30 April 2016

Giving hope to prisoners through education

Richard Tumusiime teaching the ICT class at Luzira Upper Prison. Photo by ABUBAKER LUBOWA 



In Summary



Light at the end tunnel. Getting jailed is one thing and living in the cells for a long time while getting an education is another. Gillian Nantume visited Luzira Upper Prison and interacted with student inmates.






A mute motivational video is projected on the wall. With mechanical concentration, students stare at the slides, silently reading the words.
We are in the University Hall of Luzira Upper Prison to attend an ICT lecture. The class has five computers sitting idle at the front.
You have to pass through four gates to enter the Boma Section of Upper Prison, and after the third gate, Ocom, my guide, told me I was the only woman there. No female warders are allowed in.
This is a first year class in a certificate course, and today we are learning what columns and rows in Microsoft Excel are.
“On my first day, I was not sure what to expect,” Richard Tumusiime, the lecturer from the Business Computing Department of Makerere University Business School (MUBS), says, adding, “My colleagues did not want to lecture here. The environment is different from the one at MUBS. However, I love helping the disadvantaged.”
Tumusiime always starts his classes with a motivational video or quote. “Those who enrol are self-driven and very attentive. In contrast, at MUBS, students are distracted by their smartphones.”






Inmate beneficiaries
Education is free, and only those with a hunger are attracted to it. Sowedi Mukasa was on death row until four years ago. During that time, he was the headmaster of the secondary school, studied certificate and diploma courses in Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management, and represented himself in court.






“When I was arrested, I was remanded in Katojo Prison in Fort Portal District for two years,” Mukasa says. “With my fellow inmates, I started a school to teach inmates how to read and write.”






When he was sentenced to death, the Senior Six dropout was transferred to the Condemned Section, where he found an established school. Within two and a half weeks, Mukasa was appointed headmaster by the officer-in-charge (OC).
“In 2008 because of the number of candidates completing Senior Six, together with our partners we lobbied tertiary institutions to provide us with education.”






David Okiring, a senior welfare officer in charge of rehabilitation, says, “You cannot keep people serving long sentences idle. Our records show that repeat-offending is caused by illiteracy. Some inmates did not want to do carpentry so we started the education programme. We got in touch with a number of universities but only MUBS bought the idea providing tailor-made courses in Entrepreneurship and Small Business Management at certificate and diploma levels.” Currently, the certificate course has 33 inmates, while the diploma course had 54. MUBS courses are only offered at the Upper Prison. None is offered in the Women’s Prison.






Using education to better themselves
In 2009 and 2011, Sowedi Mukasa was a pioneer student in the certificate and diploma courses, respectively. “I was a victim of a miscarriage of justice and because my lawyer was inefficient, I spent 12 years on death row.” In his appeal, the former child soldier requested the Chief Justice for permission to represent himself, and consent was given.
“I read the Penal Code Act and made a write-up with the guidance of fellow inmates. When I made my submissions, the Chief Justice told me to refine it. Later, my sentence was re-heard in the High Court and the death sentence was quashed.”






In 2012, Mukasa began a 33-year custodial sentence. He was transferred to Boma Section and relinquished his position as headmaster though he still teaches. He is now a first year student of Common Law at the University of London, with six more years in prison.
“In 2009, I enrolled for Senior Six. Afterwards, I studied a diploma in Theology, and then joined MUBS for a certificate course.”






While studying the certificate course, he enrolled at the University of London for a diploma in Common Law. He graduated in 2013 and immediately decided to upgrade his certificate to a diploma. Currently, he is in his first year doing a Bachelors in Common Law. He is also a member of the Inmates Human Rights Committee.






“In 2013, I prepared my grounds for litigation, with my lawyer, and my death sentence was mitigated. I’m helping other inmates to prepare their appeals and to ensure their human rights are upheld.”






He also teaches Economics and Divinity at A- Level. He still has four years of his sentence to serve.
“If I am released I intend to enroll at the Law Development Centre or study a postgraduate in Human Rights.”






Picking an interest in law courses
Few years ago, the University of London provided an opportunity for inmates to study for a diploma and Bachelors in Common Law, sponsored by African Prisons Project.
“Some prisoners feel they are innocent,” Okiring says, adding, “Accessing legal services is expensive, so if we can expose them to legal knowledge to represent themselves and help others, it is a good thing.” There are three inmates in third year – one woman and two men on death row; and 11 first year students.






Anticipated life outside Luzira
Both Mukasa and Kakuru intend to practice law.
“Many former convicts are doing well,” Mukasa says, adding, “So, people should learn to forgive us and forget.”
Kakuru says everybody is a potential prisoner. “Some are here on circumstantial evidence, but with such educational programmes, we can add value to ourselves and remain focused.”






Vocational education – carpentry section
Not everyone in upper prison values education. The fourth gate in upper prison opens into the football pitch of Boma A recreation ground. A sea of men in yellow is all you can see.
Some are washing clothes, others playing, while the majority seat on verandahs. Beyond the high wall on the right is the Condemned Section.






We walk across the pitch and enter the noisy carpentry section, run by Barnabas Munyos. Some carpenters are sanding, some are sewing chair covers, while others are engaged in joinery.
“We only take convicts serving five years and above.It takes a novice three months to learn how to handle timber,” Munyos says.
The finished products are displayed at Lugogo Showgrounds, and according to Munyos, government has introduced a system where the inmates earn a small percentage of the sales.
Independence Kajarugokwe, a farmer, is serving a 20-year sentence. I found him applying white paste to a wooden tray.
“When I came here in 2011; I knew nothing about carpentry and now, I’m an expert. I plan to become a carpenter when I’m released.”
Andrew Ddungu was a driver for 10 years but you cannot tell it by the way he expertly handles an industrial sewing machine.






“Once I was convicted, to avoid depression, I joined the workshop. I’m getting out in two years but I have not decided what profession I will stick with. An inmate can spend 10 years in this workshop but when he is released, he cannot get employed because people still think he is a criminal. However, if he has startup capital he can open a workshop.”
Some inmates in the workshop are just refining their skills, such as David Okello who makes sideboards, tables and chairs; and Alex Ola, a woodcarver, putting designs on church relics. Both want to open workshops when they leave prison.






Human rights of mass murderer


In Summary



UNPROTECTED? Anders Breivik Norway’s self-confessed murderer of 77 people, complains of violation of his human rights, mainly that he is confined to a solitary, high security area of the prison premises where he is serving a 21-year term.






There are times when one is confused, others that one is very confused, and then there are times that one is at a loss of words, this is exactly how I feel now.






I see that Norway’s mass murderer Anders Breivik has made it again to the news, this time for very interesting reasons. A self-confessed murderer of 77 people, complains of violation of his human rights, mainly that he is confined to a solitary, high security area of the prison premises where he is serving a 21-year term, also that his freedom of speech is being suppressed by prison authorities.






In his cell
Breivik has access to three cells, one for living, one for exercising and one is a study area, with a computer without internet, a television set, and a game station. He is also allowed visits from friends and family, but no one comes to visit him.






When Breivik thought that his human rights are violated and decided to protest against it, the government of Norway hired lawyers to defend him and footed the bill that cost tax payers almost £40,000. So, while Breivik, seems to ‘ suffer’ during his imprisonment, I want to recall other prison conditions I have known or seen myself.






On the Ugandan scene
I was once called to translate for a prisoner who was held in the cells of Jinja Road Police Station. The reception of the station, was worn and torn with effects of time and neglect. I had to cross the reception to reach the office blocks on the left side of the building; I did not expect to see the prison cells right in front of me. It looked very dark and sombre with hands of some detainees extended beyond the cell grills, as of reaching out for some fresh air, it was a very sad scene. Once the prisoner I was translating for was brought in, I noticed that he was barefoot on a filthy cement floor! I was told later that the prisoner’s shoes are taken away because he might run away, or something of the sort.






Compared to other cells
I did what I have to do and left the station hoping that I won’t go there ever again. I’m sure the Jinja Road Police station might also seem like heaven compared to some others that one hears about in Afghanistan and some South American countries. The conditions of these prisons and the prisoners, among whom some are innocent, wrongly jailed or have no access to lawyers, are so pathetic that I wonder if we are talking about the same human beings or not, ones in European prisons and ones in other parts of the world.






I know people who have been languishing in solitary cells for so many years because of their religious beliefs. They have no access to fresh air, no mattress, no health care and definitely no lawyer who can defend their ‘human rights’. It is indeed a weird world we live in today.






Who is Breivik?
Jailed Norwegian far-right terrorist Anders Behring Breivik, who killed 77 people in 2011 when he bombed central Oslo before going on a shooting spree at a Labour Youth camp on the island of Utoeya, returned to court to argue that his prison isolation violates his rights.






lifemagazine@ug.nationmedia.com






How Uganda’s political system operates



As the contest for the position of Speaker of Parliament heats up, the public is being treated to yet another spectacle of how politics is played out in Uganda.






