16 years ago: Idi Amin Dies.

Idi Amin Dada Oumee was born on May 17, 1925,and died at the age of 78 on August 16, 2003 (16 years ago; as of August 16, 2019).

He was a Ugandan president best known for his brutal regime and crimes against humanity while in power from 1971-1979 (8 years).

He succumbed to kidney failure and was buried on the same day in Ruwais Cemetery in Jeddah in a simple grave, without any fanfare.

Jeddah is a Saudi Arabian port city on the Red Sea, is a modern commercial hub and gateway for pilgrimages to the Islamic holy cities Mecca and Medina.

Over 400,000 people died under unclear circumstances during Amin’s regime, including Janani Jakaliya Luwum, the archbishop of the Church of Uganda from 1974 to 1977 and one of the most influential leaders of the modern church in Africa, who  was arrested in February 1977 and died shortly after. Born1922, Kitgum. AssassinatedFebruary 17, 1977, Kampala.

Amin:

Synopsis.

Idi Amin was a Ugandan president born circa 1925 in Kokobo, West Nile Province, Uganda. He rose within the military from the 1940s through 1970. Amin overthrew the current leader in 1971 and declared himself president, and he remained in power from 1971-1979. During his tenure, he lived a lavish lifestyle while contributing to the collapse of Uganda’s economy. He sought to stay in power at all costs, resulting in extensive human rights violations via mass killings. Overthrown in 1979, he fled first to Libya and then to Saudi Arabia, where he died on August 16, 2003.

Early Years.

Idi Amin was a member of the small Kakwa ethnic group of northwestern Uganda. His birthdate is unconfirmed, but estimated to have been in 1925. His mother, an herbalist and diviner, raised him after his father deserted the family. Amin had little formal education before joining the King’s African Rifles of the British colonial army in 1946 as an assistant cook.

Military Service.

Extremely charismatic and skilled, Amin quickly rose through the ranks. His stature was rather notable. He stood 6 feet, 4 inches tall and was a Ugandan light-heavyweight boxing champion from 1951 to 1960, as well as a swimmer. He soon became notorious among fellow soldiers for his overzealous and cruel military interrogations. Eventually he made the highest rank possible for a black African serving in the British army. From 1952 until 1956, he served in the British action against the Mau Mau revolt in Kenya.

Before Uganda’s independence in 1962, Amin became closely associated with the new nation’s prime minister and president, Milton Obote. The two men worked to smuggle gold, coffee and ivory out of Congo, but conflicts soon arose between them, and on January 25, 1971, while Obote was attending a meeting in Singapore, Amin staged a successful military coup. Amin became president and chief of the armed forces in 1971, field marshal in 1975 and life president in 1976.

Rise to Power.

Amin began his rule with popular actions, including freeing several political prisoners. Simultaneously, however, he sent out “killer squads” to hunt down and murder Obote’s supporters, predominantly those from the Acholi and Lango ethnic groups, military personnel and civilians. His victims soon came to include people from every order and rank, including journalists, lawyers, homosexuals, students and senior bureaucrats. He expelled all Asians from Uganda in 1972, an action that led to the breakdown of his country’s economy.

Amin became known as the “Butcher of Uganda” for his brutality. It is believed that some 300,000 people were killed during his presidency. In July 1976 he was personally involved in the hijacking of a French airliner to Entebbe. In October 1978 Amin ordered an attack on Tanzania. Aided by Ugandan nationalists, Tanzanian troops eventually overpowered the Ugandan army. As the Tanzanian-led forces neared Kampala, Uganda’s capital, on April 13, 1979, Amin fled the city. Escaping first to Libya, he finally settled in Saudi Arabia.

Death.

On August 16, 2003, Idi Amin died in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The cause of death was reported to be multiple organ failure. Although the Ugandan government announced that his body could be buried in Uganda, he was quickly buried in Saudi Arabia. He was never tried for gross abuse of human rights.

Western Uganda: Malnutrition still a Challenge in Mbarara,Isingiro,Buhweju.

Authorities in southwestern Uganda have been implored to expand and increase the efforts to fight malnutrition among children and the old in Mbarara,Isingiro,Buhweju and other districts which is still a challenge.

This was revealed on Friday, August 15,2019 by Mbarara regional referral senior nutritionist,Dr Dalton Babukiika,who expressed concern over poor feeding both in rural and urban areas.

