More
    Home Blog Page 172

    Solar Ovens To Launch Next Year in Uganda Through Diaspora Business

    0

    Next year, solar ovens will appear in the Ugandan market, and a new manufacturing plant will be launched in January, thanks to the entrepreneurship of Ugandan-American businessman Ronald Mutebi. After his company won $100,000 in the African Diaspora Marketplace, a competition sponsored by Western Union and USAID, Mutebi has piloted an assembly plant in Uganda to produce the ovens, which will be sold initially at $170 each. The parts come from Sun Ovens International, an American company based in Illinois.

    The ovens are made with reflectors of anodized aluminum, which do not rust, a plastic outer shell, an aluminum inner shell, as well as fiberglass insulation. The ovens are produced in the U.S. but used around the world, including 100 developing countries. The ovens will benefit from the frequent sunshine in Uganda, and one oven can feed a family of eight. A solar oven, created by Sun Ovens. Mutebi’s passion and concern over deforestation in Uganda was a major factor in wanting to start a business that will produce and distribute the solar ovens. Ugandans who use the ovens will not need firewood or charcoal, both of which have caused the loss of tropical forests throughout Uganda.

    “Uganda, as well as Africa as a whole, is losing its forest cover at an alarming rate, primarily due to fuel for cooking,” Mutebi told Ugandans Abroad. “This is what especially the population at the bottom of the pyramid rely on for their daily survival. Deforestation and its impact to global warming mean nothing, because to them it’s a matter of eating or not.” Mutebi became involved with the solar ovens when he learned about them at a Rotary International Conference in 2004. The inventor of the solar ovens, Tom Burns, is a longtime Rotary member, and Rotary runs solar oven projects on five continents. “Everyone who has seen the performance of the Sun Oven wants to get one,” Mutebi said.

    The entrepreneur is from the Buganda region of Uganda, and is the nephew of the Kabaka, Ronald L. Muwenda Mutebi. He was raised just outside of Kampala, and attended Kasubi Family Primary and Mengo Senior Secondary. He went to Makerere University for undergraduate education, and followed his college degree with an additional degree in accounting in Kampala. He started his own custom metal fabrication business in 1997. He left Uganda to pursue further studies in the U.S. at Chicago’s Loyola University in 1999, and has a home in Chicago today. He is very involved with the Ugandan community in Chicago, and likes to play football with the Chicago Cranes, their diaspora team.

    Since 1999, Mutebi’s perception of his culture and motherland has changed a great deal. “Before I travelled outside my culture to leave the country, you could not show me the wealth of my culture and heritage,” he said. “You know, the feeling of the grass being greener on the other side of the fence. But now, after living in the United States for over ten years, I am a big advocate for celebrating our culture in the diaspora.” Today, he runs the Tek Consults Group, a Chicago-based consulting group that helps professionals and companies do business in East Africa, and which won the $100,000 grant from the African Diaspora Marketplace to launch the solar ovens in Uganda. In addition to the Tek Consults Group, Mutebi also started the Ugandan American Global Initiatives, which coordinates and harmonizes humanitarian activities back home with American friends he has developed over the years in the U.S. At the end of the day, for Mutebi, being a Ugandan that lives in America is all about opportunities, challenges, and expectations.

    “Opportunity is the fact that I live in the West, and can have many guarantees to the basic necessities of life,” he said. “Challenge in the fact that the many resources and opportunities cannot easily be transferred home. And expectation of the people left home that things just happen to you because you live in the West.” This festive season, demand for the solar ovens is keeping Mutebi busy—he’s traveled all over Uganda, working on the project. Once production is in place, he plans to split his time fifty-fifty between Uganda and the United States. He says that it feels great to be home, “but these days it is hard to tell where my home is.” Mutebi says that at least 1,000 individuals in Uganda have expressed interest in purchasing the ovens.

