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Uganda Government’s Official Statement on Kony 2012

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12 days: that’s how long it took the whole of Government of Uganda to release an official statement on the controversial Kony2012 video. Again what this reminds me is that Social Media is for citizens – if you have been following the story, you have probably noticed that Uganda on the web criticized the video the moment it as launched.

Today the government of Uganda released an official statement on the #Kony2012 campaign. The statement was delivered by the Minister of Information – Ms. Mary Karooro Okurut.

The Information Minister described the Kony 2012 video as follows – “But the impression created in this documentary that Uganda is a war zone and that the conflict is still raging has got serious connotations on this country because it will scare away Uganda’s friends, tourists and potential investors. It does not bring out the fact that Northern Uganda is now under reconstruction and that  government and other organisations are doing a lot to see that it comes up and catches up with the rest of Uganda. All is this left out”

At the same time a women’s movement group today described the video as demeaning to the efforts of the Ugandan Civil society and thousands of both local organisations which have played a key role in championing peace restoration efforts in North and North Eastern Uganda. “If there wasn’t civil society in this country, people in North and North Eastern Uganda would be no more. But we held the whole mantle as the civil society, we went door to door; that is our approach of advocacy. But theirs which is your know, those pla-cards campaigns; that’s what it means in the west.” says Ruth Acheng, Director – Isis, WICCE.

The Anti #Kony2012

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By Black ACrylic

Over the last few days I feel I have been swimming furiously against the #Kony2012 tide. The campaign launched by Invisible Children encourages Americans to lobby American cultural icons and policy makers into putting pressure on the US government to send troops to Uganda to capture leader of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) Joseph Kony. Without a doubt Kony deserves his place on the International Criminal Court’s  (ICC) Most Wanted list. Under his leadership the LRA have terrorized Northern Uganda, maintaining a culture of institutionalized violence present in Uganda since its inception by the British Empire. Under the guise of spiritual conviction Joseph Kony and the LRA have waged a war that has resulted in the killing and physical mutilation of thousands and performed disgraceful acts of sexual violence including rape and recruiting young girls into sexual slavery. Abducting child soldiers into the LRA has played an important role in leveraging power in Northern Uganda and lawless border regions of the DRC, Central African Republic and South Sudan. So far all collaborative efforts from Ugandan, Congolese, Sudanese and Central African governments and pressure from the UN, ICC and other international bodies have failed to bring Kony to justice.

The destruction of the LRA in Northern Uganda has led the region to be ostracized from relatively growing socio-economic prosperity in the South of Uganda. According to the World Health Organisation (2007) there are still an estimated 900,000 internally displaced Northern Ugandan’s with limited access to food, healthcare, water and sanitation. My maternal family is from Northern Uganda and although we are largely based in Kampala I decided to take a trip to Gulu in 2008 and I remember being taken aback by the sheer number of NGO’s operating in the region. You have NGO’s on every corner scrambling for the space in a similar manner to the way you have a Starbucks and McDonald’s on every corner in London. Behind the veneer of charity, you have real people and real communities who after a generation of civil war are in the process of rehabilitation. Kony and the LRA have not been active in Northern Uganda since 2006 and today the focus in the region is now on resettlement and reconstruction by providing access to education, psychological rehabilitation, training for young adults who were captured by the LRA as children, community reconciliation and emotional and spiritual empowerment. #Kony2012 is not a campaign that supports any of these objectives.

As a piece of  neo-colonialist marketing #Kony2012 is brilliant. However, if you are concerned with accuracy and content it is disturbing. Taking Joseph Kony and the LRA outside of a national, geo-political and historical context and excluding Ugandans from the advocacy process will not end the violence of the LRA or prevent future conflicts in Uganda. What the campaign does is simultaneously appeal to the ego and the heart of the international community and gives the impression that lobbying for US military presence in Uganda (despite Kony having fled) will dismantle the LRA – just like that, magic! A Twitter user captured the campaign perfectly when he said he never thought you could blend together the Heart of Darkness and Glee. Yet, traditional responses to the war in Northern Uganda have been military action from Museveni’s government and traditionally this has failed. For example, Museveni’s Operation Iron Fist in March 2002 where he attacked LRA bases in Northern Uganda and Southern Sudan failed, leading to devastating attacks on civilians by the LRA. Recent peace in the region is considered a blessing and according to Professor Samuel Tindifa of Makerere University, requires a regionally specific solution that includes building a politically and ideologically mutually beneficial relationship between the government and the political leadership of the Acholi and Langi communities. A growing US military presence in Uganda is not on the list of needs to make the country a safer and better place. If money should be spent lobbying any government it should be on lobbying the governments of Uganda, South Sudan, DRC and Central African Republic to utilize their intelligence to capture Kony. The leadership of these governments must be held to account instead of sovereignty being outsourced to twitter and facebook enthusiasts who cannot point to Uganda on a map let alone engage with sustainable conflict resolution. The video itself does not mention Museveni which makes me question its viability as an awareness and advocacy tool.