He further decried poor services, saying that the pediatric ward (nutrition unit) sometimes gets congested and some mothers demand being discharged since they can’t afford the expenses in the one – three months of hospital admission.

Mbarara regional referral hospital on average receives about 30 malnourished children per month,with majority of the cases caused by poverty,family neglect  and ignorance where  some parents think malnourishment is witchcraft.

Parents and guardians have been challenged to seek guidance from specialists on feeding,if they can’t follow the tradition of feeding children on balanced died, and pregnant women eating well;foods like vegetables,and other nutritious foods.

Malnutrition remains one of the most significant child health problems in developing countries with an estimated 53 % of child deaths per year attributed to being underweight.

The 2011 Uganda Demographic and Health Survey (UDHS) showed that 38 % of the children were stunted and 16 % were underweight.

By RAP Uganda ED –  https://twitter.com/AaronAinomugis3  

Speaker Kadaga tough on giving away Muchison Falls to an Investor.

The speaker of parliament has showed concern over government’s continued silence regarding the giving away of Murchison falls for construction of a power dam.

Just two months ago, Rebecca Kadaga called for clarification from government given the media reports that Bonang power Energy Ltd, a south African Energy firm  had showed interest in construction of a power dam at Murchison falls , a proposal that received stiff criticism from different stakeholders.

Since then, government has never given its official statement on the matter and now Kadaga notes that she has continued to receive petitions in her office protesting this move where as  she remains stuck about what to tell Ugandans because the advert to this effect continue to appear in the media.

The government chief whip Ruth Nankabirwa was quick to ask for an excuse from the speaker to move out of the chambers shortly to consult with the responsible ministry on when parliament will be addressed on the matter.

“LOVELY STORY!!!

Copied:
So this happened some Days back, someone put up the first picture of this boy sleeping out late in the night and beside him lay a tray of banana.

William Uche Mba saw the post and re-posted requesting for the boy to be located immediately.He was bothered, a boy that age on the streets at that time shouldn’t be so. Good thing he was found and Williams (a young Nigerian based in the U. S.) Put in a video call to him via the contact with him.

He is 10 years old and lives with his aunt who took him from his parents to put him in school in Lagos. Oh well, we all know how that worked out🙄. He was taken home and the aunty said he could be taken away. The boy asked to be taken back to his parents and put back in school.

Williams arranged for the boy to be flown back to Akwa Ibom and his family located. He has promised to help his family and also sponsor the 10 year old boy to University level. We can see the boy onboard a flight to Akwa Ibom this morning.

Williams has never met this boy, and may never meet him. He is Igbo and the little boy is from Akwa Ibom state. This is what impresses me and gives me hope in humanity. If we can all emulate this, stretch your hand to the next person in need.

I hope stories that unite and uplift us as a people trend a lot more.

God bless you Williams Uchemba.
God bless the 10 year old boy.

Two Arrested for kidnap and murder in Kiruhura district.

Western Uganda – Police in Kiruhura district have exhumed the body of a 8 year old boy,Kangume Ronald a pupil at Christ the king primary school Kyakabunga,who was allegedly killed on 31st July 2019 after being kidnapped by shamba boys.

Police have since then arrested the suspects, Asiimwe Alex ,17, and Taremwa Enos,16, who demanded for  a ransom of USD100,000 to release Kangume.

 The suspects are all casual laborers in Ruhondwa village, the boy’s parents’ home in Kyakabunga parish,Nyakashashara Sub-County, Nyabushozi Kiruhura district,

Samson Kasasira,the Rwizi region police spokesperson said that the matter was taken up by Police and suspects were tracked down and arrested on the 10/08/2019 in Kiruhura district,by press time, they were in custody at CPS Kiruhura as investigations continue.

Mbarara Acid Victim Councilor Curses Perpetrators as He heads abroad for Operation.

The LC IV councilor for Nyamityobora Kakoba division Mbarara metropolitan city,Amos Katureebe ,who is an Acid Victim has cursed perpetrators who poured him acid and made him blind.

Katurebe shed tears on Sunday August 10, 2019 during his thanksgiving at Nyamityobora Church of Uganda where he thanked God for helping him cheat death after this acid attack.

