By Aaron Asiimwe
Kampala: The United States Envoy to Uganda Mrs Deborah Ruth Malac term came to an end and we can truly confirm that unless further instructions from Washington DC, the US Ambassador is soon waving goodbye from the pearl of Africa.
We learnt about Malac’s last days in Uganda when she visited the Speaker Of Uganda’s Parliament Rt. Hon Rebecca Alitwala Kadaga on Thursday for a private meeting.
However, after the meeting, Kadaga through Parliament made a tweet wishing Malac well as she reached the evening of her service as American Ambassador to Uganda and gifted her with a locally made painting.
This website through Diplomatic sources learnt that Malac also announced her exit as the US Ambassador to Uganda. “What we know is that she has done her years as Ugandan ambassador and it was announced earlier but she is expected to leave in February next year,” a source revealed.
Natalie E. Brown also career member of the Senior Foreign Service, is tipped to replace Malac, according to a Spy at the Embassy. Natalie currently serves as the Chief of Mission of the USA to Eritrea.
The source intimated that Malac’s departure hasn’t been publicized yet because she is waiting for her replacement. Sources also say Malac personally told high-level meetings that she would be leaving as US Ambassador but may return in a different capacity.
Malac has had an outstanding role in Uganda, specifically advocating for freedom of speech, democracy and respect of human rights among others.
Malac has had an outstanding role in Uganda, specifically advocating for freedom of speech, democracy and respect of human rights among others. Malac’s major task as she came to Uganda was to help Uganda avoid complacency with regards to HIV/ Aids after the progress made and also ensure that Uganda enforces tenuous peace agreements in war-torn South Sudan.
While being vetted for posting to Uganda by the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Malac told the committee that if she was confirmed, she will urge the Ugandan president to ensure the political space necessary for a spirited and robust campaign in which all parties participate fairly as the country was heading to elections.
In April 2016 while speaking at the post-election symposium on Youth, Democracy and Governance at Hotel Africana in Kampala, Malac called on the Ugandan Government not to sacrifice the rights of its citizens in the name of maintaining stability. “These rights are guaranteed in Uganda’s laws and constitution and shouldn’t be sacrificed in the name of stability,” Malac said.
She also said the US cannot ignore actions that shrink Uganda’s political space and restrict freedoms of assembly and expression. While speaking in July 2017 at America’s 241 Independence anniversary celebrations at the US Embassy in Kampala, Malac said that strong institutions, not one person or party, is the secret to longevity and stability of nations.
She noted that true democracy requires the collection of all voices, backgrounds and beliefs and a system in which, every individual can and does have a say in how Government is run. Just in September, Malac was recognized for her work in Uganda and received an award for her effort in the fight against the Ebola virus.
She has also been a strong advocate for better health for Ugandans and at the centre of the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which a U.S. government response to the global HIV/AIDS epidemic. Ambassador Deborah R. Malac is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service of the US and has served since 1981.
Before coming to Uganda, she was the U.S. Ambassador to Liberia, Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and also worked as Director of the Office of East African Affairs in Washington among others.
Malac was nominated by USA President Barrack Obama on September 19th, 2015 replacing Ambassador Scott Delisi who had announced his retirement. The US Senate confirmed Malac’s nomination in November 2015. Malac presented her credentials to President Museveni on February 27, 2016.