Over the years the US and Uganda and been building a political alliance to ensure Museveni advocates for the interests of the US in the region. For example, the Bush administration significantly increased aid to Uganda in return for cooperation with its “War on Terror”. Museveni’s eagerness to support the US agenda in Africa has been criticized as leading directly to greater violence in Northern Uganda and the 2010 terrorist attacks in Kamapla by Somali militants. There is a very apparent power struggle for influence in the region that has been compounded by the discovery of oil in Uganda. The discovery of oil will potentially lead to serious instability in the region and I see a clear correlation between the discovery of oil in Uganda and Obama sending troops in October 2011 to “help combat the LRA” that Museveni himself admitted is a “crushed force”. It is typical of Museveni to do the bidding of the US and as the Ugandan parliament has oil debate after oil debate he will no doubt help the US in their neo-colonial scramble for Africa by securing US companies with oil contracts.

Sadly, few people have used the superficial lens of #Kony2012 as a chance to educate themselves on culturally and historically specific political issues in Uganda. Most people really believe that the US military will save the day and they can make a difference by tweeting Kony into infamy. What the campaign has done successfully is provide a smoke screen for a strategy that leverages political influence (#KonyMania) for economic gain (oil revenues) by heightening US presence in Africa. Americans questioning US interest in Uganda can sleep well knowing the government have a bad guy to catch. It would have been great to see an awareness campaign around Joseph Kony being captured and charged that contextualised the LRA and engaged with Uganda’s desperate need for power and policy restructure that included Ugandan opinions. A public indictment of Joseph Kony, Yoweri Museveni and all his friends in Washington. This is what will make Uganda a better place. This will save children. Overnight Northern Uganda has gone from being one of the most ignored humanitarian crisis in the world to a pop-culture phenomena. If only oil had been discovered in Uganda 10-15 years ago.

Kony 2012 – Ugandans Speak About the Project

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By Wangui Muchiri

Since Invisible Children’s Kony 2012 video went viral many Ugandans have been infuriated by what they refer to as a gross misrepresentation of their country. Let’s give credit where it’s due. The Kony 2012 video has been hailed worldwide as a success for advocacy.  The effect this video has had in terms spreading a message is almost unprecedented.  It has also refocussed the world’s attention to the atrocities committed by Joseph Kony, and re-energized a global will to capture him once and for all.  What hasn’t been heard by as many people however is the voice of the Ugandan people.

A couple of contradictions have emerged. The video purports to represent thousands of people who are still going through unimaginable hell under Joseph Kony’s torturous anarchy in Northern Uganda and that Kony is backed by 30 000 child soldiers.  The video also places Uganda in Central Africa.  The reality however, cannot be further from the truth. According to a statement released by the Ugandan government, the last time Joseph Kony was in Uganda was in 2006.  A combination of Ugandan, Congolese and US forces continue to hunt for him in the densely thick forests of Congo to date.  The number of Kony’s supporters are also nowhere near the 30000 child soldiers that Invisible Children claim in their ‘Kony 2012′ video.  In fact, his supporters number no more than 300 today.

It’s also ironical that while Ugandans and other Africans in general viewed the video as parochial, judging from the more than 70 million hits the video has received, most of the rest of the world thought it was great! Other than the contradictions, there has also been a collective amnesia about the policy solution proposed by Invisible Children. The proposal to get American forces to come and solve an African problem has not gone down very well here.

Overall, it seems like there are some things that the majority of citizens from the north and south agree on, and some on which they don’t.  Agreed: Joseph Kony, wanted by the ICC for crimes against humanity needs to be apprehended and brought to justice quickly.  Agreed: Invisible Children’s Kony 2012 video was an extremely successful communications and marketing tool, harnessing and portraying the power of social media.  Not sure: Who does this video truly represent? Not sure: What were the true intentions or motives of releasing the video.  Disagree: That the video is a true representation of the people of Northern Uganda today,and their challenges in 2012.