It can get nauseating watching all the pettiness of it. Some quarters argue that northern Uganda has been “neglected” and so Deputy Speaker Jacob Oulanyah should be elected.






Others insist that eastern Uganda has also been neglected and besides the current Speaker, Ms Rebecca Kadaga, should be given another five years. Besides, others argue, women remain at the margins of Ugandan society and so all the more reason to make up for this imbalance by retaining Kadaga.






For those who wonder what certain regions being neglected has got to do with being the Speaker of the national assembly, welcome to the politics of unproductive, feudal societies.






Genesis
When it took power in 1986, the National Resistance Movement (NRM) had just won a military victory but did not yet have a political base.






Aware of its lack of popular political appeal, right from the start the NRM decided to create what it termed a “broad-based” government. This would achieve two purposes.






First, it would help calm the country down and reduce as early as possible the resistance to the NRM that was being mounted in several quarters, particularly in Acholi and Teso.






Secondly, this co-opting of the various established political forces would help the NRM gain its own national political ground by using the old parties as its proxy.






Thus in a contradiction that would become standard right from the start, the NRM would condemn the Democratic Party (DP) and Uganda Peoples Congress (UPC) and Conservative Party (CP) of having fanned the flames of sectarianism in Uganda through religion and tribe, but at the same time it would work with senior leaders from these parties to help it gain its own internal following.






The NRM was steeped in Marxism ideology but in late 1985 it would arrange to have the Crown Prince of Buganda, Ronald Mutebi, tour the occupied NRA parts of western Uganda as a ploy to win over the last remaining and sceptical Baganda.
It has now become a political way of life that is reflected in the Opposition too.






From its founding in 2005, the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) instituted this redundant calculation by the NRM. The FDC has a deputy president for the eastern, western, northern and Buganda regions.






Given this history, there should be little surprise at the relative stability of Uganda. It was achieved by absorbing figurehead leaders of Opposition groups and other influential sections of public opinion.
The trade-off was to lead to the largest and most redundant state bureaucracy in Ugandan history and one of the largest in the world.






Uganda now has about as many Members of Parliament as there are United States Members of the House of Representatives. It has one of the largest cabinets in the world and for a country of its size, one of the largest number of districts in the world.
As the host Andrew Mwenda said on the 93.3 KFM “Hot Seat” talk show on Friday April 22, he has not seen a person who is so political in his mindset as President Museveni.






Every policy move he makes, every decision he contemplates, every action he takes, said Mwenda, is calculated with a political objective in mind.






To Museveni, the final question in everything is politics: will it win him votes? Will it lose him votes? Will it make him look good politically? Will it consolidate his grip on power?
If the people want dirty water to drink and by giving them dirty water to drink it will buy him one more year in power, then Museveni will give them dirty water to drink.






Some reflections on the significance of Labour Day



Today is marked and celebrated worldwide as International Labour Day in recognition of the important contribution workers make to development. The theme of this year’s national celebrations to be held in Hoima District is: “Strengthening Uganda’s Competitiveness for Sustainable Job Creation and Inclusive Growth.”






Although a public holiday, for millions of Ugandan workers and peasants it will not be a day to celebrate the dignity and significance of labour. It will be just another day to toil long hours for peanuts since Uganda’s ruling clique insists that Uganda’s workers do not deserve minimum wage because minimum wage would somehow chase away foreign investors who are accorded preferential treatment by the regime at the expense of bona fide citizens.






Whenever Labour Day comes, I recall May 1, 1970, the day 46 years ago on which a historic event took place and, for me, it will always remain a day on which the workers of Uganda stood tall and shoulder to shoulder to welcome with pride and great joy the beginnings of the economic emancipation of Uganda.
On May 1, 1970, and unknown to most members of his cabinet, president Milton Obote promulgated to a capacity-filled and jubilant crowd at Kampala’s Nakivubo stadium the famous “Nakivubo Pronouncements” formally known as “Document No.4 on the move to the Left.”






In a nutshell, Obote announced that with effect from May 1, 1970, government assumed, on behalf of wananchi, control of 84 commercial enterprises in Uganda, including oil companies, Kilembe mines, banks, insurance companies, manufacturing industries, estates, plantations and Uganda Transport Company.
The owners of the 84 nationalised enterprises would be compensated from profits earned within a period of 15 years.
That bold decision of government was naturally received with hostility locally by wealthy Ugandans and elsewhere by some foreign countries. The attempt to emancipate Uganda economically was sabotaged by a military coup on January 25, 1971.






I was a witness to the events of that historic day, having graduated a few weeks previously from the University of East Africa at Makerere, the last class of a great regional institution.






I was at Nakivubo stadium on May 1, 1970, in two capacities; as a worker and on duty as a member of staff of UTV which broadcast live and recorded the historic events of the day for posterity. I was then a senior producer at UTV working under Mr Aggrey Awori, who was director of UTV. In my long career in the public service of Uganda, Mr Awori is among a few resourceful, dedicated, well organised and inspiring people I have worked with.






The “Nakivubo Pronouncements” were about putting ownership of the means of production and the resources of Uganda squarely into the hands of Ugandans. Workers of Uganda have an important role to play in our efforts to protect and manage the national assets and resources of Uganda, but they can only play this role effectively if they are empowered. Empowering workers was a cardinal goal of the two UPC administrations of the 1960s and 1980s.






When he gave testimony in 1990 before a commission of inquiry into violations of human rights (1962-1986) chaired by Justice Arthur Oder, Mzee Paulo Muwanga (RIP) lamented that Ugandans were celebrating the rise to power of NRA without any idea of what awaits them in the future. He warned and forecast that by the time the NRM regime’s rule comes to an end, “the country will have lost all its possessions and national assets, the political class will be divided, one against the other and Uganda will be in ruins!”






Under the two UPC administrations, labour was accorded the highest importance which it richly deserves by having a separate ministry of Labour headed by a full and senior cabinet minister. Under the NRM regime the Labour portfolio has been downgraded to a mere directorate in the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development!






The irony could not be more cynical, glaring and mind-boggling! Two majorities of our beleaguered country lumped together in a minor ministry which does not belong to the category called “core ministry” for budgetary purposes. Women are numerically the majority sex while the workers of Uganda comprise almost 90 per cent of the population of the pearl of Africa, of whom 80 per cent are employed in that financially starved sector called agriculture. It is unacceptable and a slap in the face of the silent majority of wananchi.






Workers and women of Uganda unite! You have nothing to lose, but your chains! Wake up, join hands, march together and demand your inalienable rights, such as gender equality and a minimum wage!
NSSF was established by the first UPC government in 1967 and placed under the line ministry of Labour where workers’ hard-earned savings were kept in absolute safety and invested wisely.
NSSF was, however, arbitrarily transferred in 2004 for dubious reasons to ministry of Finance and the fund has tragically become a cash cow and ATM for the some corrupt officials. The ongoing power struggle in the management of NSSF attests to this tragedy over what in Ugandan parlance is called eating!






On this auspicious day when Ugandans celebrate the dignity of labour, the leadership of the National Organisation of Trade Unions must speak truth to power, without fear or favour and reiterate the legitimate demands which the workers of Uganda have made every year for three decades to no avail.






The NRM regime must urgently address the burning problems of the workers of Uganda and stop the unethical practice of treating workers with contempt as if the principal producers of Uganda’s wealth do not matter! Wealth created by workers must not be routinely plundered and siphoned off with impunity by corrupt officials.
Aluta continua!






Mr Acemah is a political scientist, consultant and a retired career diplomat. hacemah@gmail.com






Mixed feelings as forward packs dominate the rugby Premiership

Philip Wokorach (right) made one of the ties of the season against EzeeMoney Rhinos. Photo by Eddie Chicco 




The Nile Special Rugby Premiership run its course yesterday with the blue riband fixture between new champions Betway Kobs and Hima Heathens the undisputed ‘headliner’. The match had been expected to assume the role of kingmaker — at least that’s what this column proffered — but events took an unanticipated turn after Heathens shared the spoils with Pirates in the first round before losing at home to a plucky Sadolin Mongers outfit a fortnight ago.
On its part, Kobs used a masterclass in passive aggression to reach the dozen mark for league titles won. Yesterday, the club was hoping to go unbeaten for the entirety of a league campaign for only the fourth time following a similar feat in 1997, 2006, and 2014.






Heathens players and their faithful made it crystal clear that nothing would be more rewarding than taking away the old foe’s undefeated record. Indeed, victory could easily be an emblem that, in a dark league campaign, gleams like the future. With Heathens keen on pouring ink on the ‘undefeated script’ and Kobs not willing to let its guard down, there clearly was no shortage of ingredients for an explosive tie yesterday.






