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Mr. President, We Have a Letter Situation…and Then Obama

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Three months ago a letter supposedly authored by a little known member of opposition Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) Catherine Ddembe caused a buzz among Ugandans on social networks. “

The letter detailed a plot to frame senior government officials in subversive activities. The letter also spoke of plans to kill key figures allegedly opposed to what has come to be known as the ‘Muhoozi project’. The project of trying to groom Museveni’s son Brig Muhoozi Kainerugaba for the presidency (We don’t know when- the father hasn’t shown signs of retiring in 2016).

Gen. Sejusa

It was this letter that Gen. David Sejusa (Tinyefuza) picked up and wrote asking that an investigation be carried out. His letter was leaked to the press (Daily Monitor).  Gen. Sejusa had travelled to London on April 30 days before the leaked document was published. And before that his aide was arrested for treason (the most misused charge by the Ugandan government.)

In the same week, the president went to attend the London Somalia conference. All didn’t go well there as British Prime Minister David Cameron kept President Museveni out of the picture.

There was a feeling that Museveni who took our forces to Somalia in 2007 (they have done great but at a great cost) was humiliated and sidelined at a western world show of who is who in Somalia.

And the president returned – with fury.  Cameron screwed up the Somalia show and so Gen. Sejusa’s letter wouldn’t be freely available on airwaves and newspapers. If the regime couldn’t have the General then they could have the media.

The Police summoned Daily Monitor editors and reporters and in a day-long quizzing they got nothing. Then the highly partisan Ugandan Communications Commission (UCC) was the next call. With UCC it is always a pleasure to get such a gig from the powers that be. Next, UCC  wrote to radio stations and warned (read intimidated) them over broadcasts of Gen. Sejusa’s letter.

UCC Executive Director Godfrey Mutabazi  told Daily monitor:

If somebody complains to the UCC, it is under obligation to act.  The government complained that the media is trying to create insecurity, which is unacceptable. If the material broadcast could cause insecurity, we shall withdraw the licence…”

In the document UCC created a new charge for radio stations saying that they would lose licences because they engaged in political campaigns instead of news reporting.

Four days later, a court order to search for the lost Gen. Sejusa letter came in. On Monday 20th May, state operatives and police turned Daily Monitor and Red Pepper into crimes scenes. They also closed Dembe FM and KFM. The search warrant allows them to go on and we are now into the second day.

An activist outside Monitor offices to protest the media clampdown on May 20. Photo by Edgar. R. Batte

Many Ugandans used social networks to discuss the siege on media houses. UCC is still struggling to dispel rumours that they could cut off access to social media networks. The regime doesn’t need more international scrutiny, the closure of the media houses making headlines is enough.

The more government hunts down the messenger, the more we believe there’s a Muhoozi project.  The Army Spokesperson Paddy Ankunda was in the media saying that Muhoozi has been an excellent officer. The only thing I can remember is Garamba. His daddy gave him major operation (Operation lighting thunder) to capture elusive Joseph Kony and all we got was a famous photoof officers with Kony’s saucepans. It is our perfect postcard from Congo sent by Brig. Muhoozi and his team. If Museveni wasn’t busy trying to shut Ugandans out of the discussion on the future of their country we would forget the saucepans for now.

Museveni’s problem isn’t the letter only. President Obama’s first visit to Africa has been announced. Since we are busy searching the printing press for a handwritten letter, Obama thinks he might be caught up in the Sejusa letter search so no visit! and no mention of this great violation of press freedom in Uganda.

President Barack Obama’s African tour due next month will see him visit Senegal, Tanzania and South Africa. Seems that young man Jakaya Kikwete is stealing our show by sending troops to DRC as Sejusa engages us 24/7. Our old man in the hat is no longer the kingpin. And of course Kenya just elected a suspected criminal so no Kogelo and grandmother for Obama.

It is tough times not just for Museveni but one thing is for sure, this whole letter-searching thing is only making Sejusa’s letter seem like gold. The suspected Muhoozi project and other likely succession issues are talked about among Ugandans daily. It must be annoying to see people to speak about your departure right in your face (hello!! am still here!) but when you have been at a place too long the anxiety should be understood.

