السم البطيء .. عيدي أمين، يويري موسيفيني، وتكوين الدولة الأوغندية
السم البطيء .. عيدي أمين، يويري موسيفيني، وتكوين الدولة الأوغندية
Translated
Slow Poison In 1972, when Mahmoud Mamdani returned to Uganda, he found a country scarred by a “tidal wave of violence.” Two years earlier, with the support of British and Israeli colonial powers, Idi Amin had consolidated his rule by force. He quickly expelled Uganda's Indian minority in the hope of building a state for black Ugandans. But the plan backfired on him. Amin succeeded Yoweri Museveni, who ruled the country for nearly four decades. While Amin sought to create a black majority state, Museveni sought to fragment this majority into multiple ethnic minorities, reviving a form of indirect colonial rule.

Bibliographic Data
| Publisher | Harvard University PressWebsite |
|---|---|
| Publisher Address | contact_hup@harvard.edu |
| Country | USA |
| Primary Category | Ideas and Policies |
| Language | Arabic (AR) |
| Translation | Translated |
| Keywords | أوغنداالسم البطئعيدي أمينيويري موسيفيني |












