The news arrives with the predictability of a Shakespearean tragedy: a Kenyan former minister, Raphael Tuju, was denied entry into Uganda this week. The stated reason? He failed to produce a valid Covid-19 vaccination certificate. The subtext? Oh, far richer and more troubling. This is not a story about public health. It is a story about a continent rediscovering the ancient game of diplomatic brinkmanship, and we in the West would do well to watch and learn.
Let us strip away the polite fiction that this was a routine border control measure. Tuju is no ordinary traveller. He is a former Foreign Minister, a man with the ear of President Ruto, and a figure who moves in the rarefied air of regional high politics. To refuse him entry is a deliberate snub, a calculated gesture meant to send a message to Nairobi. The question is what message exactly.
Uganda and Kenya have a long and tangled history, a relationship that oscillates between brotherly cooperation and simmering rivalry. Think of it as a Victorian marriage: outwardly respectable, inwardly a whirlwind of resentment and unspoken grievances. The immediate context is the recent thawing of relations between Kampala and a perennial bugbear, Rwanda. Uganda's Museveni has long courted Kenya's favour, but his recent overtures to Kigali suggest a shifting of alliances. Could this be a gentle reminder to Kenya that Uganda has other options? That the days of Nairobi taking Kampala for granted are over?
We must also consider the domestic dimension. Museveni, that eternal strongman, faces growing internal dissent and whispers of succession. A spot of diplomatic sabre-rattling provides a useful distraction for the home audience, reminding them that their president is still a force to be reckoned with on the continental stage. It is the oldest trick in the autocrat's playbook: when your own house is creaking, pick a fight with a neighbour.
But let us not be too cynical. There are genuine concerns about sovereignty and the rule of law. If a country requires vaccination proof, it should enforce that requirement uniformly. To grant exemptions to the powerful would be to invite the very rot that is dragging so many African states down. In that light, the Ugandan authorities may be commended for their consistency. Yet the timing, the target, the barely concealed theatricality of it all, speaks of more than bureaucratic rectitude.
What does this mean for the East African Community? Precious little in the short term, I suspect. These summits will still be held, these deals will still be signed, these trade tariffs will still be wrestled over. But the mood music changes. Trust, that fragile currency, is eroded. And for a continent that needs more unity, not less, this is a worrying development. It smacks of a return to the old politics of insult and retaliation, a world of petty slights and manufactured crises. It is the kind of behaviour one associates with declining empires, and I use that phrase deliberately.
The irony is rich. Here we have two African nations squabbling while the world’s great powers realign their interests in the region. The Chinese are building railways, the Americans are opening bases, the Russians are trading arms. And what do the leaders of East Africa do? They play games at the airport. It would be amusing were it not so damning.
We in the West watch these dramas from afar, often smugly, as if our own diplomatic histories were not littered with far more absurd and costly spats. But we ignore them at our peril. The stability of East Africa matters to global supply chains, to counterterrorism efforts, and to the migration pressures that wash up on our own shores. A distracted, divided East Africa is not in anyone’s interest.
The former minister will presumably find his way home. The diplomatic notes will be exchanged. The usual pieties about brotherly affection will be recited. But the damage will linger. And the next time a Kenyan official crosses into Uganda, he will wonder: will I be welcomed, or will I be taught a lesson? That uncertainty is the real story here. It is the story of a continent still learning that the past is never quite the past, and that the ghosts of old grievances can still rattle their chains.
As for us, we can only watch and muse on the eternal return of the same. Rome fell, the Victorians fretted, and now we have entry brawls at Entebbe. Plus ça change. But do not mistake me; this matters. It always matters. And the sooner we all stop pretending otherwise, the better.