    “Everyone who has seen the performance of the Sun Oven wants to get one,” Mutebi told Ugandans Abroad. “This is regardless of gender, class, or educational background.” Ronald Mutebi, near the White House in Washington, D.C. In November, Mutebi did a demonstration of the solar oven to Vice-President Gilbert Bukenya. “In a few minutes of seeing the oven cook and the temperatures that it was accumulating, he literally pulled out his wallet and paid in U.S. dollars for four ovens to be delivered to his country home,” Mutebi said.

    “Overall, there has been a tremendously positive reception of the ovens not only in Uganda, but in all other countries where the ovens have been tested.” Ultimately, Western Union and USAID gave $1.4 million in grants to fourteen businesses, all run by Africans in the diaspora. 700 African immigrants applied, and 90 were selected as finalists. Judges looked for businesses that tapped into botht he knowledge of Africans in the diaspora and their local partners back home.

    Many investors also attended, including representatives from the World Bank. USAID is encouraging its missions around the world to also offer technical expertise to winners in the competition. Mutebi hopes that other Ugandans living abroad will want to start, expand, and invest in businesses back home. “The message is simple. The time to build our continent is now!” he said. “Africa, even in the global depression, is still posting close to six points in growth, compared to the one to two percentage points the West is posting this year. Those who know this are running in droves to be part of the action.”

    The Chaotic NRM Party Elections

    0
    NRM Party Elections

    The second-biggest news story of the year 2010 — after the July 11 bomb blasts in Kampala — is, so far, the chaos within the NRM party that started with the district committee elections in July and went full-blown in August with the primary elections.

    The aborted primary elections have also offered the country a glimpse into the true thoughts of many within the NRM.

    Apparently, they are not as passive and sheep-like in their attitude as they sometimes seem or are portrayed. They can be aggressive. They can fight (even with assault rifles) for their political turf. They can storm radio stations and harass their opponents.

    If a projection were to be made into the future, it can only be speculated how far the NRM that has shown itself to be this defiant would be prepared to accept Museveni’s imposition of his son Muhoozi Kainerugaba on the party as the next president of Uganda.

    The NRM elections also proved that the ruling party’s supporters know as much about rigging as the rest of the country and have an idea that when the opposition complains about rigging, this is not just a case of sour losers.

    The confusion surrounding the elections was the first, unequivocal, highly public demonstration that the NRM is a fractured party. It might not yet be at the point that the UPC party and the UNLA army were in 1985, culminating in that July’s military coup.

    However, this drama has helped shatter the long-held image of the NRM as a solid, powerful, united political force.

    Most of the assumptions upon which the idea of opposition parties contesting Uganda’s elections as coalitions were built, were over this impression of the opposition confronting a single powerful force.

    The fallout and bickering have been so unusual and dragged on for so long, that inevitably some suspicion has arisen that there might be a hand behind it all.

    It is difficult to put it past the NRM party chairman, Yoweri Museveni, to stir up the confusion within the NRM, as many skeptics have pointed out. After all, even with all the hostility that the various camps within the NRM feel toward each other, somehow they all seem to have one thing in common — loyalty to Museveni.

    While this is still speculation, this certainly seems to be a turning point for the NRM.

    The full extent of this fall out within the NRM will be explored in this edition of the Uganda Record.

    Why IPC Had to Fail

    0
    IPC Uganda

    Dear Editor,

    First of all, welcome back The Uganda Today! Your analysis echoes some of my thoughts. The minute I heard of the formation of IPC I realized that NRM would “win” in 2011. Here is why.

    They don’t/won’t have a coherent plan of action that I have so far heard. Believe it or not, [President] Museveni is still capable of out-maneuvering them, and they know it. Their fear of him suddenly appointing a new Electoral commission in November is a case in point.

    [Olara] Otunnu is playing the wiser game as you suggest. Touch the right buttons for long enough and Museveni will have no choice but to react the only way(s) he knows how.

    Look out for Otunnu to get arrested, homosexual charges, or even a “car accident”
    — maybe even food related illness.