The reverse fixture between the two sworn enemies at Legends Club portrayed an ugly dynamic between players and referees. This was a season in which simmering resent-ment of referees was brought to a boil of accusatory rhetoric. Heathens veteran hooker Alex Mubiru dropped a lit match in the powder keg when he gave assistant referee Charles Mungoma a tongue lashing for chalking off Phillip Wokorach’s last-gasp try that would have seen Heathens vanquish Kobs.






It was neither the first nor last public spat between players and referees. That also was-n’t the only Wokorach try to be struck down. The Heathens fullback saw his try tally shrink from 19 to 12 after Gulu Elephants were suspended for failing to honour more than two league matches in succession. This did little to dim the brilliance of Wokorach who remarkably is in line to make his 15s bow at Test level. All sorts of superlatives can be used to capture the sheer beauty of his try against EzeeMoney Rhinos when he jinked his way through the full length of the Legends pitch. The try was easily the best of the season until Joseph Aredo’s boot found the lanky frame of Michael Amollo by the corner flag during Kobs’ first half annihilation of Buffaloes last weekend.






While their feats can hardly be described as fleeting, this season didn’t preserve much of the backs’ potency. Forwards-oriented play resonated all the more and surprisingly registered its dominance on the tries chart. Going into yesterday’s final matchday, Asuman Mugerwa led the way with 14.






On account of his performance in the reverse fixture, you certainly wouldn’t put it past Mugerwa to have crossed the white chalk yes-terday. If he did, not only will his legend grow that bit more, but he will have continued that unrelenting push for more than just a bit-part role with the national 15s team this year.






Mugerwa is something of an oddity. Whereas the loosehead has proved devastating in open play, his failure to master the dark arts that make front row players unsung heroes has not endeared him to some. Mugerwa is of course not the first high-scoring prop to grace Ugandan rugby. In 2000, Fred Mudoola wound up with 10 tries in the league for Kobs. An exceptionally good place-kicker, yes place-kicker, Mudoola raked 185 points (51 conversions, 11 penalties and 10 tries) that season but never at one time did he for-get his primary duties (like scrummaging). This is why he started all games for Rugby Cranes when fit until 2007 when he called time on his playing career. Mugerwa would do well borrowing a leaf or two.






Instead of “Kyankwanzi”, ministers, MPs need primary school mathematics



In a paper presented at the April 15 dialogue at Uganda Christian University, Mukono, the Uganda National Roads Authority executive director, Ms Allen Kagina, noted:
“We are paying time (sic), not performance, and that is what I think destroys public institutions.”






We all have a rough idea what that means.
There is the fat man with a fat job at the institution here. You need spies to inform you when he might be at the office.
He has a huge backlog of work, but he is paid fully. In a manner of speaking, he is half a ghost.






Young X sitting there has her nails, or his football tales, and of course the social media “work” on their smart phones. At the end of every thirty days, their salaries must be paid, or they will let hell loose.






Their immediate boss is very punctual, always planning a conference, or inventing a reason for a workshop – unless he is attending a “dialogue”, like the one where Ms Kagina was presenting her paper.






Milling around the corridors of the organisation, one or two dozen fellows with vaguely defined roles are trying to make themselves appear useful, but of course without sweating. They run small errands. They are “personal assistants”. They are part of the “front desk”. They are part of “stores”.
These, too, after 30 days …






That is a sizeable portion of the employed under President Museveni, and there are thousands in the cold who desperately want to enter that privileged sphere, to be on some payroll.
If paying for time rather than performance upsets you, our politicians are cooking something that will make you throw up. But wait a minute.






Every Ugandan government after independence has given, dangled, or promised a whole lot of free things to various entities.
In the 1960s, Dr Milton Obote’s anti-monarchist government seized virtually all the real property belonging to Uganda’s (then abolished) kingdoms. The central government got them for free. Some were turned into military barracks.






In the 1970s, Field Marshal Idi Amin gave shops and industries owned by Asians to individual Ugandans – free. Big companies and organisations went to the State, and to local entities like the Uganda Muslim Supreme Council – free.






Okay, “free” with a qualification, because I believe taxpayers and Western donors eventually compensated most of the Asians, either directly or indirectly.
Anyhow, enter President Museveni and his swashbuckling guerrillas.






After their revolutionary ideas were buried by the IMF and the World Bank, the NRM sometimes stripped and sometimes refurbished the then ubiquitous state enterprises; then it half-sold or half-donated these things to dubious “investors” and regime cronies. In effect, the beneficiaries got most of the value in these enterprises free.






Then again, all sorts of organised and individual NRM/Museveni supporters have received free “loans” and outright cash gifts over the years. Mr Museveni must be one of a very few presidents who carry sacks of money on his country tours.






If there is a controversial item that President Museveni wants Parliament to sort out, the MPs will probably get a hefty cash windfall.






Now, we had got used to failed NRM politicians being picked, one by one, and landing fat jobs with dubious roles – RDCs, presidential advisors and so on; but there is a new thing that could disgust you to the point of throwing up.






After the February general election, defeated NRM candidates have been talking of ganging up, collectively approaching Museveni and making their demands on the taxpayer.






Defeat becoming an institution! If the President wants to eradicate parasites, these pathetic hominids are the ultimate examples of a two-legged parasite.






MPs taxation: NGOs need to rethink their methods



The rage and campaign against MPs over income tax is on. Sections in the NGO world are wild against MPs claiming that they do not pay tax.






Mobilisation of ordinary citizens against their elected representatives is on-going. Money is being spent on advertorials to send messages to the people that MPs are not paying taxes. Workshops are being held to tell Ugandans that MPs are not paying taxes.






The problem
But what exactly is the problem? It’s wider. Lawyers tell me that when they are prosecuting a case, they usually first agree on the facts and the issues at hand.






Where they have disagreement on matters of law, they then plead their case before the judge in open court. I find it an interesting principle because before the matter goes on trial, the lawyers are able to gauge whether they have a strong case or not and then advise their clients appropriately.






But some civil society groups run away with anything factual or not, after all, there is a budget to be spent.






Sections of civil society have runaway with falsehoods and are so engrossed in perpetuating it that they feel agitated when other facts are presented. They are telling the world that Ugandan MPs do not pay taxes on their income and do not want to do so.






The fact is that MPs pay PAYE. The salary of MPs which was Shs2.6 million was consolidated with their subsistence allowance to make the gross pay of an MP total to Shs11.18 million monthly from which 40 per cent is a tax component. From the same money, they also make their pension contribution of 15 per cent monthly leaving an MP with Shs6.1 million take home. They also pay tax on their gratuity.


But the crusaders against MPs keep saying MPs do not pay tax at all. Some voices from URA have also been heard backing this skewed method of advocacy. Can URA confirm that they have never collected PAYE from MPs?






The issue is on taxation of MPs mileage. The argument of MPs is that the reimbursement paid to them for transport should not be categorised as an income to them yet they, indeed, must visit their constituencies.






From the same mileage, they also pay their drivers and service their vehicles because Parliament does not provide them with drivers and does not repair nor service their cars.
The other argument is that of equity. This is a very valid argument.






The MPs agree to it. It calls for a general review of the Income Tax Act.






It would also imply that those currently exempted from paying income tax, for instance, the judges and armed forces, must then be brought to the hook since the argument being advanced is that all Ugandans must pay income tax.






Instead of focusing the argument on equity, some have opted to maliciously disparage MPs as non-tax payers.
Equity extends to accountability. MPs must be held to account, so are civil society groups. MPs must account to the people who elected them.






NGOs must account to the people on whose behalf they mobilise donor support. Civil society accountability tends to be to those who give the money. What about those for whom you claim to mobilise the money?


We expect synergy between NGOs and political leadership. For instance, are memoranda of understanding signed between NGOs and districts in which they operate? That would improve accountability on both sides.






The demand that MPs must be responsive to the needs of the people is a very important one.






However, the packaging of this demand tends to portray MPs as unfit to meet the demands of the people. Let us first recognise the fact that MPs or elected leaders are the ones who hold legitimate power of the people not anyone else.






Parliament now loses it by threatening to block Budget



Ugandan MPs have passion. That is a good thing. It is just that they express their passion when they are demanding new districts (ref: MP Geofrey Ekanya’s suicide-by-necktie honourable move on the floor of Parliament) or new constituencies or ministerial positions. And, of course, when defending their fat allowances. These fat cats!






The MPs recently provoked widespread public criticism for passing a law that allows them to not pay tax on some of their allowances, especially mileage. I hold no opinion on this. But I find it crazy for the MPs, in the midst of the storm, to threaten not to pass the 2016/17 Budget unless they get their way. They seem intent on going over the cliff.






Their arrogance is impressive. Instead of explaining themselves better to Ugandans what it is they are doing and why, they are instead threatening to shut down the government by denying it money. They are essentially showing Ugandans the middle finger.
Younger MPs – Henry Musasizi and Peter Ogwang – are leading the heedless charge, as if to remind us that we should not have hope in their generation to grow up into politicians of stature.






