Talk:Ugandan affairs

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Etymology[edit]

I do not think this account of the origin is correct (although it is getting repeated all over the web). I was a regular reader of Private Eye at the time, and the account given here fits my memory of how it started much better: i.e., "we were discussing Ugandan affairs" was an excuse given by a journalist to (implausibly) explain away a long time spent alone with an attractive African interviewee of the opposite sex (at a time when Uganda was much in the news). The accusations about the Ugandan government minister having sex in a public lavatory may well have been made at around the same time, but I do not think they were the origin of the phrase.

Sometimes the expression would be varied to just "discussion Uganda," or "discussion East African affairs." — This unsigned comment was added by 216.165.224.107 (talk) at 12:55, 21 July 2010‎.

[This should be resolved soon; the forthcoming 50 years of Private Eye is meant to include the origins of this phrase] — This unsigned comment was added by 188.29.42.195 (talk) at 07:54, 14 September 2011.
I concur, the aforementioned explanation is the correct one — This unsigned comment was added by 86.189.2.242 (talk) at 21:14, 17 October 2011.