He recalls that on November 8,2017,a night before he was set to testify before the commission of inquiry investigating land matters at Ntare School, he was attacked by unknown persons who poured acid on him as he entered his gate in Nyamityobora and he was admitted in Intensive Care at Mengo hospital.

Katureebe  was to testify about the theft of land in the district.

In March this year, he decided to write to the office of Regional DPP (Director of Public Prosecutions) appealing against the acquittal of prime suspect Bony Tashobya,Mbarara municipal speaker.

Katurebe wrote that his criminal case No. 1657 of 2017 complaining on how he was not satisfied with the Judgment by the chief Magistrate court on 25/02/2019.

He added that convicts in this matter Don Kizito Baryayesiima, Emmanuel Mbiine and Denis Bataringaya were given less imprisonment sentence of 14 years, yet their fellow participant in the same matter, Sali Geoffrey was sentenced to 20 years.

Currently,the acid victim receives his medication from home since he was discharged from Mengo Hospital on 19/05/2018.

Thank God he has recovered the wounds, and other complications,but his normal work has been negatively affected.

Katurebe Heading abroad for Operation.

The Area Member of Parliament Michael Tusiime has revealed that President Y.K Museveni has already confirmed to support Katurebe in the operation of the eyes system.

Currently Katurebe cannot see anything because his eyes were sealed due to acid burning.

While at Ankole NRM Leaders meeting at Kakyeka Stadium, during president’s  national wealth creation last month, MP Tusiime introduced Katurebe to the president and he was forwarded to president’s personal doctor for consultations.

The program of his travel is not yet released. 

OTT Tax protest: Bobi Wine Case adjourned,Directive issued to State Attorney.

Prosecution has been given the second last adjournment to call all its witnesses in the Over the Top Tax case against Kyadondo East legislator Robert Kyagulanyi aka Bobi Wine and 4 others.

Security forces in Kampala in early July 2018 blocked a demonstration by activists, musicians, politicians and a few journalists,against the social media tax (as introduced 2019/2020).

Buganda road court Grade One Magistrate Acaa Ketty Joan has today Monday, August 12,2019  given the directive to State Attorney Babra Kyomugisha who informed court that the matter was coming up for hearing today, but she had not summoned witnesses since Bobi Wine was on criminal summons, and therefore she needed another adjournment to prepare them.

However one of Bobi Wine’s Lawyers Luyimbaazi Nalukoola assured the court of how his clients are interested in having this case disposed of, and applied that the State be directed to produce all its witnesses on the next adjournment.

Magistrate Acaa then adjourned the hearing of this case to 17th September 2019.

UGANDA: Drone Media Journalist Case adjourned.

Human Rights Network For Journalists-Uganda:

Makindye Chief Magistrates Court has adjourned a case in which Pidson Kareire, a Drone Media Journalist is accused of criminal libel and offensive communication by Middle East Consultants Limited, a labor export company in Uganda to 6th September 2019 at 9:00 a.m for hearing.
Appearing before Grade 1 Magistrate Okumu Muwonge, counsel for the complainant Nsubuga Charles informed court that they had amended the charge sheet and are ready to proceed. He was told by court to appear with all witnesses on the aforementioned date.
Counsel Daniel Walyemera, representing Pidson Kareire prayed to court to be availed with a certified copy of the court file.

President Museveni (Uganda): How do we transform our society?