Whatever happened to the letter – may be the goat ate it- the role of the army in Uganda’s future is an important issue that Ugandans must discuss openly without intimidation and made up accusations on breach of security

Gen. Sejusa, who ironically in the past has led missions to close down some media outlets, has been the most outspoken general on this. In February he wrote about President Museveni threatening parliament and the coup talks.

…we must confront is the role of the military in the management of the State. Will it remain an embodiment of the aspirations of the people from which it derives its legitimacy and power or will it try to subvert the power of the people and by so doing loose its historic pro people position which would of course result in its collapse and inevitable defeat, for the people always win no matter how long it may take.

People will always win, in due time!

Uganda Media Siege Protested Worldwide

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His Excellency Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda
State House
P. O. Box 25497,
Kampala,
UGANDA.
Fax: +256 414 235 462
info@statehouse.go.ug

27 May 2013

Your Excellency,

We are writing on behalf of the World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers (WAN-IFRA) and the World Editors Forum, which represent 18,000 publications, 15,000 online sites and over 3,000 companies in more than 120 countries, to express our serious concern at a raid by armed police on The Daily Monitor and Red Pepper newspapers and their subsequent closure, as well as the forcing off air of two radio stations which share office space with The Monitor.

According to reports, on the morning of 20 May heavily armed security personnel cordoned off The Daily Monitorand Red Pepperpublications, then forced KFM and Dembe FM radio stations, which are housed within The Monitor’s premises, off air. Security forces searching the premises reportedly claimed that they had a court order declaring the building a ‘crime scene’. The newspapers and radio stations remained closed on 21 May.

The raid follows the publication of a leaked memo by a senior general alleging that you are grooming your son Muhoozi Kainerugaba to succeed you and that those who oppose him risk being murdered.

This act of censorship and intimidation occurred only one week after Ugandan politicians were at the forefront of a resolution supporting press freedom at the Pan African Parliament (PAP).

The Midrand Declaration on Press Freedom in Africa was unanimously endorsed by members of the PAP, which also recognised our organisations’ Declaration of Table Mountain, which calls for greater press freedom in Africa, and launched an annual media freedom index for the continent.

During the PAP discussion, Ugandan parliamentary member Hon. Sam Amooti Otada said: “We believe in the media as the fourth estate, because in Uganda, we understand where there is no free media there is no democracy.”

In line with the Midrand Declaration, we respectfully call on you to immediately end the blockade of The Daily Monitor, Red Pepper, KFM and Dembe FM so that they may carry out their journalistic role of informing the public. We urge you to take all possible steps to ensure that in future Uganda fully respects its international obligations to freedom of expression

We look forward to hearing from you at your earliest convenience.

Yours sincerely,

Jacob Mathew
President
World Association of Newspapers and News Publishers

Erik Bjerager
President
World Editors Forum

WAN-IFRA is the global organization for the world’s newspapers and news publishers, with formal representative status at the United Nations, UNESCO and the Council of Europe. The organization groups 18,000 publications, 15,000 online sites and over 3,000 companies in more than 120 countries.

cc.
Hon. Onyango KAKOBA, Chair, Justice and Human Rights Committee, Pan African Parliament
Hon. Sam Amooti Otada, Committee on Transport, Industry, Energy, Communication, Sicence and Technology Pan African Parliament.

Source: http://www.wan-ifra.org/articles/2013/05/27/protest-campaign-uganda-27-may-2013

President Museveni’s Speech on OAU/AU 50TH ANNIVERSARY

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H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni

Speech  By H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
President of the Republic of Uganda

At the OAU/AU 50th Anniversary

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

25th  MAY, 2013

Your Excellencies,

As we celebrate 50 years of Independence, we need to ask ourselves the following questions:
1.    Why were we colonized?  Why could we not defend ourselves and preserve our sovereignty?  Why couldn’t the African Peoples, who are similar or linked, work together to defeat Colonialism?
2.    Are we aware of what happened to the other conquered peoples in the World?
3.    Why did the African Peoples survive the nightmare of colonialism and slave trade?
4.    How did we regain our freedom?  Which factors helped us to do so?
5.    How have the African peoples worked to insure their freedom since Independence?