Their mad rush is quickly setting up a confrontation with President Yoweri Museveni, who is likely not to sign the amended income tax law that contains the exemptions. Of course, MPs have the power to disregard what Mr Museveni thinks and make the law go into effect. As it has been shown repeatedly, Mr Museveni has won in confrontations with MPs. He will win again.






Reset mode
The President is in reset mode. The early signs after his contested February re-election are that he must be seen to be doing something to improve delivery of public goods and services. He quietly visited Mulago and Naguru hospitals to gauge the temperature of those key healthcare facilities. (His action comes 30 years late, but no matter).






So he is likely to not only want to be seen siding with the common wananchi, but also he may chafe at the idea of being pushed around, threatened by MPs.






I see the MPs losing this fight and losing badly because of their exaggerated sense of self-importance as the elected people’s representatives who must get their way or else they withhold the money that should go into providing services to the very people who elected them. Tactically and strategically, the MPs are acting crazy even if they may have a point to make about their mileage allowances.






The appetite for money, which I suppose a vast majority of humanity has in abundance, has proved a problem in Uganda’s Parliament. MPs play fast and loose with their money, falling in debts and then running to President Museveni to rescue them. It is this behaviour that has allowed MPs to emasculate themselves and cede so much ground to the President.






Who knows, if there had not been millions of shillings, probably presidential term limits may have stayed in the Constitution. Assuming a new president had taken over in 2006, this past February we would have elected yet another person. But here we are with the air full of tension from the February fallout.






Next up
Next up is money changing hands in Parliament for MPs to change the Constitution to remove the clause that bars a person running for president when above 75 years of age.






It may turn out, therefore, that Mr Museveni is playing hardball now with MPs to look good before Ugandans only for him to open the cash spigots at the right time. With that MPs will recover money they lost paying tax on their allowances, and the Big Man will get his nth kisanja. With these politicians, you can never be sure who is standing on principle or opportunism.






Mr Tabaire is the co-founder and director of programmes at African Centre for Media Excellence in Kampala.
bernard.tabaire@gmail.com
Twitter:@btabaire






I got a loan to wed

Allan Michael Rwamulungi and his wife Sarah Najjemba after exchanging vows at Full Gospel Church-Katwe, Masaka . COURTESY PHOTO 





By Shamim J. Nakawooya
Posted 


Sunday, May 1 

2016 at 

01:00



In Summary



Together forever. In a bid to impress his wife and strengthen their relationship, Allan Michael Rwamulungi, a primary school teacher, secured a loan and wedded Sarah Najjemba, a nursery school teacher, after dating for four years. The couple has been together for seven years and share their story with Shamim J. Nakawooya.






When and how did you meet?
Allan: I met Sarah in 2004 when I had just completed college. We used to pray from the same church, she was a family friend and we were both in the worship team.






When did the two of you eventually become close?
Allan: We spent four years in courtship. I used to visit her. When she lost one of her parents, she dropped out of school.
Sarah told me that she wanted to go back to school. As I was thinking about it Suzan Okalanyi, a good Samaritan who was the Masaka state attorney offered to pay for her education up to Senior Three. My family and I agreed to pick up from Senior Four up to college. So, that is how we became very close and got into a relationship.






Sarah: After the death of my father, I started living with Allan’s parents in Masaka where I was studying from. I would go back home in Sseguku, Wakiso for holidays. I liked him and his family because they embraced me when I was desperate. They made me what I am.






How was the proposal, when was it and how did you react?
Allan: After she had completed college, I proposed to her but she did not take it seriously until I started buying goodies to take for our introduction ceremony.
Sarah: When I saw him draw an introduction budget, I felt he was serious and accepted his proposal. I love him and felt he deserved to be mine.






What attracted you to each other?
Allan: Sarah is hardworking and she had gone through many challenges meaning she is resilient. She is also beautiful- I like her body shape.
Sarah: He is handsome, respectful, loving, caring and reserved.






What was your budget and how did you raise the funds?
Allan: I’m a government primary school teacher, I secured a three-million salary loan and bought some marriage requirements. We also got contributions from family, friends and church members. Things were not costly in 2009, we raised Shs8m for the wedding.
Sarah: I spent so much on the introduction ceremony. By then, I had a job from which I saved some money plus top up from cash rounds and the school where I teach contributed a great deal. I altogether raised Shs5m.
What was the most expensive item?
Allan : The reception venue and food which cost Shs2m.
Sarah: The gown because I hired it at Shs 400, 000.






Did you involve a wedding planner?
Allan : No, friends helped me during the wedding meetings.
Sarah : Yes, I used my brother who planned for each and every thing for the introduction.






What were you doing on the wedding eve?
Allan : There were missing items which I had to cater for since I did not have a planner. I felt much pressure on that day.
Sarah: I was home with my friends and relatives enjoying the eve, some people brought for me gifts, they were happy about my forthcoming wedding.






Were you disappointed in anyway during the wedding?
Allan: Yes, we had planned to get the food from outside the hotel, we only had to pay for the venue but two weeks to the wedding, the hotel management said we were not allowed to bring food from outside. Theirs was very costly much as people ate but not like as we had planned for them.
Sarah: I was disappointed by the photographer and even the person who baked our cake. We expected a bigger cake and decorations than what they came up with.






Did you go for premarital counselling and what did you learn from it?
Allan: We went to Full Gospel Church Katwe – Masaka, we spent three months. I learnt that it was just the beginning of learning about each other’s personalities yet I thought I knew my wife better. We learn more about people we live with, when we spend more time together.
Sarah: I learnt that care, humility, patience, prayer, trust for each other and respect for my husband are the key to a happy marriage.






Did you think of going for a honeymoon as vital?
Allan: Yes, it is, but the place we had booked turned out to be very costly so we decided to spend it in a new rented house.






What is your advice to those planning to wed?
Allan: Those who wish to wed must be ready for the wedding, let them not fail to wed because they want to do the kind of expensive weddings they watch on TV.
God is only looking at righteousness and your willingness to be repentant.
You may make the people happy and after the wedding you begin begging, our budget was small but we made our day happen.
Sarah: They do not need to secure loans for weddings; they can save money with help of friends to fulfill their wedding dreams.






The details
Date : September 26, 2009
Bride : Sarah Najjemba
Groom : Allan Michael Rwamulungi
Church: Full Gospel Church Katwe-Masaka
Guests : 300
Reception: Golf Lane Hotel-Masaka
Rings: Shs 50,000
Cake: Shs150,000.
Budget: Shs 8m






Titbits
Cake
Deogratias baked the nine-tier cake whose base was adorned with blue ribbons to fit the colour theme.






Groom attire
Allan bought his white suit from Diplomat Suit Designers, Kampala. His blue shirt, tie and pocket square looked vibrant and blended with the day’s theme.






My critic Omara of the UPC think tank




By Prof George W. Kanyeihamba
Posted 


Sunday, May 1  

2016 at 

01:00




First, let me make a personal confession. I love critics. Without independent critical examination and judgment of one’s work or opinion, one would not be able to correct mistakes or improve what he or she personally thought is right or good.
Any writer or opinion maker worthy of note should always welcome other people’s comments on his or her work. I lived in academia and the intellectual world long enough to know that an opinion or an idea which does not excite comments one way or the other, is not worth advancing.






Consequently, I personally welcome critical responses to what I say or believe because those responses make my work better and my ideas more practical and easily accepted. That is why I welcomed the views Mr Andrew Omara ably expressed in the Sunday Monitor of February 20.






He criticised me for the views I expressed about the late Maj Gen David Oyite-Ojok’s relationship with the late former president Yusuf Lule. Mr Omara’s historical account of what happened during the Uganda liberation war was quite fascinating and perhaps accurate. He must be congratulated for enlightening us. I have not personally written about that part of our history because I do not know it well. When the events Omara writes about occurred, I was in exile.






However, I came to know Oyite-Ojok during the Moshi Unity Conference and in the UNLF government where I was attorney general and minister of Justice. My comments, which Omara criticises, were limited to the period in which Yusuf Lule was president.






I vividly recall the day president Lule called me to State House Entebbe where he worked and presided over the affairs of the nation and said there was a crisis in the UNLF government. He instructed me to draft an amendment to the Uganda Army Act deleting the army commander from the membership of the National Defence Council.






I was puzzled about it and asked the president the reasons for making such a strange proposal. He said Oyite-Ojok was insubordinate and even refused to salute him as president. Lule disclosed that Oyite-Ojok had apparently undertaken that he would never recognise Lule as president but only as chairman of the UNLF because he had previously dedicated his life and service to Dr Milton Obote (RIP) as president of Uganda and there was no way Oyite-Ojok would break his oath.






I advised the president that the course he was proposing was unattainable and politically explosive. I respectfully declined to draft the amendment. I am not sure that Mr Omara knew about this incident. If anyone is in doubt about it and the context in which I made my remarks in the Sunday Monitor, one is advised to read my, “Constitutional and Political History of Uganda from 1894 to the Present, 2nd ed.”, P. 150.






