So it has come to this. The Uganda People's Defence Force, in what can only be described as a ham-fisted display of authoritarian muscle, has shuttered a leading media outlet. The Foreign Office tuts, wrings its hands, and issues the obligatory calls for press freedom. How predictable. How utterly Victorian.
Let us not pretend this is an isolated incident. It is part of a broader pattern, a decadence of governance that mirrors the late Roman Empire's contempt for public discourse. The empire, you see, did not fall to barbarians at the gate overnight. It crumbled from within, suffocated by a ruling class that mistook silence for stability. Today, in Kampala, we see the same delusion.
Consider the parallels. The Roman Senate, once a forum for vigorous debate, was gradually reduced to a rubber-stamp assembly. Dissent was branded treason. The result? A populace disengaged, a political culture rotten with sycophancy. And then came the Visigoths. Uganda's current trajectory—closing newspapers, silencing journalists—is not the path of strength but of fear. It is the mark of a regime that knows its ideas cannot survive scrutiny.
The Foreign Office's response, for all its noble language, is a study in impotence. It calls for press freedom, but what leverage does it truly hold? Trade deals? Aid packages? These are the tools of an empire in decline, a Britain that has forgotten how to project moral authority without hypocrisy. We lecture others on democracy while our own press suffers under billionaire ownership and political pressure. Let us not cast stones from a glass house made of tabloid sensationalism and spin.
What Uganda needs is not a lecture but a mirror. It needs to see that the path of censorship leads to economic stagnation, intellectual decay, and ultimately, revolution or collapse. The Victorian era, for all its faults, understood that a free press was the safety valve of empire. Without it, steam builds. And boilers explode.
So here is the uncomfortable truth: The Ugandan army's shut-down is a symptom of a global sickness. Every nation that sacrifices liberty for order ends up with neither. We have seen it from Rome to Rwanda. The question is not whether Uganda will learn this lesson. It is whether we in the West will remember it before we repeat the same mistakes.
The silence from Kampala is not peaceful. It is the quiet before a storm. And we are all standing in the same weather.