To all Ugandans, especially the Buzzukulu.Greetings. I have concluded my countrywide tour of the 20 zones. My idea of using these 20 zones for sensitization comes from the 19 Independence Districts, which themselves had grown out of the 15 colonial districts. The colonial districts were: West Nile; Acholi; Lango; Karamoja; Teso; Bugisu; Bukedi; Busoga; Mengo; Mubende; Masaka; Ankole; Kigyezi; Tooro; and Bunyoro.This is according to a clockwise movement from West Nile.At independence, on account of the cultural and linguistic considerations, four new Districts were created. These were: Madi out of West Nile; Sebei out of Bugisu; Kasese out of Tooro; and Bundibugyo (Bwamba) out of Tooro. This brought the total to 19. Kasese and Bundibugyo were created during Amin’s time, responding to the resistance by the Bakonjo and Baamba to the mistakes of the managers of the Tooro kingdom, before the abolition of the kingdoms in 1967. During the NRM time, in addition to further decentralization for ease of service delivery, we also created the Kampala zone out of the colonial Mengo district. Hence, the total of 20 zones. During this sensitization campaign, my staff handled Kampala with Wakiso, out of the former Mengo district.These 20 zones are convenient for communication on account of the dialects used. In each zone, I either speak in English or in the local dialect if I have good command of it and there is only one translation for most of the zones. However, in a few, we are forced to have multiple translations. In, for instance, West Nile, we must have translations into Lugbara, Alur and Kakwa. In Bukedi, we must have translations into Lugwere, Japadhola, Ateso, Samia and Lunyole. In some areas, like West Nile and Bukedi, I use Swahili.On this tour, my message was, again, to continue to assault the bottleneck of the archaic tradition of subsistence farming – okukolera olubuto lwokka, okukorera enda yoonka, erikolera erirya riisa, tic me cam keken,aisoamaikin akoik) etc. etc.In the pre-colonial, pre- capitalist times, Ugandans mainly worked for food, ensuring simple shelter such as the traditional huts (ebifuuha), collecting firewood (okusheenya), collecting water from the well (okutaha amaizi, okussena amazzi), raising cattle or goats for bride price, using cattle or goats to come to the help of a friend in need (munno mu kabi, kushumbuusha), using cattle or goats for empaano (friendship gifts) and using goods (ghee, hoes, pangas, bark-cloth etc.) for barter-trade (okuchurika).There was very little use of money and families or communities were self-sufficient but at a low – level of technology, as seen above. The families would build their own houses etc, because, technologically, it was possible to democratize the skills of house -building. However, even at that time, the need for specialization (emyooga) was becoming clear. While everybody, together with family members and neighbours, could build the traditional huts, not everybody could be a blacksmith (omuheesi); not everybody could be a mubaizi (carpenter); not everybody could be a munogoozi (clay workers -potters); not everybody could be a mukomagyi (bark-cloth maker); not everybody could be Omutanagyi (the maker of bows and arrows); not everybody could be a omuriimbi (lake men – that operated canoes or rafts – ebiba); etc. etc.Therefore, even in the pre-capitalist, pre – colonial times, specialization had started. You did not have to do everything that you needed for life yourself. You only needed to have the means to barter or buy for everything you needed. They were using cowrie-shells (ensimbi) as currency.With colonialism, in some isolated instances, technology advanced. More sophisticated houses, using cement, steel bars (mitayimbwa), mabaati, matafaari (bricks), mategura (tiles) etc., were introduced. That meant that not everybody could be a builder. It is the civil engineers, the brick-layers etc. that could build those modern houses. The rest of us, therefore, had to have enough money to pay the specialists to build the modern houses for us. While it is still easy for almost everybody that can walk to go to the well and collect water, or go to the forest and collect fire-wood, it is neither convenient nor efficient. It is more convenient to use gas or electricity for lighting and cooking and to have the National Water and Sewerage Co-operation to bring water to us through pipes and take away sewerage through other pipes. We no longer have bachuura – the people that would come at night in towns to take away people’s faeces that had been deposited in buckets (obulobo). The bucket system in the pre-modern towns all over the world was, of course, some sort of improvement on the open- defecation that was common in villages – just easing oneself in the bushes.Therefore, with modernity where you no longer build your own house etc., the need for money is accentuated.You need money for a good house; you need money for some of the foods (sugar, coffee, tea, meat, salt etc.) even when you grow your own food; you need money for the education of the children that do not get Government bursary; you need money for the household non-food needs (clothes, furniture, etc.); you need money for clean water( piped or not); you need money for electricity; you need money to buy a modern means of transport (pikipiki, car, etc.); etc., etc.Therefore, the traditional way, where you only work for the stomach (subsistence farming), is a disaster for the African families. Subsistence farming in the modern times is like a fish out of water. It cannot survive. It is out of place and in danger.During the colonial times, the traditional mainly non-money economy had a modest change that mutated it into an “enclave economy”. “An enclave economy” means an island of pseudo – modernity surrounded by a sea of backwardness. The Island of pseudo – modernity