President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni has today bid farewell to the outgoing Ambassador of Ireland to Uganda, H.E. Kevin Colgan at State House, Entebbe.

During the meeting, President Museveni commended the Ambassador for his diplomatic service and Ireland’s longstanding partnership with Uganda.
“I am very happy to meet you and thank you for your good service. I wish you good luck in your next posting,” he said.
Ambassador Colgan first served in Uganda in the late 1990s during an earlier diplomatic assignment and returned in 2020 for a second term as Ambassador, which he just concluded.
President Museveni reflected on key global and regional issues, with a focus on fair trade, economic transformation, and historical lessons from Africa’s struggle for liberation.
“How can you have prosperity without a link between goods, services, and consumers? Production and consumption cannot be one-sided. If you want someone to buy from you, they must have purchasing power. That’s why it doesn’t make sense to want to trade with poor people. You need rich people to trade better,” he said.
“How will people have money if they are poor? And how will they get rich if they don’t process anything? It’s in our interest that Africa rises, so we can all benefit from trade. That’s why I always say that those who buy from us are helping us.”
The President also acknowledged Ireland’s constructive role in global affairs.
“Ireland has played a positive role because you don’t carry the same baggage of past wrongs. We need more dialogue between Africa and the West. There are many mistakes being made that we could help correct and there is no need for unnecessary conflicts. We should be talking.”
President Museveni further recounted Africa’s historical path to liberation, positioning himself as part of the third generation of freedom fighters.
“The first generation began around 1912, the second included leaders like Julius Nyerere, Nelson Mandela, Kwame Nkrumah, and Jomo Kenyatta in the 1940s. We were the third generation in the 1960s. So, we see that there are still many lessons the West could learn from our experience,” he said.
He cited missed opportunities in Africa’s industrialization due to misguided global policies.
- Advertisement -
