplomats, have expressed interest in running to become Kenya’s fifth president.
Speaking to local media in Kampala, President Museveni said, elections in Kenya or any other African country are a matter of the people of that country and the Uganda government never takes sides in the internal matters of other countries.
Until he was blocked from flying to Uganda in August last year for what he had termed a private visit, DP Ruto had made frequent visits to the country, including in 2015 when he joined President Museveni on a campaign rally in Kapchorwa, and referred to him as a role model.
In 2018, Ruto was again back in Uganda at the launch of the Kapchorwa-Suam road that links to Kenya
Political analysts thought Museveni was backing Ruto for presidency as NRM Director of Communications Emmanuel Dombo said that Ruto and Museveni have for long cultivated their friendship.
Allaying fears that the elections in Kenya normally destabilise the flow of goods, especially fuel as was the case in 2007 when the post-election violence caused a scarcity of fuel in Uganda for weeks, Museveni said there is already an alternative route through Dar es Salaam and therefore, there is no cause for alarm.