was comprised of the 3Cs and 3Ts, as the colonialists themselves described it.The 3Cs stood for: Coffee, Cotton and Copper; the 3Ts stood for: Tea, Tobacco and Tourism. These represented a very small proportion of the Ugandan families. In Ankole, for instance, only a few families in Ndeija grew coffee and maybe some in the Igara – Sheema area and some families in the Kyamuhunga area grew tea. Certainly, in the two parishes of Kikoni and Nyaburiza in Ntungamo Sub-County, I do not remember anybody (any family) that was engaged in cash-crop growing. They were all, democratically, working for the stomach only. It could be that some coffee farmers in the Buganda area got some reasonable money from coffee. There were a number of good permanent buildings in that area. That must have been on account of getting good money from coffee, most likely. In Northern and Eastern Uganda, where the main colonial cash-crop was cotton, there was some progress especially in paying for education, buying bicycles etc.However, housing remained mainly the traditional grass-thatched houses. Why? Was it because the people did not want better houses, or was it because the money from cotton was not enough to cover the education costs and improved housing? In 1969 when I made a personally sponsored study tour of the Northern Uganda, some women in Arua town were still walking around with only leaves tied around their waist but, otherwise, totally naked; at Kalongo Hospital, I found about 50 women, waiting to deliver, in the courtyard of the Hospital, all bare – breasted. I do not have to talk of Karamoja because for that area, there was no attempt to introduce any cash crop at all.With coffee, you can make good money even in a small acreage. With cotton, you can only make money if you have a big acreage. In the North and East, in those years, the populations were still small, and, therefore, the land could not have been the problem. What, then, was the problem? Why were people not building better houses? In the Ankole area, the people were staying in grass-thatched huts because there was no cash-crop production- no coffee, no cotton, no dairy industry, no serious beef industry beyond the monthly cattle auction markets that, again, only catered, where the parents were enlightened enough, for school fees, like in my family’s case. By 1954, I can only remember 3 mabaati-roofed houses in the two parishes of Kikoni and Nyaburiza – two belonged to local colonial chiefs and one belonged to a trader. Apart from the mabaati roofs, the three lonely houses were made of the flimsy wattle, reeds and mud walls (emuli- emiingo and ebikondo). The bricks or the Cement blocs were unheard of. Yet, many families had a lot of land, cattle, big banana plantations etc. It was, however, all for, mainly, traditional purposes of subsistence – erikolera erirya riisa, okukolera ekidda kyonka, okukolera olubuto lwokka, okukorera enda yoonka, tic me cam keken, aisoamakin akoik.Therefore, by independence, there were two social-economic problems for the population of Uganda: Continued living under the social formation of primitive self – sufficiency at low technological and organizational levels and where cash crops had been introduced, engaging in cash crops for the benefit of the colonial industries such as the textile factories of Manchester in the U.K but without taking the homestead economics as the primary factor. The primary factor, should be to make the family rich and not just the factories rich. Therefore, by independence, many families had no source of sustained cash and the ones that had some sustained sources, the amounts were small except, probably, for coffee.In comes Idi Amin in 1971. He destroys, almost completely, the small modern economy, the cash economy of the 3Cs and 3Ts. Cotton and copper disappeared completely. It is only coffee that continued to limp on at 2 million, 60kgs bags per annum. Tea declined from 23million kgs per year to only 3million kgs per year. Tourism disappeared. Tobacco continued to limp on but with reduced volumes. By 1986, therefore, when the NRM finally came to power, the economy of Uganda had become more subsistence than it had been in 1971 but, of course, with a bigger population.This is where the NRM played a decisive role in reviving and propelling forward the economy of Uganda. First, we had to bring back the small “enclave economy”, the small island of modernity surrounded by the sea of backwardness. Tea has gone from the 3 million kgs of 1986, passed the 23 million kgs of 1971 and is now at 60 million kgs. Coffee has gone from the 2.392million bags in FY 1985/86 to 4.305.million bags FY 2017/18. Even cotton has gone from almost zero in 1986 to now 189,444 bales in FY 2018/19. Tobacco is still being produced and in FY 2017/18 Uganda exported 21,393 tonnes. Tourism has grown by leaps and bounds from the 16,950 of 1968 and the almost zero numbers of 1986 to now 1.5million tourists bringing in US$1.5bn per annum. It can and will grow more. Of the original 3Cs and 3Ts, therefore, it is only copper that has not yet been revived.In addition to reviving the 2Cs and the 3Ts, the NRM has successfully commercialized many completely new products as follows: maize, milk and milk products, beef, fish, timber, bananas, fruit, cocoa, vanilla, palm oil, flowers, sim-sim, sun-flower, cassava, etc. etc. All these are agro-based with factories being fed by them. Many of these agricultural products have been transformed by factories into final products: textiles from cotton, fish products, cooking oils and soaps from palm trees and sun-flower, plywood from timber, juices from fruits, starch from cassava, powdered milk and other dairy products from milk, tyres from rubber, etc.etc. There are other factories that are not based on agricultural products. These are: cement from limestone (einooni); plastics from