    You rightly point out that the FDC and friends won’t want the truth about our dark past (Luwero, etc) to be revealed because they were in the know at the time and thus implicated or complicit in alleged crimes.

    Keep probing Sir.

    Ugandan Man
    Email: ugeeman@gmail.com
    ——————————
    Corrections on journalist Tony Owana

    I want to correct this error by the Ugandan media about Mr. Tony Owana. He is not an editor with Tarehe Sita magazine but just a guest writer and is listed as a columnist.

    He is not on the pay roll of journalists officially employed by the Ministry of
    Defence under the Defence Press Unit. He instead works for Kyankwanzi Natioanal Leadership Institute under Col. Shaban Bantariza. So correct this false impression.

    Mike Ssesanga
    Email: mike.ssesanga@yahoo.com

    President Museveni’s Speech During the Opening AU Summit

    0

    Speech By H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni President of the Republic of Uganda At the Opening of The African Union Summit Theme:  Maternal, Infant and Child Health and Development in Africa Commonwealth Resort, Munyonyo, Kampala 25th July 2010

    Your Excellency Dr. Bingu Wa Mutharika, President of the Republic of Malawi and Chairman of the African Union; Your Excellency Jean Ping, Chairman of the African Union Commission (AUC); Your Excellencies Heads of State and Government; Other Leaders of Delegations; Invited Guests; Ladies and Gentlemen. The people of Uganda welcome you to your second home, Uganda. Your decision to hold our Summit in Uganda, this July 2010, was an honour to the people of Uganda.

    The theme of the Summit is: “Maternal, Infant and Child Health and Development in Africa”.  When I saw the theme, my 2 immediate response was: ‘How can we discuss “Maternal, Infant and Child Health and Development in Africa” without discussing the foundation issues of job-creation, Human Resource Development and infrastructure development?’  In order to sustainably support maternal health, you need money to buy drugs, medical equipment, fund health units, etc.  Our countries will not have the necessary money without adequate tax collections by our Governments. Our Governments will not collect enough taxes unless our economies grow.  Our economies will not grow unless we apply the right strategic stimuli to them.

    Some of the Asian societies have been able to transition from “Third to First World economies” in the last 50 years.  Many of the African economies are endowed with more natural resources than the Asian economies.  Yet they have not been able to transition while the Asians have.  Why was this so?  It was so because, as I have already said, some strategic stimuli necessary to spur the economy to mutation have been missing.  I do not want to put out the full list of the necessary strategic stimuli that are needed to cause the 3 transition of our economies.  I had done this when we met for the G-8 at Sea Island (in 2004).

    All I need to say for this occasion is that we shall not be able to achieve socio-economic transformation if we do not address all of these strategic bottlenecks.  I will just take one example – electricity.  How can an economy become modern if it does not have access to adequate and reliable electricity?  There is a unit of measurement known as kilowatt hour (kWh) per capita – the amount of electricity consumed by each person in a country per annum.  The kWh per capita of the USA is about 14,124.  Some of the African countries have as low as 9!!  High cost and shortage of electricity, poor roads, inadequate human skills, etc. – all translate into high costs of doing business in a given country.  This, in turn, means that such an economy is not an attractive business destination.  No or little investment will, therefore, take place with all the consequences already stated above.

    Owing to my forty-five years of student activism, liberation struggle and running a non-developed economy, I have now 4 crystallized the issues.  One cause of failure to develop infrastructure in Uganda was depending on foreign borrowing or grants.  The foreign lending Agencies either do not know or do not care to find out the magnitude of needs Africa has.  It takes 15 years to negotiate for one power dam (its funding).  During the time I have been in Government, I have discovered that depending on external funding for infrastructure development (grants and loans) is very dangerous.  In one of our dialects we say: “kewelimidde akira mbegelaako” – the one who has grown his own crops is better than the one that begs for food from neighbours.  The money begged for or borrowed from outside is too little, very unreliable and too slow in coming to be able to help us in dealing with infrastructure.