Africans insure cars, houses, etc.  How have we insured ourselves and our future as free people since Independence?

I have addressed these questions before.  However, there is no harm in answering them again because a convergence on these issues has not yet emerged among our people.

The answer to the first question is that we were  colonized because we were not united in spite of the similarities among us and the linkages we have.  Some people try to use the excuse of the superior technology of the Europeans.  I do not accept this excuse because the Chinese and the Japanese were also lagging behind the Europeans in technology. The Europeans could not, however, defeat them, not for lack of trying.  They were too big to swallow.  On account of a higher degree of integration, our Ethiopian brothers and sisters were able to defeat the imperialists.

The Chiefs that should not be forgiven are the ones of the Great Lakes area and Southern Africa.  Vasco Da Gama went around the Cape of Good Hope in 1498.
The Portuguese, thereafter, started frequenting the East African Coast.  These Chiefs of ours could have seen and heard that a new power, with stronger weapons, had come on the scene.  It was not until 1862, a full 364 years afterwards, that the European aggressors got to Uganda.  Why couldn’t our ancestors get together and plan to defeat them?  No. Instead, they were busy fighting each other and even assisting the slave trade by selling the captives from neighbouring tribes to slave traders.  Poor political organization, lack of political integration, was, therefore, the main cause of our defeat.  The fire-weapons of those days were not much better than spears or arrows, especially in the Tropics where there was a lot of bush cover.

You know what happened to other conquered peoples – the Indian Americans, the Incas, the Aztecs, the Australian Aborigines etc.  They either disappeared (were exterminated) or are marginalized.
Why did we survive colonialism, slave trade etc?  It was because of our strong genes and advanced civilization.  Since we had achieved advanced agriculture, the domestic animals we kept had inoculated us against the zoonotic diseases (diseases that go from man to animals) that had exterminated the other indigenous peoples.  Our survival proved that we were strong genetically and culturally (civilization, agriculture, science).  However, our shameful colonization proved that we were weak in terms of political organization.

How, then, did we regain our Independence?  It was on account of three factors:
i)    The continued resistance of the African peoples – initially by the Chiefs – Cetswayo, Lobengula, Mkwawa, Kabareega, Mwanga, etc, but, eventually, by the liberation movements or mass political organizations – Nkrumah, Azikiwe, Nyerere, Lumumba, Luthuli, Mandela, Thambo, Sisulu, Kaunda, Ben-Bella, Musaazi etc, etc.
ii)    The mutual weakening among the imperialist countries with their inter-imperialist wars – the so called First and Second World Wars.  Even after these horrible wars among the imperialist predators, in which a total of 1.8 million Africans were used as cannon fodder, the imperialist countries tried to re-impose their colonialism – in Kenya, Indo-China, Southern Africa, etc.

iii)    The support our cause got from the Socialist countries – the Soviet Union, China, Cuba, etc.

These were the three factors that enabled us to regain our freedom.

The final question to answer is:  How have we worked, since our liberation, to insure ourselves from the present marginalisation or from future re-colonization?  We have attempted 50% of what we should do.  We have attempted economic-integration – with ECOWAS, COMESA, EAC, SADC, etc.
This is good.  This is one of the factors the African economies are growing at the rate of 5%- per annum while some other parts of the World are growing at miserable rates.  Even here, a lot remains to be done.  You still have unnecessary non-tariff barriers, unequal distribution of benefits within the economic blocs, insufficient attention to infrastructure (e.g. electricity where the Khw per capita is as low as 12 in some African countries while in the USA it is 14,000), inability to build effective State pillars in some cases etc.  Nevertheless, Africa must be commended here because, at least, we have started on the long journey to economic integration.