With regard to Mr Omara’s critique of my comments on former Zambian president Kenneth Kaunda, again I am afraid Mr Omara wrote an opinion entirely unrelated to the comments I made about that humanist leader of Zambia.






It may be recalled that in the same Sunday Monitor issue, my comment was only limited to Kaunda’s statement that he wished to stand again in the presidential election. He had already served Zambia well for many terms stretching to 27 years. Apparently, he wished to complete his programme of modernising Zambia.






I have no reason to doubt Mr Omara’s narrative of what Kaunda achieved for his country in those 27 years. In fact, if what Omara wrote is correct, then he is actually supporting my opinion that Kaunda should not have stood again because he had completed his programme.






Scholars and writers should always read someone’s whole works and internalise them properly before rushing to judgment. For Mr Omara to write “Prof Kanyeihamba must respect or try to understand the heritage of Zambia and comrade Kaunda, the party and the government’s decisions or thinking” is like taking a tilapia out of Port Bell lake waters, placing it on the concrete road and then criticising it for failing to ride a bicycle to the city and appreciate what KCCA and Kampala Lord Mayor have done for Kampala.






Prof Kanyeihamba is a retired Supreme Court judge. gwkany@yahoo.com






Otile, Baguma begin their S. African dream



KAMPALA. 2015 Nile Special-Uspa sportsman of the year Ronald Otile and Daniel Baguma leave for Pretoria next week to begin their golfing and academic dream after finally securing visas to South Africa.






“It’s not been easy, the whole process,” Oscar Ssemawere, an executive member in charge of competitions and development at the Uganda Golf Union (UGU), told Sunday Monitor, “But at last we are relieved and happy it is done.”
Ssemawere, through the Union, led the scholarship application process for the two Tooro Golf Club (TGC) and national team stars in December last year. The scholarship was finally granted in March this year.






They will do their three-year Elite Champ Golf Program at the Turks Academy, which is under the University of Pretoria.
The Union was advised to apply at the academy through Pretoria by the Africa Director of Golf Development at R & A, Alison White.






Smooth journey
The academy will sponsor the duo’s studies for the three years while the Union and well-wishers, some of whom contributed to the Otile Foundation after the golfer won the double Uganda Open, will take charge of the boys’ welfare.
“This provides a smooth journey for me to improve my game since I will be playing with more experienced golfers,” Otile, 21 in September, told this newspaper.
“Once it is all done, I want to return as a pro and also coach. And then there is the bigger picture of a chance at the European Tours. So it’s big.”
His colleague, 20-year-old Baguma, is basking in the “big opportunity” where he says keeping grounded will take him places.
“I now have to put my head down and focus on making my dreams come true,” Baguma, who was considered for the scholarship as one of the best young golfers, said, “Every golfer dreams of having a shot at the European Tour and PGA.”






amwanguhya@ug.nationmedia.com






When TV remote fights ensue




By Douglas D. Sebamala
Posted 


Sunday, May 1  

2016 at 

01:00



In Summary



TIME FOR WAR? What does one do when the TV remote is a point of contention? Douglas D. Sebamala explores.






Change the channel or please change the channel. Which of the two phrases do you often use when you are already tired of the programme she has been watching all day? Or worse still, when you are looking forward to that football match but she is helplessly bent on that soap opera.






It might not even be a girlfriend or wife, but a brother, sister or even a housemate whose tastes in TV are annoying. “I had a roomie at University who never used to get it! I always thought Telemundo was a feminine thing, until I met John. Man, he was loyal to- is it Second Chance and…” Jonathan Musiime, an engineer, pauses as he tries to recall all the other soap titles John was loyal to.






“It got even worse when my girlfriend and I started living together. Four years later after hustling with John, she never got enough of those translated Indian soaps on TV. That’s when I started doubting if that was the kind of girl I wanted to date or marry,” he said. He angrily counts the many times he missed a wrestling game, the Premier league and the news because she wanted to watch soap operas and channel E!






How to keep it in check
Little things such as taste in TV programming are bound to break a relationship. So how do you keep things together without losing the fuss to a dear one? For Bob Bwana, it’s all about compromise. “I would learn to compromise with my partner. It comes down to deciding; if you like this and I like the other, then she will have to watch the other channels when I’m busy and give me the chance to watch what I want too.






However, his friend Ruth Natukunda disagreed. She urges him to reason saying “women are the hardest thing to get off TV. How dare you tell me to leave the TV for you to watch what you want? She questions.






Natukunda: There is no room for compromise. Period!! The men should just leave the TV to women. My stepmum quarrels over the TV. She tells my uncles to go watch it elsewhere if they want particular channels, often it was news.
Bwana: You ought to give yourself a chance to watch what the other is watching. It comes back to sacrifice; you might like what they are watching. You would be shocked.






Natukunda: no, you go buy your own TV. Buy another one and let me keep my own.
At this point, they seemed to agree on having separate TV sets. Bwana agreeably said it would be wise to have one TV in the sitting room and one in the bedroom. Truth is, often time, women influence what the family (especially the children) watch. So, keeping a separate set for yourself might be a good solution.






Multitask
Natukunda maintains that, “Unless the woman is sleeping, there is no room to stop her from watching what she wants. Perhaps if she is a busy woman, maybe, but she is also the first to get back home and often the first thing she does when she returns (watch TV). Bwana interjects, “What if I want to make love?” Natukunda quickly adds, “Women are the only people able to multitask. I once watched a show where a woman was watching TV as the guy did his thing.”






Bwana responds with a hearty laugh, before he comes up with a different solution. “Perhaps I would buy the Dstv explorer package that enables us to watch different channels at different times,” he said. The only ground the relationship should stand upon is that the relationship stands regardless of petty differences like TV tastes.






To keep peace
Jonathan Musiime who still lives through these cat fights argues that women love TV more. “Unless the man is also very fussy, you have to let her watch and have your own TV set or watch something with her often to keep the peace.” He also suggests that if you won’t catch the game at home steal off a night or two at the nearest bar with friends to watch what you want there and let her know.






Three dead as suspected cholera strikes Mayuge


In Summary



Deadly. The three died in one week and 18 more were admitted to various health centres







Three people have been confirmed dead of suspected cholera at Bwondha Landing Site in Malongo Sub-county in Mayuge District.






Dr Charles Nabangi, the district health officer, said on Thursday the disease had claimed three people in one week and more than 18 were admitted to various health centres.
Majority of the victims were rushed to Malongo Health Centre III.






“I started feeling abdominal pains after taking water and within a short time, I started vomiting and developed diarrhoea,” Ms Magaret Owori, one of the patients, told Sunday Monitor at her bed at Malongo Health Centre.
Health officials at the hospital said most of the patients were vomiting and had diarrhoea.
However, Dr Nabangi said they had not yet confirmed whether it was cholera.






“The disease is associated with vomiting and diarrhoea and we have sent samples to Kampala to establish whether it is cholera or any other disease,” Dr Nabangi said.






He said the disease is caused by poor sanitation and accused households of lacking latrines. He said 30 per cent of households in the district lack pit latrines and discharge human waste into the bush and nearby Lake Victoria, where they also draw water for domestic use.






A press statement from the director of health services, Dr Jane Ruth Acheng, yesterday said the eastern districts have reported chorela cases with Namayingo and Butaleja, the most affected, recording at least four cases daily. She said the neighbouring districts of Busia, Sironko and Kibuku have also reported cases of cholera, which she attributed to poor hygiene and sanitation worsened by the rains.






Dr Acheng appealed to the residents to boil or chlorinate all drinking water, intensify health inspection in all communities, intensify health education and awareness, and enforce construction of pit-latrines.








Cholera is an acute diarrhoeal infection caused by ingestion of food or water contaminated with the bacterium Vibrio cholerae. Symptoms may range from none to mild to severe. The classic symptom is large amounts of watery diarrhoea that lasts a few days. Vomiting may also occur. The bacterium is usually found in food or water contaminated by faeces from a person with the infection.






Police officer to be charged with murder




The police officer who shot dead a suspect for fleeing arrest will be produced in court next week, according to police.






The Sipi Regional Police Commander, Mr Musa Nabende, told mourners at the burial of the late Richard Semu on Wednesday that he would ensure the case files against the implicated officers were ready by end of the week to take them for prosecution.






The three officers who had gone to arrest Semu are under detention and among them is the officer in charge of Sipi Police Post, ASP Medard Kayolo, who commanded the operation. The two others are Constables Musa Mwanga and Daniel Chepkwurui. Semu, the son of Kapchorwa Municipality MP-elect Sam Cheptoris, was killed on Monday by a bullet which ripped his intestines and left hip bone.






“Kayolo as a boss should have put the situation under control other than killing a young man who still had opportunities in life,” Mr Nabende told mourners. “This will serve as a lesson to other officers who use rudimentary methods to arrest unarmed criminal suspects,” he added.