    In the last few years, therefore, given the growth of our economy and our improved tax collection, we have set up our own Energy and Road Funds solely funded by the Government of Uganda.  We are, at least, able to move fast on many infrastructure projects: hydro-power dams, electricity transmission lines, roads and even the railway.  Given that our economy has been growing at the 5 average annual rate of 7.0% per annum over the last 24 years, one can imagine what will happen when we have solved the problems of electricity as well as road and railway transport. This does not mean that we do not appreciate external support.  We say in one of our dialects that: “etajugirwe nyoko, ku obona ekirengye oti nariire” – a cow which is not your mother’s bride price, even if you are given a hoof when it is slaughtered, you should be grateful.

    We are, therefore, sure that Uganda will become a middle-income country by 2015 and, by that time, our electricity generation capacity will be about 3,800 mgws.  Our electricity generation capacity was only 60 mgws in 1986 when we took over Government.  It will soon be about 1,000 mgws after the completion of the new dam (Bujagali).  In the next 20 years i.e. 2030 our electricity generation capacity will stand at about 17,000 mgws and, by that time, Uganda will be an upper middle-income country.  The building up of power generation capacity has not been as fast as we would have wanted precisely because of relying on external funding.  This will no longer be the case given our improved financial capacity.

    In the past, we had no choice. 6 Coming to the question of “Maternal, Infant and Child Health and Development in Africa”, the situation in Uganda is currently as follows: maternal mortality ratio is now 435/100,000 while infant mortality rate is 76/1,000. In terms of infrastructure, we have extended health units up to the Sub-county level.  There are 1,116 Sub-counties in the whole of Uganda.  The radius for many of the Sub-counties is 4 miles.  This is far much better than what we used to have in the colonial times. A health unit would cover an area of 15 miles or more.  In some cases we have gone to lower levels – to the Parish.  This would give us a radius of only 2 miles or less.  The problems are now only two: adequate funding for the consumables: drugs, gloves, etc; and corruption among medical workers who steal and sell Government drugs and other supplies.

    There is always pressure to pay public servants more so as to ‘cure’ corruption.  Yes, we are beginning to improve the salaries of medical workers as well as other science graduates and technicians.  However, we have vigorously rejected the strategy of only paying public servants and forgetting to fund roads, power dams, the railway and the peasants. Additionally, we are intensifying monitoring of health services, embossing drugs of the Government and other medical equipment. In the roadmap for accelerated reduction of maternal, neo-natal mortality and morbidity, we aim at reducing the maternal mortality ratio from 527/100,000 in 1990 to 131/100,000 by 2015.

    Regarding infant mortality reduction, Uganda aims at reducing the ratio from 122/1,000 in 1990 to 41/1,000 by 2015. Finally, I thank Your Excellencies for your moral support following the terrorist attack on merry-makers who were watching World Cup football on screens in a restaurant and in an open field. 76 innocent young people were killed.  I am glad to inform Your Excellencies that many of these organizers have been arrested. Their interrogation is yielding very good information.

    Meanwhile, in Somalia, on the 4th and the 21st of July, 2010, those terrorists attacked the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) and the African Union (AU) positions.  They got the punishment they deserved. TFG and the AU Forces defeated the attacks.  I, however, recommend that the AU members do not accept this 8 arrogance.  Who are these people who dare to attack AU Flag? Whose interests are they serving?  These terrorists can be and should be defeated.  As you may know, I have quite long experience with fighting.

    I, however, have great contempt for the authors of terrorism – using violence indiscriminately, attacking non-combatants, manipulating children to be used as cannon fodder.  I am glad the whole of Africa have condemned these cowards.  Let us now act in concert and sweep them out of Africa. Let them go back to Asia and the Middle East where I understand many of them come from.  As for some of the local Somali people that allow themselves to be used in this shameful way, our Somali brothers and sisters have the answer.  I personally, reject this new form of colonialism – through terrorism. Thank you very much. 25th July 2010 – Commonwealth Resort, Munyonyo, Kampala.