Where performance is totally deficient is in the other 50% – political integration.  Apart from Tanzania, which was moulded by our great leader Mwalimu Nyerere along with another freedom fighter, Mzee Abeid Karume, nothing has been done on this crucial front.  You remember the first sin of our ancestors was failure to unite politically.
That is why we were colonized.  This failure is not excusable because the African peoples are either similar or linked.  They are just grouped into four linguistic groups: the Niger–Congo groups of languages (including the Bantu and Kwa languages), the Nilo-Saharan (Cushitic, Nilotic languages), the Afro-Asiatic (Arabic, Amharic, Tigrinya etc) and the Khoisan languages of the click speakers of Southern Africa.  This is a cardinal mistake which this Anniversary Convention should revisit.

In the EAC we are very explicit on this issue.  Our treaty aims at an eventual Political Federation of East Africa.  We cannot guarantee the future freedom of Africa, the way we are organized politically today. Why do we get mesmerized and are awed by the strength of others but do not strive to build our own strength?  If we admire the strength of the USA, China, Brazil, etc, let us build our own strength.

All the raw materials are here – similar or linked peoples and a common land mass that has got all the resources we need to build incredible strength, with very rich islands around it and two vast Oceans – the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic Ocean – giving us huge marine resources.

You remember, I did not support the ideas of the late Muammar Gaddaffi of uniting politically the whole continent.  However, there are parts of Africa that can unite politically. Economic and political integration are the two factors that can give full meaning to the renaissance of Africa.  Renaissance means modernization and integration (economic and political).  We cannot take renaissance to only mean singers, paintings etc.

When Africa acts together, we win.  The founders of the OAU determined to defeat, militarily, the incorrigible colonial and racist white regimes that were controlling Southern Africa at that time.  Many people thought the Africans were joking.
However, by 1971, Frelimo, led by Samora Machel, had defeated the big offensive, “Operation Gordian Knot”, by the Portuguese General Kaulza D’Arriaga, leading an Army of 70,000 Portuguese soldiers in Mozambique.

The blows the Portuguese were receiving in Mozambique were duplicated in Angola and Guinea – Bissau.  By 1974, the Fascist Regime in Portugal had collapsed.  Africa had liberated Portugal from fascism and had also liberated Mozambique, Angola, Guinea-Bissau and Sao Tome.  The defeat of the Portuguese in Mozambique, led to the defeat of the Ian Smith White regime in Zimbabwe.  Zanu and Zapu were leading that struggle.

By 1994, South Africa and Namibia had been liberated by military action.  When Africa unites, nothing can stop us.

In those anti-colonial wars, Africa was supported by the Socialist Countries (the Soviet Union, China, Cuba etc) with military equipment and know-how.  Some of the Western countries were giving non-lethal aid -scholarships, relief for refugees etc.  These were mainly the Scandinavian countries, Holland etc.

In our Luganda dialect, we say: Agali awamu gegaluma enyama” – teeth that are tight in the gum are the ones that can successfully chew meat”.

I thank you.

YOWERI KAGUTA MUSEVENI
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA

UWA ED Meets Prince of Wales in England

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Seguya Meets Prince of Wales

The Executive Director of Uganda Wildlife Authority Dr. Andrew Seguya who is also a board member of the Uganda Tourism Board,on May 21st,2013, was among the Ugandan delegation that attended a meeting hosted by his Royal Higness the Prince of Wales.

The meeting also attended by the commissioner for wildlife in the Ministry of Tourism Mr. James Lutalo sought to discuss action areas of potential collaboration and partnershipsto combat illegal wildlife tradeand related products.

The UWA boss also utilized his visit to hold meetings with the Ugandan embassy staff to discussissues pertaining to the promotion of Uganda Wildlife Authority and visit tourist sites and businessesin London.

90% Of Ugandan Women are Sexually Harrased At Work

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Government has been called upon by Uganda Human Rights Defenders Association to find ways of protecting women in Uganda against “sexually hungry” men at places of work.
The Executive Director HURIDA, Gideon Tugume on Friday condemned the increasing rate of women sexual harassment in the country with many more still suffering from humiliation and self dejection.

Tugume said a research was carried out between March 15 and May 11, 2013 in 1500 companies, 1000 secondary and primary schools, 10 Universities,200 health centers, 100 churches, 50 mosques and 50 financial institutions where 10,000 respondents were interviewed to find out the situation in which women are working and challenges they face at their place of work.