Restaurant review: Fast food would be a better option




By A. Kadumukasa Kironde II
Posted 


Sunday, May 1  

2016 at 

01:00



In Summary



Get better. If only the service could improve at Nakajukko Restaurant, clients would be satisfied.






Upon entering Nakajukko Restaurant the place strikes me as being the sort of joint that would best be suited for the main Street in the city centre. True that Kansanga has a large community of students and fast food joints are a dime dozen, but in the main, they are selling chicken and chips which in terms of Ugandan students has to be the preferred menu of choice. Conceptually and in terms of layout, this latest fast food joint is trying very hard to make an impression. Despite the close proximity of Kampala International University and its vast cosmopolitan student body the punters are simply not impressed.






Menu
The menu is unusual for this genre of roadside eatery, and given the prices that are unrealistically low, authenticity is not only farfetched, but keenly absent. Better to have done something along the lines of Tipsy or Chicken Tonight and compete with them all the more so considering that the startup cost for the venture is the same either way.






Dishes
Jerk chicken, Teriyaki chicken, Japanese beef these are incredibly recondite (in Uganda) items that are prominently featured on the menu, but despite their presence are poor renditions of the real deal. Jerk is the Jamaican barbecue and like its North American counterpart, jerk is simultaneously a dish, a cooking method and a way of life. In Jamaica it turns up at rugged roadside eating joints.






Compared to others
Honestly, the only place in town that can lay claim to making an authentic variant of the dish is Café Javas. To make jerk, the meat of choice is washed with lime juice and or vinegar and marinated in a fiery paste of Scotch Bonnet chilies and other spice and smoke cooked over smoldering hardwood. The chicken teriyaki fared no better and sadly lacked adequate marinating and as for the Japanese beef, the beef used was not Kobe which pretty much sums it up. We ordered burgers and were not impressed.
As for the kitchen it is really tiny and no bigger than the size of postage stamp. One can only pity the poor chef who is most likely a tenderfoot in the field and given the cramped quarters that obtain it is hard to see how they can cope with large numbers. It took for ages for our burgers to arrive and that is despite our being no fewer than a half dozen diners.






If you go…
Place: Nakajukko Restaurant
Address: On Gaba Road adjacent to KIU and Tipsy takeaway
Smoke-free zone: Not available
Recommended items: Nothing to write home about
Service: They try
Ambience: The size of a postage stamp with poor ventilation
Open: Daily
Our rating: Ok/so so
Menu: Jerk chicken teriyaki chicken Japanese beef
The space: Cramped and can barely seat a couple of dozen people
The crowd: Not at all busy
The bar: Coffee
The damage: A piece of jerk chicken is a fiver while coffee costs shs 4,000; a relatively inexpensive joint
Sound level: Not bad
Parking: Not available
If you go: Daily






Uganda seeks advantage at regional MX competition


In Summary



Uganda seeks advantage regional MX competition






KAMPALA. The Central Africa Motocross championship might have been reduced to a battle between Uganda and Kenya.
That though is unlikely to deter the hosts from pushing for victory when the FIM East and Central Africa Motocross Championship gets underway today at the Garuga race track.
This is especially after Uganda lost last year’s championship after failing to pay the Shs8m event fee for the FIM Africa Central Africa Motocross Championship first leg it hosted.
That has since changed with the newly elected motorsport governing body led by Dusman Okee having already cleared this season’s arrears.
For Team Uganda captain and reigning Mountain Dew National Motocross MX 1 champion Maxime Van Pee however, the team has also improved in that period and will be favourites to win all seven categories.






‘Strongest team’
“This is the strongest team I have been part of,” remarked Van Pee who also won last season’s regional title in the MX 1 class.
With the bulk of the 15 Kenyan riders expected to feature in the MX85 class or below, Van Pee will be favourite to retain his title as well as increase his lead on the domestic front.
This is as a result of the event also acting as the third round of the Mountain Dew National Motocross championship
Similarly, youngsters Gift Ssebuguzi, Isabella Blick will be keen to impress after winning last season’s MX 50cc junior andMX50cc Seniors categories.
Apart from the two-day action that starts with the first heat today, fans will tomorrow also be treated to rally action as the redesigned double circuit track is relaunched.






essenono@ug.nationmedia.com






Storm destroys 30 Amuru homes

Mr Ali Odong, one of the affected locals at his home. His house’s roof was blown off during the Wednesday downpour. Photo By Julius Ocungi.  



In Summary



Devastating. The downpour also left a four-year-old girl with broken legs after the house in which she was collapsed on her







More than 30 homesteads were destroyed and one child injured following a devastating downpour in Kal parish, Pabbo Trading Centre in Amuru District on Wednesday.






The four-year-old girl was injured after a wall collapsed on her and broke her legs. She was taken to St Mary’s Hospital Lacor in neighbouring Gulu District.






According to eyewitnesses, the storm blew off iron-sheets from about 20 houses and roofs of about 10 grass-thatched huts.
“We have never seen such a powerful storm in this area. I was with my wife and daughter when it started but when I realised the roof was shaking hard, we ran out and in five minutes, the roof was no more,” Mr Ali Odong, one of the locals whose house roof was blown off, told Sunday Monitor.






His crop harvest of rice and peas and important documents were destroyed by the rain.






Another resident, Ms Lawil Ocaya whose son’s house roof was blown away, blamed the storm on people who have destroyed the forest cover in Kilak Hills for charcoal burning.






Rwot Jakeu Achaye Agole II, the Chief of Pabbo Clan, also said tree destruction in the area has contributed to adverse weather conditions. “Heavy charcoal burning is ongoing in our area, we have warned locals against cutting down trees but no one listens. The sub-county officials have been bribed by businessmen who now buy chunks of forest land for charcoal burning,” Rwot Agole said.






He appealed to the district leaders to intervene in the wanton cutting down of trees for charcoal.
Mr Christopher Ojera, the Pabbo Sub-county chairperson, warned of worse weather disasters unless the tree cutting stopped.






Island residents in crocodile scare




Residents on islands of Bugaba, Kasizi, Kagoonya and Bukasa in Kalangala District are living in crocodile scare following increasing attacks on humans by the water beast.
Most of the victims are attacked while fetching water from Lake Victoria.






The residents voiced out their fear during a meeting with Kyamuswa County MP-elect Carol Nanyondo Birungi on Wednesday.
Ms Nanyondo visited the area following reports that residents were staying indoors for fear of being killed by the reptiles.






Residents led by Mr Augustine Muwanguzi from Kaazi Bugaba Landing Site in Bufumira Sub–county, said crocodiles have for the last three weeks been coming near the fishing village.
Almost all landing sites in Kalangala District have suffered crocodile threat. Three weeks ago, a crocodile invaded Bwendero Landing Site in Bujumba Sub-county and killed a man only identified as Ssebuyira, who was fishing on Lake Victoria.






Ms Nanyondo asked the Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) to work with local leaders to address the problem. “We want these reptiles for tourism but peoples’ lives are also important and their concerns shouldn’t be taken lightly, ” she said.
Mr Peter Ogwang, a UWA safety officer, blamed the communities on the lake shores for destroying habitats thus exposing themselves to crocodiles.






He, however, said UWA would soon dispatch a team to the Islands to pick all marauding crocodiles and transfer them to game reserves.






East Coast fever kills 2,000 livestock




Kotido District authorities have said 30 cows, goats and sheep died of a strange disease in Kacheri Sub-county in the district last week.
However, veterinary officials say it is East Coast fever killing the animals.






Mr Calisto Adome Lokwi, the Kotido District chairman, told Sunday Monitor on Thursday that the epidemic has lasted for more than a year and claimed about 2,000 cattle, goats, sheep and camels. He said since March 2015, pastoralists have been losing livestock to the disease.






He said the district veterinary team took blood samples of the dead animals for testing at the Ministry of Agriculture four months ago but no results have been released.
Mr Lokwi said the animals just collapse and die.






Mr Colline Ogwang, the Kotido District veterinary officer, confirmed the livestock epidemic, saying the animals are dying of East Coast fever, a tick-borne disease.
The Kotido Woman Member of Parliament, Ms Margret Aleper, said she presented the problem to Parliament and the Ministry of Agriculture promised to take action but nothing clear has been done.






Mr Samson Lokeris, MP for Dodoth East in Kaabong, said the disease in Kotido was a threat to other neighbouring districts.






JSC staff charged with theft



KAMPALA. Two Judicial Service Commission (JSC) officials were on Thursday charged with fraud before Buganda Road Chief Magistrate’s Court.
The officials are Mr Pastor Kiiza,45, an office supervisor and resident of Ntuuse–Nsambya, a Kampala suburb, and Mr Moses Waiswa, 36, an internal auditor and resident of Kyanja in Wakiso District.