    Mama Zakayo Joins Pet Therapy Drive

    0
    Zakayo

    I could talk about chimpanzees all day,” says Peace Nakitto. Like most people who work with animals, Nakito (fondly nicknamed Mama Zakayo) has immense respect for them and gets sentimental just talking about them. But for her, it is man’s closest relative in particular that stole her heart.

    Nakitto, who will most notably be remembered for starting the tradition of celebrating Zakayo’s birthday, leaves behind 10 memorable years at the Uganda Wildlife Education Centre (UWEC). Zakayo is the oldest chimpanzee living at UWEC.

    Nakitto is now Country Co-ordinator for Yebo, a UK-based organization that focuses on using animal-assisted therapy and primate-based learning to support socially and emotionally disadvantaged children in Uganda, South Africa and the UK.

    It was founded by Lisa Davies, a primate researcher and child welfare worker after she discovered that chimpanzees react in the same way humans do when traumatized, abused, ill or disabled.

    Yebo works with Raising Up Hope, an orphanage in Kampala that takes care of street children who have had abusive and traumatizing upbringings.

    Davies collaborated with Nakitto while doing her research in Africa and they’re using their knowledge and experience to help disadvantaged children.

    “I love working with children, and animals,” says Nakitto. “The more you understand them, the deeper you grow to love them. Primates and children understand each other. That’s why children are the most prominent visitors at the primate enclosures.

    Primates are driven by feelings, just like children. They are always chattering and arguing. A grudge between two members is a quarrel for the whole troop. But chimpanzees have a lot of compassion.

    There are a lot of things you could learn just by watching a baby and mother chimpanzee relate. The bond between them is extraordinary. That’s one thing people don’t seem to understand.”

    Nakitto is also working with Uganda Reptile Village. “I want to take my knowledge and experience further to help other organizations.

    There is little awareness and appreciation for reptiles in Uganda and they don’t receive nearly as much attention. Consequently, many reptile species are vulnerable.

    Unlike other creatures that live in protected areas like giraffes in national parks, reptiles live side by side with human beings and, therefore, need more protection. We’re working in conjunction with Nairobi Snake Park to bring on board some of their concepts and ideas.”

    Nakitto’s passion for animals and conservation started when she was only a little girl. Her parents had cats and dogs in the home and greatly cared about their welfare.

    “If we had to eat, they had to eat. They had needs just like we did and my parents taught us to respect that.” This was in contrast with what she saw outside the home and she was greatly moved. As a little girl, she used to linger around Zakayo’s cage during visits to UWEC.

    Throughout her school life, she had taken any opportunity to preach conservation and respect for the welfare of animals. She served as Wildlife Club chairperson, minister of environment and performed other nature-related duties at school.

    Though she wanted to do an animal-related course at university, her     father noticed her strength in communication and decided that she was better suited for education or    journalism. She did a Bachelor of Arts in Education.

    After university, she started teaching, but kept her dream about working with animals alive. One day, she walked into UWEC and offered to work as a volunteer.

    Nakitto continued teaching while working as a volunteer; shoveling poo, feeding the animals and doing whatever else she was assigned to do for six months until she was offered a permanent position.

    “For me, it was never about the money, it was about making a difference where I have a passion. Whereas many graduates looked at this kind of work as dirty and unprofessional, I had set my mind to contribute to the growth of UWEC.”

    Immediately she walked into the animal cages, she came to the realization that this was what she wanted to do for the rest of her life. “I fell in love,” she exclaims. Her 10 years at UWEC were the most eventful of her life.

    Saying Goodbye
    “Animals can tell that something is wrong. When I went for my farewell, there was an outpouring of      emotion. One of my favorite chimps Sarah, who is also Miss UWEC, gave me a huge goodbye kiss.

    Unlike humans who finally forget you,   animals don’t. They show their appreciation every time they see you. I am already missing them. I get goose bumps just thinking about it.

    Every day at the centre, there was something new, risky and perhaps even life threatening, but always   entertaining.