“It was discovered that 90 percent of women are sexually harassed at their places of work by their male seniors by raping them in their office or using their authority to force them into sexual intercourse in lodges, cars and after dump them without care,” said Tugume.

According to Tugume cases of female job seekers who are asked to offer sex to their male employers before offering them jobs is increasing but surprisingly they refuse to offer them jobs. And where the jobs has been offered, after one month they are dismissed after failing to keep every day sexual demand.
He added that 88 percent of female students who go to different companies for internship are sexually abused but they keep quite “because most of the assaults happened in the closed offices of the bosses who offer some money or favors after the act.

He added: “99 percent of house girls are sexually abused by men in their bedrooms when their wives are away for work or when they are sick after either delivery or both.”

Tugume, however, appealed to Women Non- Government Organizations both National and International to rise up “and condemn this increasing human rights abuse against women in Uganda.”

Police, like other government institutions have been urged to crack down on sexual harassment of women at workplaces

Sri Lanka President Visits Murchison Falls National Park

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Murchison Falls National Park in My hosted a number of high profile visitors including the Sri Lankan President HE Mahinda Rajapaska.The Sri Lankan head had a boat ride to the bottom of the falls,the Delta where Victoria Nile joins Lake Albert,a game drive and also visited the top of the falls.

He toured the park after attending the Commonwealth Conference for Local Governments in Kampala and was impressed by the beauty of the park especially the magnificent Murchison Falls. He was accompanied on the tour by the Minister of State for Tourism, Wildlife and Antiquities.

Other high profile visitors to MFNP included Her Royal Highness the Queen of Bunyoro Kitara Kingdom as well as the French Ambassador to Uganda accompanied by the General Manager Total E&P that were on a tour of Oil exploration sites inside Murchison Falls National Park.

Muslims Seek to Block New Judges

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Legislators belonging to the Muslim faith yesterday petitioned the Speaker of Parliament protesting “discrimination and marginalization” in the appointment of the new judges and demanded that the planned vetting process be stopped until further notice.

Last week, President Museveni submitted a list of 28 new judges to the Speaker of Parliament for approval. In a petition presented to Ms Rebecca Kadaga by Parliament Imam Latif Ssebaggala (Kawempe North), the MPs complained that they responded to the advert by the Judicial Service Commission and their names were sent to the President only to be removed under unclear circumstances.

Citing Articles 21 (2) and 32(3) of the 1995 Constitution, Mr Ssebaggala said the marginalisation of Muslims in the appointment of the 28 judges offends the Constitution.

Sources close to the Speaker’s office told our source that Ms Kadaga is expected to forward the petition to the appointing authority and that the same merits and demerits of the petition will be discussed in the Appointments Committee.

But a senior official at Judicial Service Commission told our source that not more than three Muslims applied and the reason is that many Muslim lawyers are unwilling to leave private practice and work for Shs5m which is the salary for a judge.

Inexperienced Leadership Harmful to Uganda

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Inexperienced Leadership

The current indisputable decadence in Uganda has forced Ugandans to search for a solution more than ever. There is consensus Uganda has enough resources – human and non-human – to meet basic needs of education, food, health, housing and clothing for every Ugandan now and in the foreseeable future if used fairly. Ugandans are not only hard workers; they are also innovative if given a chance. At the time of colonization, Uganda was more industrialized than it is today. Through specialization in production and exchange in local and regional markets Ugandans obtained what they needed except during periods of natural or human calamities like drought and war that led to famines and loss of lives.

The colonial regime changed Uganda’s economic structure, ending industrialization process and turning Uganda into a producer of cheap raw materials it never produced before (cotton, coffee, tobacco and tea) in exchange for expensive manufactured products that it produced before like hoes that contributed to poverty and its negative offshoots. The struggle for independence was meant to reverse the order thereby reintroduce industrialization of the economy and export manufactured products with a higher unit value than raw materials. This has not happened after independence in 1962 for two major reasons: inexperienced leaders in the art of public administration; and opportunism, corruption and sectarianism. As late as 1960, Uganda national leaders hadn’t emerged. Iain Macleod, then British Colonial Secretary wrote in May 1960:

“The problem here is an extremely complex and difficult one. In no other territory is the political picture so confused. No national African leader of any sort has yet emerged. In consequence the struggle goes on between the traditional forces represented by the Kabaka and the other Agreement Rulers and the rising power of the political parties. We must try to keep a balance between them and not sacrifice either…”(Roy Douglas 2002).

