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Development control gone awry
Mail & Guardian
|M&G 10 October 2025
Kampala’s urban landscape reflects systemic development failure, contrasting with Kigali’s long-term vision and effective governance in infrastructure and planning.
Lack of polish: Kampala's urban form reflects a city that has grown by default rather than by design.
(Photo: Wikimedia Commons)
After a four-week professional immersion in Rwanda, a country that has mastered the art of urban coherence, I arrived in Kampala, Uganda, with a sharpened analytical lens and a pen reawakened by contrast.
Kigali had reignited my passion for writing after a prolonged hiatus, offering a compelling case study in disciplined urban planning.
It is a city where infrastructure speaks the language of intentionality, and governance is not merely performative but profoundly service-oriented. Kigali's urban form is not accidental. Its pedestrian-friendly pavements, efficient moto-taxi system, and absence of potholes or load-shedding are the result of a governance model that privileges long-term vision over short-term expediency.
The city's cleanliness is not cosmetic; it is infrastructural. Its silence is not apathy; it is order. Rwanda's strategic investment in human capital, sport diplomacy, and global partnerships has positioned it as a hub for tourism, investment, and international collaboration.
This story is from the M&G 10 October 2025 edition of Mail & Guardian.
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