    One morning at the centre, it was business as usual. I was walking through the shady trees when suddenly; two groups of agitated Vervet monkeys came charging at me.

    I prepared for the worst and wondered what I could have done to disturb them. As the scuffle continued, I realized that they were rival groups and I was simply an obstruction.

    I stood very still and when they realized that I wasn’t taking sides, they continued with their melee and I walked away.

    Another time, these monkeys attacked me for wearing a shirt with a picture of a chimpanzee on it.

    Of course the incidences in the chimpanzee enclosure are most unforgettable. There was one chimp that   always washed her feet.

    One day, a mischievous tourist threw in a cigar and she crossed her legs and started smoking it. I’ll also miss grooming the mane of Salaama, the friendly lion.

    UWA Beefs Up Rescue for Dutch Tourist

    0

    A TOTAL of 58 members of the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) and Rwenzori Mountaineering Services (RMS) were deployed to carry a Dutch tourist down the Rwenzori Mountains.

    The unnamed tourist was rescued six hours after he fell into a crevice during his expedition in the Rwenzori Mountains National Park at midday on Monday, according to UWA chief, Moses Mapesa.

    He said on Tuesday that the tourist and another were descending after a five-day trek around the 5,109 meter-high Margherita Peak.

    The incident occurred near Elena Peak when he slipped off a cliff and fell into a crevice.

    Mapesa said the tourist in his early 50s was unable to walk because of his injured limbs.

    “We deployed 58 people to carry him back to base,” the RMS acting director, Robert Mulekya, said.

    He said the tourist was heavy and unable to walk, so he had to be carried in turns during the trek that takes several days.

    ICC conference offers Opportunity to commit to justice

    0
    ICC Conference in Uganda

    Uganda is privileged to host the first landmark review conference of the Rome Statute which established the International Criminal Court (ICC) . The United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon will open the historic conference today at Munyonyo.

    It’s 12 years since the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court (often referred to as the International Criminal Court Statute or the Rome Statute), the treaty that established the International Criminal Court (ICC) was adopted at a diplomatic conference in Rome. The statute, which came into force on July 1, 2002 and has since been ratified by 110 countries including Uganda, has drastically changed international criminal law.

    The Rome Statute and its implementing agency the International Criminal Court, has in the short period of its existence ensured that perpetuators of horrendous  crimes against humanity do not escape the rule of law. And the list of indicted suspects grows by the day, the latest being those accused of perpetuating crimes against humanity during the 2007/8 post election violence in Kenya.

    The ever elusive Joseph Kony and his Lords Resistance Army (LRA) deputies Vincent Otti, Okot Odhiambo and Raska Lukwiya have also been indicted but are yet to face trial at the ICC. They stand accused of 33 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity committed against the people of northern Uganda in the last 20 years.

    The indictment of these men and others still at large in various parts of the world proves one thing ; that the Rome Statute which is now up for review, has to a certain degree been effective in ensuring that there is no place for impunity in the 21st Century. Of course there is a lacunas (gaps) in the Rome Statute which must be filled.

    One such gap is the lack of a definition for the international crime of aggression. It is now a serious issue of contention because of the presumed influence of the powerful nations when they seek to attack or invade weaker nations without the approval of other civilized states.

    Unlike the crimes of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, the International Criminal Court (ICC) cannot exercise jurisdiction for the crime of aggression because the Statute is silent on its definition and doesn’t set out the circumstance under which court can summon suspects.

    However , according to the proposed amendment the individual crime of aggression is now defined as the planning, preparation, initiation or execution by a person in a leadership position, of an act of aggression. Importantly, it contains the threshold requirement that the act of aggression must constitute a manifest violation of the Charter of the United Nations, which is basically an instrument geared at the peaceful co-existence of nations.