Appearing before Chief Magistrate Jamson Karemani, Mr Kiiza was independently charged with two counts of forgery and uttering false documents under the Penal Code Act. Mr Kiiza and Mr Waiswa are jointly facing a third count of conspiracy to commit an offence. They both denied the charges.
They were released on a cash bail of Shs1m and their sureties given a Shs10m non-cash bond each.






Court adjourned the case to May 11 for the hearing.
Prosecution contends that Mr Kiiza on June 19, 2015, at JSC on Farmers House in Kampala, being employed as store keeper, forged a “goods-received” note showing that JSC had received 444 copies of Citizens handbooks whereas not. It is further stated that Mr Kiiza on the same date and place fraudulently uttered the said false “goods-received” note to one Ms Aminah Nabulime, the procurement officer and Mr Kagole Kivumbi, the accounting officer, to enable process payment for the purported delivery of the 444 copies of the handbooks.
On the third count of conspiracy to commit a felony, the state claims that Mr Kiiza and Mr Waiswa on June 19, 2015, at the same place conspired to forge the “goods-received” note in order to defraud JSC of Shs6m.






bndagire@ug.nationmedia.com






Blackburne to interpret for Cipla in Liverpool



KAMPALA. Ms Alison Blackburne breathes Liverpool. She puffs not just the United Kingdom city, but Liverpool Football Club as well.
The British High Commissioner to Uganda, clad in a black dress under the gentle lights of her residence balcony at Nakasero, runs through a list of Liverpool achievements over the years before stressing: “As a matter of fact, Liverpool is the most successful football club in Britain.”
Ms Blackburne (pic above) was delivering a wit-filled speech at the official flag-off to Anfield, Liverpool of the Cipla Quality Chemicals Football Team, who won the corporate 2016 Standard Chartered Cup, on Tuesday night. Midway, she spanned in one step into her living room, picked her hand bag and pulled out a small book that bore some of the club legends.
Holding it aloft, she joked, rather sternly: “The things you should not mention when you are in Liverpool; Man Utd… And well, Everton.”






Scouse dialect
Ms Blackburne then warned the travelling contingent. “The Scouse accent can be tough,” she joshed, “You may need some interpretation.
“But since I will be in Liverpool, I will be your interpreter. I will also show you around my beautiful city.”
Scouse is a dialect of English found primarily in the Metropolitan county of Merseyside, and closely associated with the city of Liverpool.
Ms Blackburne then asked how many of the Cipla players supported Liverpool. One out of seven hands, only one went up.
Unflinching, she approved. “You will enjoy.” Chorused laughter from invited guests followed.
“Anyway,” Ms Blackburne went on, “Most of us here support Liverpool, apart from someone over there who is a great fan of Norwich,” pointing at Samuel Paice, the Head of Communications at the Consulate.
The Cipla team, as a prize for winning the Standard Chartered Cup, leave for the UK on May 5 and will watch the Premier League match between Liverpool and Watford at Anfield three days later.






amwanguhya@ug.nationmedia.com






Anena bows to her boobs with poetry

The poet Harriet Anena during the performance last Tuesday at Uganda National Cultural Center. She believes that people are more likely to engage in erotic discussions. PHOTO BY MICHEAL KAKUMILIZI 





By  DOUGLAS D. SEBAMALA
Posted 


Saturday, April 30 

2016 at 

01:00



In Summary



Political erotica. In a performance that left the audience impressed, Harriet Anena addressed different political issues using sexual undertones.






Harriet is not your average Stella Nyanzi. She chooses her words carefully and tailors them with artistic grace, whose strength hits harder than a bare chested woman. While she strutted the National Theatre stage, performing her own collection of poetry “I Bow For My Boobs,” Anena proved an all-round artist. She is the writer who used theatrical performance to bring poetry to life.
She effortlessly merged politics and eroticism in a way not even undressing publically could measure up to. “Politics is a subject most people don’t want to be associated with and they don’t want to speak publicly about the erotica –albeit the enjoyment,” she said.






Marrying interesting topics
But people also enjoy politics, so she decided neither to concentrate on one but marry the two. As she seductively strutted the stage, in a shorts- thigh up- and black vest, she teasingly knotted her hair, lusciously wore a yellow stretch of beads around her neck…and as she made a quick dress change, before our very eyes, topping a red shirt to cover her nearly bare back, the black top underneath became a mini shirt.
“I’m wearing Black Yellow Red” she burst out in word, “Not for the damness of the moment but for the thickness of memory” as though she were reminding the audience of the colours that make Uganda distinct. She utilised chatters of laughter that resonated with her audience as she teased them momentarily, on one incident, nearly throwing her undergarments at them.






The central poem
While the performance was a collection of several pieces, the title of the show “I Bow To My Boobs” is from a title of the poem in Acholi. She performed it in Acholi to maintain the power of language which might be lost in translation but also because it is “a very personal poem and the only way I would get into it and bring it on stage- it wouldn’t work in English,” she said.
It centres on a drunkard husband who returns home, his trousers wet with urine. His bitter wife wonders what to do with him that she decides to pray to her breast to turn into stone. “It’s really about power and powerlessness and how the two interchange. I look at relationships between a couple and how the woman relates to the man and how each of them tries to curve out their space,” Anena noted.
During the dialogue with the audience she revealed that she writes in Acholi first and translates to English because there’s richness in local language.






The performance
There was a file of sexual undertones that she otherwise covered with euphemism in action. She admitted to there being a thin line between the moral and immoral in political erotica, so she chose dancing some of the poems. Her tone kept drifting and one could draw her emotional digest in the words even as she rubbed her hands all over her thighs and chest.
The contrast in the subject and action was the strength of these pieces that while we might separate eroticism from politics, these two have close likeness. However, the poet hopes the audience appreciated diversity in culture, diversity in relationships, and diversity in how people use their bodies and minds to curve out a political space to them.
Afro Man Spice’s Sandy Soul credited Anena for having embraced all the characters there are in her poems and transforming into a different person on stage.






Poetry shrine
The poetry shrine founded by Peter Kagayi has creating these one man-one woman shows, and while Anena’s performance is now slated for the Babishainiwe poetry festival later in June with plans for an all Acholi performance underway, the next one man poetry show (next month) is by Hip Hop sensation Ruyonga.






editorial@ug.nationmedia.com






Danra - going places with music


In Summary



Rising star. Danra is a 19-year-old musician who idolises Beyonce and as luck would have it, she has already started getting performance gigs unlike other already established musicians who only perform once in a week. She shares her music career.






What is your real name?
Daphine Flavia Nassuna.






Why did you pick an interest in singing?
I didn’t only pick an interest in singing, but I had a passion for it and this is because I grew up in a family of music lovers.






What style of music do you do and why?
I do all types of music but then I decided to concentrate on dancehall and reggae genres because I resonate more with them.






Music is perceived as a career for failures and being a 19-year-old, do you should think this is the right career for you?
(Laughs) Music is not for failures. Actually to me, music is not only a career but it’s also business because at the end of the day, it’s what puts food on the table and takes care of my needs.






How far did you go with school and why?
I am a vacist. I got done with my Form Six last year and I’m joining university soon.






How did you parents feel when you chose music as a career?
My dad didn’t first support the idea but my mum was always giving me a go ahead so one day my dad took time and listened to my music. Surprisingly, he loved it and also started supporting me and as we talk, both my parents are my number one diehard fans.






How many songs do you have so far?
I have four songs namely: Zina, Mulala mulala, Drop your energy and Brown Sugar.






Musicians usually market themselves by performing in places like bars or nights clubs. How safe is it for you?
Safety is one thing I first took care of before I decided to take music as a career. I’m 100 per cent safe because I always move with my team of about five people.






How do your parents deal with you being out late?
My parents know how the industry runs especially when it comes to night performances, all they say to me is to take care in everything that I do. And whenever I’m to perform late at night, I’m always communicating with them.






Speaking of performances, which places have you performed at so far?
I was so lucky that I started getting weekly gigs in different places like Club Silk every Tuesday, Club Venom and Waikiki at Centenary park every Thursday while Saturdays, I’m always at Club Ceeders.






Which musician do you look up to?
I love Beyoncé because of her stage performances, vocals and attitude.






Why do you think music is the right path for you?
I don’t think but I know music is the right path for me because I’m SWAT which is Simple, Willing And Talented. I’m multi-talented when it comes to stage performances because I’m an energetic dancer and I believe I have the vocals.






Tell me about your musical journey?
I started singing at an early age but realised that I had the talent in 2010 after joining St Cyprian High School. I used to sing in church and also in the school choir and after my Form Four during vacation, I was called to backup my friend in studio but when the producer called Ricky listened to my voice, he gave me an offer of recording a song at his Sammie production. The next day, I recorded my first track ‘Drop your energy’ which did quite well but I decided to give music a break after that because my vacation was done and I had to complete my Senior Six.






Then what happened next?
After my Senior Six, I decided to officially start a music career and that is when I met a guy called Sewaah shots who became my manager. He took me to studio and I recorded the ‘Zina’ song which really did well in clubs like Silk and many more. After some time I left Sewaah shots management and recorded ‘mulala mulala’ before releasing ‘Brown sugar’ recently.