The two questions posed above are in debate in Africa today. Local NGO’s in Northern Uganda have pointed out that communities in Northern Uganda have been on an upward trajectory since 2006, rebuilding their lives, and moving on from the scars left behind by the LRA massacres.  Their kids are beginning to go school, they’re busy making great strides towards a path of healing and restoration. According to them, the true story is this, today, against all odds, baby step by baby step, Northern Uganda, is rising.

On Wednesday night 40 000 Ugandans from a Northern town called Lira gathered for a public viewing of the Kony 2012 video for the first time.  There is very little internet connectivity in the area so local NGO’s brought the documentary to town. The people of Lira are among those in Northern Uganda who witnessed first-hand Joseph Kony and his henchmen maim or kill their children, brothers, sisters, mothers and fathers before 2006. Media reports say that the communities of Lira gathered to watch the famous movie they had heard about, expecting to see the story of their past tribulations including the countless atrocities from Kony and his rebels.  This is not what they saw and they were outraged.  Stones were thrown as the people vented their anger. What seemed to exasperate them even further is Invisible Children’s sale of Kony 2012 merchandise in the name of raising funds for charity and exposing Joseph Kony further.  They wondered why anyone would want to promote a murderer right in front of the eyes of the real victims of Kony’s merciless carnage. The people of Lira  viewed this as totally insensitive.

What one really wonders though, is whether Northern Uganda’s people’s true story is being told.  What if their real challenges, such as nodding disease were expressed. Would the world listen?  Would there be a rising up for a people reshaping their future, would the world respond with equal force? Equal measure? What can be done to have the same viral effect when telling stories of an Africa that is rising, so that Africa is not always sterotyped as a continent full of chaos and hopeless decay? Granted, Africa has it challenges, and these cannot be ignored. BUT, there’s more to Africa than meets the eye.

Invisible Children Co-founder Detained by Police

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By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

SAN DIEGO – A co-founder of Invisible Children, the group behind the “KONY 2012” video on alleged atrocities by an African warlord, was detained after a witness reported a man masturbating and acting strangely, NBCSanDiego.com reported.

Jason Russell was detained after a man was reported masturbating in public, vandalizing cars and possibly under the influence of something, said police Lt. Andra Brown, NBCSanDiego.com reported.Russell is one of the founders responsible for the “KONY 2012” video that went viral last week. He is described on the organization’s website as a co-founder and “our grand storyteller and dreamer.” Russell is also described as a Christian and father to two children who wants to have nine more children with his wife he calls his “best friend for over 23 years.”

In a statement Friday, Ben Keesey, CEO of Invisible Children, said:

“Jason Russell was unfortunately hospitalized yesterday suffering from exhaustion, dehydration, and malnutrition. He is now receiving medical care and is focused on getting better. The past two weeks have taken a severe emotional toll on all of us, Jason especially, and that toll manifested itself in an unfortunate incident yesterday. Jason’s passion and his work have done so much to help so many, and we are devastated to see him dealing with this personal health issue. We will always love and support Jason, and we ask that you give his entire family privacy during this difficult time.”

The video of alleged child atrocities by Ugandan warlord Joseph Kony has been viewed more than 100 million times on the Internet.

The 30-minute YouTube film aims to wake up the world to atrocities committed by Kony’s Lord’s Resistance Army, including kidnapping children and forcing them to fight.

Invisible Children tapped 12 influential policy makers and 20 celebrities with popular Twitter accounts, including Oprah Winfrey and Angelina Jolie, to spread the video.

The phenomenal success of the video, including the savvy media campaign with tweets about Kony, has been hailed for inspiring young people to activism, but has suffered some criticism including that it oversimplified a long-standing human rights crisis.

Russell, who narrates the video with a personal story that juxtaposes shots of his young son in San Diego with the hopelessness of Ugandan children, told Reuters last week the video was only meant as a kick-starter to a complicated issue.

“It definitely oversimplifies the issue. This video is not the answer, it’s just the gateway into the conversation. And we made it quick and oversimplified on purpose,” he said. “We are proud that it is simple. We like that. And we want you to keep investigating, we want you to read the history.”

NBCSanDiego.com and Reuters contributed to this story.