    The act of aggression is the use of armed force by one State against another State without the justification of self-defense or without authorisation by the Security Council. The acts of aggression contained in the amendment proposals involve invasion by armed forces, bombardment and blockade.
    It’s encouraging that in an effort to avert cross border wars between or among nations, the threshold and formulation of the proposed definition: there is preliminary compromise made by many states that the powerful states should not use their positions to invade other countries without the approval of the international community. It should be noted , however, that USA, France and Britain are some of the super powers still opposed to this settlement.

    On the issues of ICC’s jurisdiction, there is also broad consensus that an investigation could be opened by the prosecutor on the basis of a UN Security Council referral, a state-party referral, or proprio motu (the prosecutor’s own volition). In other words, the same trigger mechanisms would apply as in the case of the other three crimes under the Court’s jurisdiction. No nation should be allowed to invade another without just cause and support of other civilised states.

    The writer is a journalist and advocate
    msserwanga@gmail.com

    New Road to Kisoro Already Breaking Up

    0

    The long awaited new tarmac road connecting the two South-Western Ugandan towns of Kabale and Kisoro is reportedly already developing cracks before it is even handed over by the contractors to government. The recent very heavy rains across the country may well be a reason for the cracks which have in recent weeks become visible at the road shoulders, causing enough concern for government to bring in consultants, engineers and consultants for a full assessment of the damage, before deciding on what to do next along the affected sections of the road.

    The consultants’ report will hopefully shed some light on the origin of the cracks and fissures, and establish if the rains alone were the cause of if poor materials were used in construction, or else earth tremors responsible for the problems.

    Kisoro offers short access to Uganda’s two gorilla national parks of Mgahinga and Bwindi and is also close to the border to Rwanda and Congo. The town is surrounded by steep volcanic mountains and extensive tropical rain forests not to forget the various lakes, making it one of the most scenic locations in the country.

    If you love Bi-Nigeria, then Go Watch the CHOGM Play

    0

    There is a play showcasing in a theatre called Parliament. It is a comedy to be precise. The protagonist is a gentleman called Nandala Mafabi, whose theatrical group is named the Public Accounts Committee. Their latest production that elicits laughter to the point of tears is called Investigation into the abuse of funds during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

    The plot is the familiar linear type, with usual twists of suspense and asides. But like its distant cousin-the Bi-Nigeria, the ending is predictable—no catharsis. The play is derived from the recent happenings in a house of a man named Uganda. Three weeks ago, Uganda assumed the enviable role of hosting a great meeting of other men who had once slept with the Queen of England.

    Like all good hosts, Uganda chose to give the guests a great treat. He weeded the paths and planted banana stems to ensure great scenery as the guests toured his homestead. Not sure of his children’s culinary abilities, he procured services of a neighbour’s maid. Knowing that the Queen and some of the guests would want to tour neighbouring villages, Uganda decided to hire some bicycles to facilitate this process. And indeed when the party was held, it was memorable.

    There was one hitch though. Uganda’s budget, that he presented to clan mates, was Shs200 billion. A week after the party, the clan, under the leadership of one Nandala Mafabi—the protagonist—wants to know if there was value-for-money. They are asking really silly questions. For example, they wonder how Uganda’s first born, Kutesa, who was charged with hiring the bicycles could have spent more than five times the normal market price. One of the clan leaders, a hoarse-voiced man called Kazibwe is surprised that the maid brought to help in the cooking was actually no maid, she was a herdsgirl.

    There is this talkative clan elder called Sekikubo. He amused the clan gathering when he asked Uganda’s senior wife, Hope, why the flowers planted for the fete withered immediately the Queen left. There was derisive laughter, with some drunken guys wondering what good flowers would be to a village known for littered buveera and dung.

    The protagonist, Nandala, keeps making reference to the need for the clan to know how their money, earned largely from sale of coffee and vanilla, was spent. But some of Uganda’s more sensible children have snubbed the clan summons. One of them Mbabazi, in fact told off the elders. He is busy tending to his father’s cattle. He has no time to explain how the askaris guarding the guests were carrying rungus instead of the arrows as indicated on the budget. The other son, Bukenya, has received some form of relief after members of his age group, that he heads, said he can’t be quizzed at a village playground.