What challenges have you faced so far doing music?
There is a lot of beef in the industry and because I don’t have a manager, I get challenged in financial issues and promotions.






Protect prosecutors, crime boss tells government

L-R: The children of the late Joan Kagezi, George Phillip Kagezi, John Harvey Kagezi and Pearl Priscillar Kagezi on Thursday during the memorial lecture in honour of their mother who was shot dead last year. PHOTO BY ABUBAKER LUBOWA.  




Kampala. South African national director of public prosecutions advocate Shaun Abrahams on Thursday used the Joan Kagezi memorial lecture to call upon African governments to provide security to their prosecutors to avert a repeat of the fate that befell Kagezi.
Mr Abrahams was the main speaker at the lecture held in Kampala in honour and memory of Kagezi. Kagezi was gunned down by assailants trailing her on a boda boda on her way back home in Kiwatule, a city suburb, last year.






Mr Abrahams was particularly infuriated by the rampant killings of public prosecutors in various African countries and even the US as they bring to book implicated criminals.
“What happened to Joan was tragic. Today I call upon the African Union and the United Nations to honour the safety of African prosecutors and independence of prosecutors and establish trust in our fallen heroes and not to do so will jeopardise their lives,” said Mr Abrahams amid applause from the audience.






“Prosecutors should be physically protected and states should provide security to the prosecutors at their office and other places,” he added. “In honour of Joan Kagezi and other fallen prosecutors, I propose that there should be awards in memory of them like the Joan Kagezi award.”
During the documentary that was played to reflect on Kagezi’s life to the public at the memorial lecture, High Court judge Susan Okalany revealed that following the brutal murder of Kagezi, all prosecutors who were handling sensitive cases at that time were given security.






The rest of the team
However, she wondered about the other prosecutors who were not given security yet they also handle equally sensitive cases.
It’s now a year after Kagezi’s murder and police have never arrested the suspects although the Director of Public Prosecutions, Mr Mike Chibita, has since indicated there are two useful clues that might lead to the arrest of the assailants.






Kagezi’s murder was largely linked to her being a lead prosecutor in the trial of the 2010 terror suspects in which 13 men are accused of masterminding the Kampala twin bombings that killed at least 76 people who were watching the World Cup final between Spain and Netherlands at Kyadondo Rugby Club in Lugogo and Ethiopian Village Restaurant in Kabalagala suburb on July 11, 2010.
Chief Justice Bart Katureebe who was the chief guest at the Kagezi Memorial Lecture, said: “If all those who took Joan’s life, did so because of her job, then they must have realised by now that they were terribly mistaken if they thought they would stop others from carrying on her work. All of us who are involved in fighting organised crime and terror must rededicate and double our efforts.”






Justice Katureebe also used the memorial lecture to caution that terrorists are more sophisticated in terms of technology which sophistication, he said is far from that of the public prosecutors.
To that effect, he called upon the relevant stakeholders to appropriately equip public prosecutors to match or even supersede the terrorists’ technology.
The Chief Justice also cautioned against blame-game between the various investigating agencies on why there has been a delay in tracking the assailants. He said in such a time, such investigating agencies should work together.
The Joan Kagezi Memorial lecture was held under the theme “Fighting Terrorism And Organised Crime”.








Papa Wemba conquered the world with music

Papa Wemba (C) performs before he collapsed on stage in Abidjan, Ivory Coast last weekend.  



In Summary



Tribute. Last Sunday, the world was shocked to learn that Congolese music star Papa Wemba had collapsed and died on stage while performing during a music festival in Abidjan, Ivory Coast.






When I was asked by the editor to write about the fallen Papa Wemba, I wondered what I would write. Would I write an obituary? Would I write a profile? Would I just comment on his discography?
For an internationally acclaimed musician whose death featured on CNN and BBC as a breaking news item, how would I bring Papa Wemba’s story home and ‘Ugandanise’ it?
The Congolese star collapsed and died on stage while performing during a music festival in Abidjan, Ivory Coast. He was 66 and married to Marie Lozolo Amazone.
Papa Wemba’s mother was a pleureuse (professional dirge singer) who could be hired to sing at funerals. She died in 1973.
His mother was one of Papa Wemba’s earlier influences. “If my mother was still alive, I would be rich in words and rich in melodies. Mother was my first teacher and my first audience,” he is quoted as saying on his official website.
Papa Wemba’s professional career began in 1969 as part of the pioneer singers of what has variously been referred to as the Youth Movement of Congolese music embodied in l’Orchestre Zaiko Langa Langa.






Zaiko Langa Langa was the first band to play a more raucous version of the Congolese rumba aimed at Kinshasa’s younger generation. The singers choreographed stage routines and created dance strokes for their followers.
And Papa Wemba was on Zaiko Langa Langa’s line up of vocalists which also included other strong vocals in Michel “Evoloko Joker” Anto and Siméon Mavuela Somo. In addition to his tenor, Papa Wemba was also a composer scoring a number of hits including Liwa Ya Somo (scary death).






Conflict
As is always the case in these things, success in popularity and number of band members in Zaiko Langa Langa brought some friction; Papa Wemba and some of the other singers felt stifled.
In 1974, the band dismissed singer Evoloko Joker. In the heat of things, Papa Wemba, Mavuela and Bozi Bozian also left Zaiko Langa Langa and joined Evoloko Joker to form l’Ochestre Isifi Lokole.






A year later, Papa Wemba and Mavuela left Isifi Lokole and formed Yoka Lokole and were later to split in 1977. Papa Wemba then formed Viva la Musica, which provided a platform to showcase his talent without the stifling of would-be rivals. Viva La Musica was an immediate success. In 1979, Papa Wemba left his band to perform alongside Tabu Ley and Afrisa Internationale. In 1982, he recorded in Paris as a solo for Franco Luambo Makiadi’s Visa 1980 label. This seemingly selfish behaviour led a number of his musicians to leave Viva La Musica.






July 1986 was the start of La Vie Est Belle (life is beautiful), a joint project of Belgian director Benoit Lamy and Zaire’s Ngangura Mweze. La Vie Est Belle is the story of a young, impoverished singer who comes to the city in search of stardom. The sound track features much of Papa Wemba’s music, including the title song.






Going it alone
About a year later, he announced that he was going solo in order to achieve a more international sound and audience. In Paris, Papa Wemba re-recorded seven of his songs in collaboration with French producer Martin Meissonnier.
The result was a very un-Congolese sounding disc entitled simply Papa Wemba which alienated old fans; yet it also failed to attract new ones. Singing in Lingala, he headlined Peter Gabriel’s World of Music and Dance tour and secured a global audience.






It is his courting of international audience that may have brought Papa Wemba’s music to Uganda. Otherwise, the Youth Movement was never really successfully in penetrating the East African market then dominated Franco, Tabu Ley and Kyamuangana Mateta (of Orchestre Veve). The first album that attracted Ugandans was the highly publicised Wake Up, collaboration with Kofi Olomide who already had a footprint in Uganda with three albums namely Papa Plus, Andrada and Bana Magie.






Papa Wemba’s international appeal was enhanced when he worked with an international cast of musicians that included Gabriel, Eric Clapton, Stevie Wonder, Youssou N’dour, Lucky Dube, and South African vocalist Brenda Fasi on a tour sponsored by International Committee of the Red Cross.






But the most popular of Papa Wemba’s works in Uganda was the single Show Me the Way which had very un-Congolese beats yet retained the aura of Afro-Rumba accompanied with lead vocals.






Conquering Uganda
Show Me the Way actually offered Ugandans what Tabu Ley’s Muzina didn’t do; a bridge that was later to deliver Uganda’s popular dance to hip hop.
A newspaper once asked what Congolese musician Ugandans preferred to perform in Kampala. Most of the entries voted for Papa Wemba (and looked forward to him playing Show Me the Way live). That’s how Show Me the Way was popular in Uganda. The other song that appealed to Ugandans was Iyolela. “I am speaking from the heart when I say that Paris has allowed me to go everywhere – to reach the summit of international show business,” Papa Wemba said in an interview with CNN.






Papa Wemba bio
Papa Wemba was born Jules Shungu Wembadio Pene Kikumba on June 14, 1949 at Lobefu in the Kasai Region of DR Congo. As a direct descendent of a long line of the Tetela tribal warrior chiefs, he was supposed to be raised for the role of a tribal warrior chief. Unfortunately, this was not possible because in 1955, Papa Wemba’s family moved to Leopoldville (Kinshasa). However, he was later to earn the title ‘chief’ from the elders for his contribution to music and culture (but not as a warrior).
His father died in 1966, after which he joined the choir of St. Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church in Kinshasa. That must have been the beginning of what was later to be a singing career that spanned 50 years.






editorial@ug.nationmedia.com






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