What Jason Didn’t Tell Gavin and His Army of Invisible Children

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By Prof. Mahmood Mamdani

Only two weeks ago, Ugandan papers carried front-page reports from the highly respected Social Science Research Council of New York, accusing the Uganda army of atrocities against civilians in Central African Republic while on a mission to fight Joseph Kony and the LRA.

The army denied the allegations. Many in the civilian population, especially in the north, were skeptical of the denial. Like all victims, they have long and enduring memories.

The adult population recalls the brutal government-directed counterinsurgency campaign beginning 1986, and evolving into Operation North, the first big operation that people talk about as massively destructive for civilians, and creating the conditions that gave rise to the LRA of Joseph Kony and, before it, the Holy Spirit Movement of Alice Lakwena.

Young adults recall the time from the mid-90s when over 80 per cent of the total population of three Acholi districts was forcibly interned in camps – the government claimed it was to “protect” them from the LRA. But there were allegations of murder, bombing, and burning of entire villages, first to force people into the camps and then to force them to stay put.

By 2005, the camp population grew from a few hundred thousand to over 1.8 million in the entire region – which included Teso and Lango – of which over a million were from the three Acholi districts.

Comprising practically the entire rural population of the three Acholi districts, they were expected to live on handout from relief agencies. According to the government’s own Ministry of Health, the excess mortality rate in these camps was approximately one thousand persons per week – inviting comparisons to the numbers killed by the LRA even in the worst year.

Determined to find a political solution to enduring mass misery, Parliament passed a Bill in December 1999 offering amnesty to the entire leadership of the LRA provided they laid down their arms.
The President refused to sign the Bill. Opposed to an amnesty, the President invited the ICC, newly formed in 2002, to charge that same LRA leadership with crimes against humanity. Moreno Ocampo grabbed the opportunity with both hands. Joseph Kony became the subject of the ICC’s first indictment.

Selected justice?
Critics asked why the ICC was indicting only the leadership of the LRA, and not also of government forces. Ocampo said only one step at a time. In his words: “The criteria for selection of the first case were gravity.

We analysed the gravity of all crimes in northern Uganda committed by the LRA and the Ugandan forces. Crimes committed by the LRA were much more numerous and of much higher gravity than alleged crimes committed by the UPDF (Uganda Peoples Defense Force). We therefore started with an investigation of the LRA.”

That “first case” was in 2004. There has been none other in the eight years that have followed.

As the internment of the civilian population continued into its second decade, there was another attempt at a political solution, this time involving the new government of South Sudan (GOSS).

Under great pressure from both the population and from parliament, the government of Uganda agreed to enter into direct negotiations with the LRA, facilitated and mediated by GOSS. These dragged on for years, from 2006 on, but hopes soared as first the terms of the agreement, and then its finer details, were agreed on between the two sides.

Once again, the only thing standing between war and peace was an amnesty for the top leadership of the LRA, Joseph Kony and Vincent Otti in particular. In the words of Otti, the second in command: “… to come out, the ICC must revoke the indictment…If Kony or Otti does not come out, no other rebel will come out.”

Yet again, the ICC refused, calling for a military campaign to get Kony, joined by the Ugandan government which refused to provide guarantees for his safety. Predictably, the talks broke down and the LRA withdrew, first to the Democratic Republic of Congo and then to the Central African Republic.

The government responded with further militarisation, starting with the disastrous Operation Lightning Thunder in the DRC in December 2008, then sending thousands of Ugandan troops to the CAR, and then asking for American advisors. The ICC called on Africom, the Africa Command of the US Army, to act as its implementing arm by sending more troops to capture Kony. The US under President Obama responded by sending an unspecified number of advisers armed with drones – though the US insists that these drones are unarmed for now.

Call to make Kony world famous

Now Invisible Children has joined the ranks of those calling for the US to press for a military solution – presumably supported by a mostly children’s army of over 65 million viewers of its video, Kony 2012! What is the LRA that it should merit the attention of an audience ranging from Hollywood celebrities to “humanitarian interventionists” to Africom to children of America?

The LRA is a raggedy bunch of a few hundreds at most, poorly equipped, poorly armed, and poorly trained. Their ranks mainly comprise those kidnapped as children and then turned into tormentors. It is a story not very different from that of abused children who in time turn into abusive adults. In short, the LRA is no military power.

