What plan do you have to counter the state from banning your performances?
Our biggest success is when the state doesn’t know how to deal with us. They don’t know how to handle us. They feel us but can’t touch us. I can’t release the plans. I just want you to see them taking place.
Just like how you always manage to get away from the forces?
Actually, I don’t celebrate my getting away from the forces. I am not supposed to run away from my own police. The fact that I have to run away from them is already a failure. So, I am supposed to be sad whenever I run away from them.
Did the ‘Twebeelemu’ tribal clip affect your relationship with Besigye?
You say you’re just a representative of the people. Don’t you believe everyone has the ability but a few people are blessed?
I don’t agree. In any case, I am the least qualified person. I am only a third-year-law student. I have been in music all my life. What brings me is pure frustration. And since I am a man from ghetto causing that change, it means each one of us once we play our role perfectly, we can cause that change.
You encourage people to get National IDs. Should we start preparing for 2021?
Yes! Prepare for 2021.
Should we say you’re coming out to run for the presidency?
No, that’s not what it means when I say prepare for 2021. Uganda has problems in 60,000 villages. People should come out and vote. For starters, you can’t choose your leaders if you don’t have a national ID. There is an opportunity in 2021 to throw out this government and the quickest constitutional opportunity is less than 24 months away.
Besigye has tried that since 2001. Which strategy will you use that is going to differ from his?
Besigye is my mentor. This means I have been watching and learning from him. I have learnt from all the mistakes and I believe that failure is not an option. Museveni has taken advantage and rigged the elections but even our side as the opposition is to blame. We have never completely united. The same way we make songs hit songs is the same way we can make ideas hit ideas. I refuse to believe that we can’t win this man.
We heard that you’re working hand in hand with Gen. Muntu? How is the partnership going?
Not only Muntu. Am in touch with KB [Besigye], Muntu, Mao, Basalirwa and all these other forces of change. We want to find a way of working together.
What has been your biggest lesson as a leader?
We are a generation that has everything we need to free itself. And we are generation that is facing a very despotic regime and is ready to do anything to keep us under bondage.
What would you do for Bebe Cool if you became a president?
Bebe Cool is a fellow artiste, he is a brother, he is someone I have known over time. Even when we disagree, I still respect him as a person, as a colleague, and as the father of my children’s friends. When you are a leader, you are a servant. I am Bebe Cool’s servant. He is my boss because he is a citizen of Uganda.
What’s your most creative time of the day?
From 6 pm to midnight. That’s when I catch up with my friends. It’s those conversations that we hold, unto which I add the melody, Dan Magic adds on the beat and we have songs. I am going to release an album called Forbidden Music.
In regard to socio-economy, what good thing has President Museveni done that has improved the lives of the People of Uganda?
They used to be many. The discipline of the army, I used to credit it to President Museveni till a few years ago when the army completely lost it. I would have credited the modernization to him when the internet was free but now it is taxed and limited. I would have credited freedom to him but the fact I am not given the freedom to practice my profession which took time, discipline money and commitment, I won’t.
I would say the only good thing I credit Museveni is that he uploaded naturalness on Abenakyo.