Because of the struggle for power, Ugandans that had some experience like Ignatius Musazi and Ben Kiwanuka of Buganda, George Magezi of Bunyoro and William Rwetsiba of Akole were sidelined by young and with little or inexperience for post-independence leadership. Consequently, the president, prime minister and probably both secretaries-general of UPC were in their thirties with hardly any experience to lead a complex country.

As if we did not learn anything, Amin without civilian public experience and with a well known record of brutality in Kenya and Uganda was well received in January 1971 as the savior of Uganda. In order to hang on to power Amin damaged the economy and society by killing and forcing into exile the elites including the expulsion of the Asian community. Then came Museveni who was not only inexperienced in civilian administration, but an opportunist as Mzee Boniface Byanyima described him to C. M. Mpagi (Daily Monitor October 6, 2005) who has also turned out to be highly corrupt and sectarian. Museveni originally a UPC member wanted to lead DP in 1980 elections; formed UPM when DP rejected him; lost a parliamentary seat in the 1980 elections and ended up waging a brutal guerrilla war because the elections were rigged when his party is not the one that felt had been cheated in the 1980 elections. Museveni recognized his lack of expertise recently when he made a statement in Kisumu at the invitation of Raila Odinga. Museveni observed that he had become an expert giving the impression he had been a student on the job with European tutors (he was given tutorials in macroeconomics by European tutors). In his address on April 18, 2013 launching vision 2040, Museveni took us back to some sections of the ten-point program which he abandoned in early 1987 (in favor of failed structural adjustment program) before it got implemented as if to remind us of the work he came to power to do which hasn’t been done. After reporting on what he considers as achievements in education, energy, democracy and security, he said “We are now set to move”, implying that he is now ready to lead the country to accelerated economic growth and possibly equity.

Boniface Byanyima who perhaps knows Museveni more than anyone else because he looked after him while he was young observed that Museveni introduced the idea of vision to deprive people the right to determine their destiny and leave it in the hands of Museveni to do it for Ugandans. To prevent parliament from determining Uganda destiny Museveni “invented the idea of the man of vision; … so they should allow him to think for us”(Daily Monitor October 6, 2005). We already have Museveni’s ongoing 2025 vision. The question is this: Why have another vision? Does vision 2040 replace 2025 or is it a revision and extension of 2025? From the information at my disposal no explanation has been offered why we needed vision 2040. It may represent an attempt by someone who has failed at home and increasingly abroad and is trying to hoodwink the public in order to stay in power longer (when faced with domestic problems Amin threatened to reclaim Uganda land in Kenya. When that failed he invaded Tanzania that fought back and sent him into exile). Ipso facto, vision 2040 should be treated with a grain of salt.

Now we have Gilbert Bukenya who some people believe is another opportunist. He was one of the people closest to Museveni as minister in the presidency and then as vice president serving in that capacity for ten years and therefore closely associated with and definitely shares responsibility for the mess in Uganda. He was comfortable with NRM until Museveni dropped him in the cabinet reshuffle in 2011. He hasn’t been absolved of a number of things including possible corruption. With all this record, he has already been selected by DP and FDC to lead the opposition against NRM which he served since its inception in 1986 until he was dropped from the cabinet. How is Bukenya going to convince Ugandans that he wasn’t responsible for the country’s decadence? How has this decision blocked emerging of a formidable candidate to run against Museveni? Are there some parallels between Gilbert Bukenya and Paul Ssemogerere? Some have suggested that Ssemogerere couldn’t make it to the top because of opportunism. While DP leader he served as minister in Okello Lutwa government, then in Museveni government as minister of internal affairs, foreign affairs and second deputy prime minister and then competed against Museveni in 1996 for president on a DP/UPC ticket knowing full well UPC was unpopular especially in Buganda. What does Bukenya stand for and what is his family tree? Present and aspiring leaders should be transparent and make their political economy views known to give Ugandans a chance to make informed decisions (Ugandans who avoid to discuss unpleasant or controversial issues like federalism to avoid risking losing popularity should not participate in running a government because they will evade those issues and more while in power or will use force to silence dissent and the country and citizens will suffer).