oil; steel products from scrap and now from iron ore (obutare); fertilizers from phosphates; gold bars from gold ores; batteries from recycled batteries; etc.etc. Some of the factories use imported raw-materials such as PVC.This spectrum of the sources of the raw-materials – agricultural, forest, fresh water, minerals or imported, as well as the peaceful atmosphere, has already attracted a total of 4,900 factories employing a total of 700,000 workers. Therefore, sector one, commercial agriculture, is already linked with sector two – industries – in some significant ways. Also mining, to a limited extent, is also getting linked to industry.Then, there is the services sector comprised of the hotels, transport, banking, insurance etc. with a total of 200,000 companies, employing 1.5m persons. This is sector III.Finally, there is the ICT Sector with 1,200 companies employing a total of about 10,000 persons. These ICT companies include companies like Techobrain, iSON Technology which do BPO operations which involve, among others, linking businesses across the World.Therefore, the Ugandan economy is one of the fastest growing in the World on account of the NRA/UPDF ensuring peace, the NRM ensuring reconciliation and democratic empowerment of the Ugandans, the NRM ensuring macro-economic stability as well as the NRM ensuring some limited infrastructure rehabilitation and development. It would have grown faster if the 6th Parliament had not delayed the construction of Bujagali dam and if we did not have corrupt actors asking for bribes before delivering services or those corrupt officials doing shoddy jobs and inflating costs. The corruption issue, however, is a software issue and not a hardware one. Given our transparent democratic system, the corrupt always get exposed and, on account of our massive educational system, nobody is indispensable.In 2006, I put my foot down with the 7th Parliament and we prioritized the roads, defence, electricity, health, education and ICT. With adequate electricity, the economy will roar.There is, however, one structural problem in the society and that is the residual pre-capitalist phenomenon of subsistence farming (okukolera olubutto lwokka, okukolera enda yoonka, okukolera ekidda kyonka, erikolera erirya rissa, tic me cam keken, aisoamaikin akoik) already mentioned above. It is this continued disabling factor that I have been battling eversince 1966 after my A levels. Tropical Africa is very deceptive and dangerous for those that do not sharpen their insight. The good climate means that even the lazy can survive. I used to see two madmen in Ntungamo – Katukuuza and Kaboogyi. They would go round completely naked but they would not die immediately. In the cold climates, you cannot survive like that. In the Tropics, you die slowly and without drama. By not dying dramatically, however, it does not mean that the Ugandans’ quality of life is good; not at all. How do we measure this? We have a number of measurements such as: the infant mortality rate; the average life-expectancy; the percentage of people with stunted growth; etc.etc. Infant mortality rate in Uganda was 122 per every 1,000 infants born alive in 1986. It has now fallen to 43 per every 1,000 infants born alive within the 1st year of life. In Sweden, however, the infant mortality rate is 3 in every 1,000. The average life expectancy in Uganda was 43 years in 1986. It is now 63 years. In Japan, however, it is 86 years. In Finland it is 81 years. Therefore, this abstaining from modernisation has got a cost to the society. Yet, some people refuse to see this.You get religious people preaching on how “God has called” the deceased. My question is always: “Why does God like to call Africans more than calling the other people e.g. Japanese?” It is not God calling Africans; It is Satan calling them on account of the Africans failing to use the “talents” (in the Book of Mathew 25: 14-30) God gave them.This inadequate quality of life is on account, in part, to the 68% of our people refusing to get out of the tradition of only producing for the stomach. It is the failure of the leaders that live near these people, to tell them how to improve their lives by going commercial in their production efforts. In 1966, when we confronted the phenomenon of the stagnation of the Banyankore Society, we proposed 4 steps to be taken: step one – stop nomadism. The Banyankore, like the Karimojong, had that additional problem of nomadism that I analysed in the Booklet: “From Obwiriza (grass thatch) to Matafaari”, which captured that campaign. As a result of that campaign, the Banyankore settled down and started fencing their lands and doing semi-modern animal husbandry.Unfortunately, Amin came in, in 1971 and we had to embark on fighting that lasted 16 years, until 1986.When I came back in 1986, I found many of the Banyankore settled but still in the phenomenon of only working for the stomach. After some detailed analysis, I proposed 3 steps. Step one, go out of only producing for the stomach and also produce for the pocket (money). Step two, as you work for money, do so with ekibaro (cura, aimair, otita). Step three, once the families have started earning incomes, the new danger is when the head of the family dies and, then, the children descend on the property and destroy it by fragmentation, just like white ants. In step three, we, therefore, de-campaigned inheritance by fragmentation and recommended inheritance by shares (emigabo). In this way, we divide what comes from the property, surplus income, rather than dividing the property. In that way, what the late property owner left will be preserved and it will produce new companies for each of the descendants of the late owner.On the issue of cura (ekibaro), our recommendation is that for somebody of four acres or less, the following activities are recommended:

