Home
About Uganda Latest News
Uganda Visitors Forum
Advertise Here Free
Facts about Uganda
Uganda Travel Guide
Questions & Answers
Uganda Guests Book
Uganda Events
Flights Africa Flights
Travel in Uganda
Sleep & Eat Uganda hotels
Hotels Forum
Uganda Food Guide
Uganda Food Recipes
Recipes Forum
Uganda Restaurants
Restaurants Forum
Uganda 4 Star Hotels
apartments
budget hotels
 Safari Lodges
camping
Africa Hotels
Kenya Hotels
Tanzania Hotels
Zanzibar Hotels
Camps/Lodges
Safaris &Tours Tour Agencies Forum
Africa Safari
Ugandan Safaris
Kenya Safari
Leisure Uganda Entertainment
Shopping in Uganda
Volunteers Forum
Governance All Ugandan Districts
 Uganda History
 Uganda Culture
Uganda Civil Wars
Obote1
Amin
Obote2
Museveni
L R A
Uganda Tourism Uganda top Attractions
Game Parks
Uganda Game Parks
Uganda Wildlife
Kidepo
Bwindi
Gorillas
Pygmies
Kenya Parks
Tanzania Parks
Cities & Towns Kampala Capital City
Mbarara
entebbe town
Masaka
Masindi
Kabale
Fort-Portal
kasese
Jinja
Mbale
Lira Town
Useful Info Health
Education in Uganda
HIV/AIDS
Uganda Real Estate
Business Guide
Uganda Car Rentals
Kenya Guide
Tanzania Guide
Find out More Travel Links
Site Map
About Us
Make a Website
Advertise Here
Contact Us
Privacy Policy

[?] Subscribe To This Site

XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines

History of Uganda in the World War 2


Do you want to learn about Uganda with the World War II and its aftermath? Stay on this page.



During World War II the protectorate faced the task of becoming as self-sufficient as it could. More important for Uganda was the attempt by the governor, Sir Charles Dundas, to reverse his predecessors’ policy and to give more freedom to the factions striving for power in Buganda.

The old policy was revived, however, after an outbreak of rioting in 1945. Also in that year the first Africans were nominated to the Legislative Council, and in succeeding years African representation steadily increased.

An important step was taken in 1954 when the African council membership increased to 14 out of a total of 28 nonofficial members; the 14 were selected from districts thought to be more natural units of representation than the provinces that had previously existed.

In 1955 a ministerial system was introduced, with 5 nonofficial African ministers out of a total of 11. The success of the council was undermined, however, by the erratic participation of Buganda, which viewed a central legislature as a threat to its autonomy.

This feeling reinforced the resentment Bugandans harboured after Mutesa II had been deported in 1953 for refusing to cooperate with the protectorate government. He returned two years later as a constitutional ruler, but the rapprochement between Buganda and the protectorate government was lukewarm.

In the immediate postwar years the protectorate administration placed greater emphasis on economic and social development than on political advance.

From 1952 the government rapidly expanded secondary education, while legislation was enacted and a loan fund established to encourage Africans to participate in trade.

A relatively ambitious development program was greatly assisted by the high prices realized for cotton and coffee; coffee overtook cotton as Uganda’s most valuable export in 1957.

In 1954 a large hydroelectric project was inaugurated at Owen Falls on the Nile near Jinja, and in 1962 a five-year development plan was announced.









Related Articles

History » The Uganda Protectorate

History » The Uganda Protectorate » Growth of a peasant economy

History » The Uganda Protectorate » Political and administrative development

History » The Uganda Protectorate » World War II and its aftermath

History » The Republic of Uganda » Tyranny under Amin

History » The Republic of Uganda » Obote’s second presidency

The First Obote Regime: The Growth of the Military

Idi Amin and Military Rule and civil wars

The Second Obote Regime: Repression Continues

The Rise of the National Resistance Army

Allied Democratic Forces National Army for the Liberation of Uganda (NALU)




Click to return from World War 2 to Uganda history

Click to return Back to Home Page









footer for World War page