Addressing the problem called the LRA does not call for a military operation. And yet, the LRA is given as the reason why there must be a constant military mobilisation, at first in northern Uganda, and now in the entire region, why the military budget must have priority and, now, why the US must sent soldiers and weaponry, including drones, to the region. Rather than the reason for accelerated military mobilisation in the region, the LRA is the excuse for it.

The reason why the LRA continues is that its victims – the civilian population of the area – trust neither the LRA nor government forces.

Sandwiched between the two, civilians need to be rescued from an ongoing military mobilisation and offered the hope of a political process.

Alas, this message has no room in the Invisible Children video that ends with a call to arms. Thus one must ask: Will this mobilisation of millions be subverted into yet another weapon in the hands of those who want to militarise the region further? If so, this well-intentioned but unsuspecting army of children will be responsible for magnifying the very crisis to which they claim to be the solution.

The 70 million plus who have watched the Invisible Children video need to realise that the LRA – both the leaders and the children pressed into their service – are not an alien force but sons and daughters of the soil. The solution is not to eliminate them physically, but to find ways of integrating them into (Ugandan) society.

Those in the Ugandan and the US governments – and now apparently the owners of Invisible Children – must bear responsibility for regionalizing the problem as the LRA and, in its toe, the Ugandan army and US advisers crisscross the region, from Uganda to DRC to CAR. Yet, at its core the LRA remains a Ugandan problem calling for a Ugandan political solution.

Prof. Mahmood Mamdani, a professor and director of Makerere Institute of Social Research and Herbert Lehman Professor of Government at Columbia University, New York City, gives an insight into the downside of the Kony 2012 video.

Nabila Involved in Accident with Police Car

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Kampala Woman MP Nabila Nagayi Ssempala is still admitted at International Hospital Kampala (IHK) in Namuwongo after a Friday evening accident left her with suspected broken limbs when her car rammed into a police patrol car.

The legislator, who was in a car Reg No UAM 484U, hit the police mobile van Reg No UP 1982 at around 7pm near Sanyu Babies Home along Wakaliga road.

Ssempala was driven off to IHK for medical attention in Forum for Demoractic Change (FDC) outgoing leader Dr. Kizza Besigye’s vehicle. Her supporters blocked police from taking her to hospital, and instead demanded she be driven in Besigye’s car.

The woman MP appeared unconscious shortly after the road mishap and is reportedly still in critical condition.

She was on her way back from addressing a political rally held at Ndeeba play grounds when the police patrol car screeched to a stop a few feet in front of her car. Her driver was not in time to stop the vehicle from ramming into the police van.

The police vehicle was trying to clear FDC supporters in procession after an Action for Change (A4C) rally which Ssempala was from staging.

Rivalry in Uganda’s music Industry

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Rivalries in the Ugandan music scene are good for business because the rate at which beef is rising between Uganda’s artists is astonishing.

Artists who started out as friends are now bitter rivals: Gagamel vs. Fire Base, Rocky Giant beefing GNL, Goodlyfe and Bebe Cool and Goodlyfe in turn sparring with Leone Island. The list goes on.

These endless beefs become an important source of income to the artists involved. Lyrics with intent to diss become a fascination for the audience and fuel the rivalry. Suddenly fans are forced to pick sides and with each new insult the artists keep the limelight and the money keeps rolling in.

Here’s the way it works: A small misunderstanding arises when a certain musician is misquoted by another or a hot woman is thrown in the mix and the situation explodes. Then, strong statements are thrown and the artists each release tracks that diss the other. But is it legitimate, or just a way for artists to stay in the spotlight? Because, while the war of words may be intense, this beef rarely, if ever, escalates into physical violence.

The biggest battle of them all is the one between Bebe Cool and Bobi Wine. The two giants offer all kinds of music, from bubblegum to reggae, raga to Afro beat. One thing that hasn’t changed, though, is their beef. Bebe is the son of a former minister and Bobi is a common man from an average family. Both have toiled to make it to the top of the profession and neither wants to admit that he is weaker than the other.

Their spat has taken many musical forms: Agenze by Bebe Cool basically talks about how he has loved his wife and all of a sudden she decides to leave him. Bobi Wine studied the situation and released a diss track titled Wesotinge, a song that lyrically tells Bebe Cool to handle family matter more professionally. It sounds like Bobi Wine was throwing a piece of advice but Bebe Cool took it as an insult and he stormed D. Records and released a club banger, Bogolako, informing Bobi that it is within the powers of a man to stand bold and speak up. The twist did not stop there, Bobi replied with Mr. Katala where he informed Bebe that he made his wife stupid. According to the song, Bobi seems to have wanted a credit for advising Bebe, but instead he was called a fool. Bebe Cool’s latest release in that line is Minzani where he refers to the music industry as a weighing scale and says that God is the only one to make the final determinations. The beef took a reprieve in January 2010 when Bebe Cool and two of his bodyguards were shot. Bebe narrowly survived death and Bobi Wine actually encouraged people to go and visit his rival in the hospital and this meant that however competitive they are, they would not wish bad for each other.