Bukenya started upland rice which he no longer talks about. If the project is still running how much rice are we producing? How much of it is consumed in the country and how much exported? What has been the impact on the environment and peasant land holding? The situation Uganda is reminiscent of what Macleod talked about in May 1960 namely: “In no other territory is the political picture so confused [as in Uganda]”. Now we have a president who goes to public rallies with sacks of cash to bribe Ugandans! Can Museveni and Bukenya be rebranded by Ugandans and their outside supporters? People are asking what to do in 2016 should they be presented with Museveni and Bukenya as presidential candidates of the two major parties: Should they re-elect Museveni or replace him with Bukenya or stay away from the polling stations? What should concern Ugandans now is to find out who is the invisible hand directing Uganda’s political affairs.

Navio’s Grandmother Collapses and Dies at Serena Hotel

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Guests at the Pepsi anniversary celebrations on Monday evening were gripped with shock as Maggie Kigozi‘s mother, Molly Blick collapsed and died on spot.

Crown Beverages, bottling company was celebrating 20 years at Kampala Serena Hotel.

Eyewitnesses said that it all started with gospel singer Judith Babirye entertaining the guests with his classy hits including the electrifying Maama.

The audience quickly gave her a standing ovation.

Excited, Kigozi, who once served as Crown Beverages’ Marketing Director, introduced her ageing mother, Mrs Molly Blick.

Kigozi described her as an energetic, loving and caring mum. Molly’s face was lit up with joy and blessedness.

It is suspected Molly was overwhelmed by joy and excitement.

A few minutes later, Molly collapsed and died.

The bereaved was Rapper Navio‘s grand mother.

Kigozi’s husband, Engineer Daniel Serwano Kigozi with whom they had three children died suddenly in 1994.

Kigozi’s father, Engineer George William Blick of Irish descent was a civil engineer with the Uganda Ministry of Works and Transport while the deceased traces her roots to Masaka District in Central Uganda.

People pass away. Remember them as they would like to be remembered.

— NAVIO (@naviomusic) April 16, 2013

May her soul rest in eternal peace and condolences to the family of the bereaved.

New Mr. and Mrs. Wildlife promise to guard environment

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The newly crowned Mr and Miss Wildlife will take two days off their books for a trip to the amazing Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

This comes after the duo won the Environment Education competition at Kitante Hill School at the weekend, instantly winning free fully-sponsored trips. Moses Waibi, a Senior Four student at Kira College Butiki in Jinja emerged Mr. Wildlife while Gadaffi Nawal, a Senior Five student of Kisaasi College in Kampala emerged as the Miss Wildlife

The competition was organized by the Wildlife clubs, an environmental association of Uganda that aims at enabling the students appreciate environmental studies.

Mr Fagil Mandy, the chairperson of the Uganda National Examinations Board, said that schools should promote formation of more of these clubs to boost co-curricular activities to enable students have a different understanding on various aspects of life.

Joining cause

After being crowned, Waibi said he would use his position to promote environment education in schools while Nawal said she would be an environment ambassador in schools across the country.

The two beat 98 students in a hotly-contested competition that covered general knowledge, thematic questions, and general presentation on the environment and wildlife.

Mr Dan Nuwamanya, an environment don at Makerere University, Ms Patricia Adoki, a Biology and science lecturer at Gulu University and Ms Claire Wandera, an education officer at Uganda Wildlife Educational Centre, were the judges.

The Vice Chancellor of the East African University and also board member of the Uganda Wildlife Clubs of Uganda, Prof. Eric Edroma, said they had come a long way in conserving the environment. He compared the sector to 1975 when poaching was at its peak to what the country can pride in today.

Mr David Musingo, the chairperson of the Wildlife Club of Uganda said plans were underway to organise regional competitions.

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