    Nandala also keeps scratching his head, trying to figure out how the village treasurer, Mutebile, instead of the Shs200 billion budgeted and requested for, had given the Uganda family over Shs600 billion.

    That is the comedy showing at Parliament. It would have been a great show and I would have recommended that you go watch this play. But the problem is that there have been such other shows before. The same theatre hosted a play Investigations Into Corruption in the Police Force and another production titled Probe into Junk Choppers.

    But beyond bringing into prominence an actress called Julia, there have been no tangible lessons for the village. The last such show, The Trials and Tribulations of Temangalo, was such a put-off. In fact, some of the cast broke off from the main act and formed a breakaway group, which put up the now famous Minority Report show. If you are interested in stale plays with no emotional impact, I would recommend you go to Parliament and watch this new play. But if that plot and resolution, like the Bi-Nigeria movies, have gotten to your nerves, I suggest you go to the bar, pick a beer and brainstorm on who will win the Premiership this season.

    Blame Corruption on Dormant Ugandan Youth

    0

    Last year, I was assigned by my editor to attend a ceremony where the government Ombudsman was releasing a perception survey which was carried out after an investigation into prevalence and incidences of corruption and administrative injustice in the public service.

    Although the survey showed the Police, Judiciary, Uganda Revenue Authority, Umeme- the power utility firm- and the public service pension office as the most corrupt government departments, it blamed the youth for doing nothing to fight graft.

    Uganda’s vulnerability to corruption stems from systemic faults in governance. Continued initiatives to strengthen legal frame work, national enforcement agencies and national anti-corruption strategies are needed to effectively curb corruption in the country. Although government initiatives such as the Anti-Corruption Court, the Inspectorate of government and the office of the Auditor General have, in varying degrees, positively contributed to Uganda’s fight against corruption, the full effectiveness of these initiatives is impeded by several challenges.

    Uganda may share the story of corruption with many countries but its young population is unique in the world today. Over 67% of its population are under the age of 35. A further 48 % are under the age of 18. In the next 15 years to come, most institutions will be manned by people under the age of 50.

    The question that seemed important to me was, how in a country with such pervasive youthfulness and pervasive corruption- can the future leaders fight that evil called corruption? Certainly, it was not a question of lack of institutions. Alongside the Ombudsman were several laws and institutions designed to fight corruption.

    Despite of all these measures, however, the vice seems to be flourishing and not diminishing. The World Bank country managers said this month that graft in Uganda was endemic, and a confidential World Bank report said government audits read like a case of “Ali Baba and the Forty thieves”.

    So how could today’s innocents prevent being sucked into the circle of Ali Baba? Will the forty thieves become forty million thieves? Who are they stealing from if not themselves? And if institutions failed, our role models failed, where will change come from? How do you save a generation from going bad? That’s the question.

    In the fight against corruption everywhere, there can be no victory without courageous individuals standing up, speaking out, taking risks, and alerting the wider society that something wrong is taking place. Such courageous individuals are to be found amongst the youth. This can only be successfully if youth organizations form a symbiotic relationship with the media and use the power of the Internet to spread the anti-corruption gospel. The youth can rise up to demand the necessary legal and structural reforms that are vital in fighting corruption.

    The youth should rise up and work with the civil society and religious groups to raise awareness about corruption and participate in the design and implementation of anti-corruption strategies. The youth should understand that they are unstoppable force in any country, whatever the stage of its democracy. Their effectiveness in exposing corruption is only one of the many things that they can achieve together. They must believe in their respective strengths, and in their combined partnership strength, and persevere in their efforts to achieve a better world, generally, and especially one that is free of corruption.

    MOST COMMENTED

    Bebe Cool’s Skimpy Dancers Barred from Performing at ‘Enkuuka’

    0
    Organisers of the annual CBS/ Buganda sponsored end of year gig, 'Enkuuka', barred Bebe Cool's skimply dressed female dancers for performing for the Kabaka. As...

    HOT NEWS