The reprieve didn’t last long. These two men have taken the art of the rivalry to a new level, specifically in the way they always hold their shows on the same day at competing locations. For example, on 7th October, Bobi had a show at Hotel Africana and Cool had his at Garden City roof top. Revelers say Hotel Africana was full to capacity and Garden City, being a new venue for such shows was relatively full.

Susan Nava of the popular Login show on NTV, said Bebe Cool confronted her recently complaining that she had Bobi Wine on her show during Login and neglected his despite the fact that he shared sponsors with her. “Bebe Cool does not want to accept that Bobi Wine had a better turn up at Africana,” Nava said. Other beefs shouldn’t get lost in the heat of the Bebe/Bobi kerfuffle. For example, the conflict between the group that formerly made up Leone Island: Chameleone and Goodlyfe. When the latter formed their own group after years of being overshadowed by Chameleone, they said he was a greedy man who didn’t like to see other people prosper. They released a diss track called Nyambula that specifically tells Chameleone that he took them for granted. They later released Kamila da Teacher, where they refer to Chameleone as their hater and number one trouble maker.

Surprisingly, Chameleone does not attack back lyrically, but instead advises them in his songs Mukisagwo, Abatasiga Nsigo and Technology where he questions why money should split them when they vowed to always be there for one another.

Maybe the answer is because making more money requires some good beef.

Museveni Appoints Justice Byabakama as New EC Chairman

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Justice Simon Byabakama replaces Kiggundu as EC chairperson

Justice Byabakama is to be deputized by Hajjati Aisha Lubega, with Peter Emorut, Stephen Tashobya, Prof George Piwang and Mustapha Ssebagala as members of the Commission

President Museveni has appointed a new Electoral Commission ending speculation on who would replace the Dr Badru Kiggundu led one, whose term ended on Thursday.

In a letter to Speaker of Parliament Rebbecca Kadaga, President Museveni has appointed Court of Appeal Judge Simon Mugenyi Byabakama to replace Mr Kiggundu who spent 14 years as EC chair.

The other appointees who now wait vetting by the appointments committee of parliament before assuming office include Hajjat Aisha Lubega (vice chairperson) and commissioners Peter Emorut, Steven Tashobya, Prof George Piwang and Mustapha Ssebaggala Kigozi. The new appointees will join Ms Justin A. Mugabi whose tenure at EC is yet to expire.

Bebe Cool in Boston: The Show of the Year

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It was the show of the year! Bebe Cool’s show at the French Club last Saturday was definitely a success.  The turn-out was strong, and the fans had nearly three hours of fun with the artist, unlike other shows we’ve had with musicians back home.  The organizer of the show, Ms. Hawah Ssebunya, gets an A+ for organizing such a wonderful show.  The M.C., Charles Muwavala, also gets high marks, from the smoothness of the event to the clear sound.

The Ugandan community in Boston loves Bebe Cool.

The evening began with Touch and Soul, a band from Boston headed by the son of the late Elly Wamala.  The DJ was largely excellent until the eleventh hour, when he made some strange comments that left fans puzzled.

But at exactly 11:05, the MC introduced Bebe Cool to the stage, and the crowd screamed.  Many people could not believe that he could walk and dance on his feet after the shootings earlier this year.

Bebe Cool thanked and praised the Touch and Soul band for their performance that night, and vowed that he would use the band every time he returns to Boston.  He also advised all musicians to support the band– and the crowd gave this large applause.

During the second part of the show,  DJ Jamo (also known as DJ Kasenge) played tune after tune, and the crowd kept screaming.  Everytime he stopped, the crowd would shout, then scream again when he would start playing.  It was really fun!

During the show, Bebe introduced his mother and wife Zuena, who had been seated in the back.  Before Zuena came on the stage, Bebe introduced his mother, and sung a number he composed for her.  Bebe said he missed her a great deal.  His mother could not stop tears of joy from rolling down her cheeks.  Then Zuena showed up at the stage, delighting the audience.

Men in the crowd began cheering “kale omusajja alina embooko,” literally meaning that Bebe has a beautiful wife.  Zuena thanked the people of Boston for welcoming them, and supporting her husband.  Finally, the Kasepiki song came on, and the crowd went crazy.  Zuena stood behind her husband as he blew the Kasepiki.  He sang the song twice, as fans called for more.

By12:45 am, almost everything ended as planned.  Then we had another show from DJ Jamo, who began by  thanking everyone who turned up that evening.  As a Luganda saying goes, “ku mbaga tekubula musiwuufu.”  After the DJ thanked everyone, he started yelling in the microphone at someone who wrote an article about an earlier Chameleone  show in Boston.

People couldnt believe that such words were coming from the DJ, who had had a nice night.  At some point, he even threatened to expose this writer that was in the crowd.  He even went on to compare his wedding with the person who had written that article, boasting that DJ Jamo had a more fantastic wedding than him.  DJ Jamo went on to warn that no writer that he can put him or her in, meaning that he has the power to put the reporter behind bars in Uganda .

At this time, a drunk man began yelling in Luganda, “leka baba wandikeko tukoye okutubba.” This means that they should write about you; we are tired of being cheated.  Then ladies began joking with chants of “bali tebamanyi nti nabasajja balina wolokoso,” or that they didn’t know that men also gossip.

Many people were puzzled as the DJ asked whether he should expose this guy, to which he got no answer.  The DJ’s show ended up being about seven minutes long.  It finally ended when one intoxicated woman yelled back at the DJ, and told him to keep quiet about those writing about him.  She added that he should be happy that people knew him, and which newspaper had ever composed a story about him,  apart from imposters.

As the DJ ended his speech, he promised the crowd to expose the journalist who covered the Chameleone performance.  But up to now, people are still trying to figure out what inspired the Dj to give such an uncalled speech. At 1 a.m., it was time to go home.

Despite entertainers threatening to take reporters out for unfavorable reviews, it was really a great night.  We haven’t seen anything like this in Boston this year! The fans just wanted more music.

And keep an eye on this page– you shouldn’t miss out if the DJ decides to expose the writer!

Geoffrey Nsereko is a Ugandan-American radio presenter based in Boston, Massachusetts.  He hosts a radio show on http://www.radiougandaboston.com/about.htm.  It is called “Gyetuva ne Gyetulaga,” and airs on Wednesday from 5:00 pm EST and Sunday from 6:00 pm.  You can listen through the Radio Uganda Boston website here.

Uganda Voted the Best Destination to Visit in 2012

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Rwenzori Mountains

The Lonely planet, the world’s largest travel guide book and digital media publisher has named Uganda the number one tourism destination to visit in 2012.

Uganda emerged number one out of 10 other countries surveyed, followed by Myanmar (Burma), Ukraine, Denmark, Bhutan, Cuba, New Caledonia, Taiwan and Switzerland.

The study that survey family travellers, bloggers and tweeters for their travel destinations in 2012 released the findings in the Best in Travel 2012, the best trends, destinations, journeys and experiences for the upcoming year, report.

The list was voted for by a panel of inhouse travel experts based on topicality, excitement, value and that special X-factor.
Uganda is home to largest number of primates including mountain gorillas, one of the rare animal species in the world.

It is the source of the mighty River Nile which offers the best white-water rafting in the world, its blessed with snow-capped mountain range in Africa-Rwenzori, wonderful water falls, birds and vegetation.

Reaping huge
The executive director Uganda Tourism Board, Mr Cuthbert Baguma Balinda, said yesterday that the tourism sector will use the visibility created by Lonely Planet to undertake other campaigns to promote the country as a tourism destination of choice on the continent.

“Lonely planet has stated the obvious and it’s a platform used by tourists as a reference point,” he said.

Despite being gifted by nature, the country has not reaped much from its tourism sector due to limited budget to sell the country in key tourism source markets such as Germany, USA, the UK, China and France, the biggest spenders in tourism.

The government for instance allocates Shs9m to market and promote Uganda as a destination of choice annually, lower than what other regional countries spend.

Tourism is increasingly becoming a lucrative source of foreign exchange for many countries including E. Africa. For instance, Kenya reaped $3.5b from tourism last year compared to Tanzania’s $3.2b, $1.2b for Rwanda and $650m for Uganda.

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