  1. Coffee;
  2. Fruits (oranges, mangoes, pineapples, grapes,

apples, straw-berries);

  1. Food-crops;
  2. Pasture for dairy;
  3. Poultry farming for eggs in the backyard;
  4. Piggery in the backyard;
  5. Fish-farming in the periphery of the wetlands

(emiiga), but not in the centre of the wetlands.Therefore, the aim of my recent campaign is to wake up the sleeping 68% portion of our homesteads to join the transformation efforts. If each of the 8million homesteads of Uganda earned Shs.20million per year, that effort would add an extra US$44bn to our economy. The size of the economy would, therefore, jump to US$74bn by the foreign exchange rate method.In 1966, before we started the anti-subsistence farming campaign, I had some disagreement with the Banyankore elite. Their view was that the traditional Banyankore could not change. They were “impossible” (tibarikubasika). My question, then, was: “What, then, should we do?” Their answer was: “Obarugyeho”; “okore abyaawe” (“leave them alone; do your own personal things”). I could not believe in this line because I was living with my mother, originally a traditional woman herself, but who had been transformed by the limited Church efforts and oburokore (being saved). She had learnt the hygienic practices of boiling milk instead of drinking it raw; she taught us to abandon the unhygienic Banyankore practice of eating from the same big plate (orusaniya) or a heat – treated (kubabura) banana leaf (olulagala, orureere) in favour of each individual having his own plate, his own cup, his own kyanzi (milk – pot). She had learnt the knitting of sweaters. She could even read the Bible. This was all influence by the two self -sponsored six months’ courses each of oburoonde (baptism and confirmation courses) which, at personal expense and staying with the Katungyis (family friends of my grand-parents), “abroad” at Kinoni (25 miles from Ntungamo). All this was in addition to the great personal discipline of no alcohol, no smoking (okureetsa), no kikaambi (chewing tobacco), no loose living etc. I, therefore, believed that the Banyankore could change; but we had to undertake the efforts. Besides, we had to try.Recently, I was in the Sub-county of Kanyaryeru. 70% of the homesteads have food security and are in commercial farming with good ekibaro (cura, otita, aimar) of dairy and bananas. In the 9 Villages around Kisozi, the percentage is 85% for the 1,997 homesteads.How do the 68% move forward, following the present campaign? My answer is that there are already four funds for Wealth and Job creation. These are: the Operation Wealth Creation (OWC) Fund; the Women Fund; the Youth Fund; the Micro-finance fund and the Innovation Fund. This is a total of Shs437.2bn. This money has been there every year, in some cases, even since the year 2001 as NAADS money. The complaints are now that, this money is given to the ones “who already have”. The have-nots do not get. It is the “haves” that access this support. This cannot be a big problem. The big issue is that the money is there. If the routes through which it is passing have a problem, then we shall get better routes.Besides, we shall add an additional 3 funds: the value addition fund for the 20 zones depending on the locally available raw-materials; the myooga funds; and the leaders’ SACCO fund. We have already supported the youth of Kampala, Rukungiri etc. with metal cutting and bending common-user machine tools, the common-user machines for carpentry etc. We supported some youth with grain-milling and animal feeds’ mixing machines. We are now to aim at the whole spectrum of value addition, area by area. The immediate industry I am about to launch is leather – tanning at Kawumu, Luwero, using the skins of the meat-packers so that Uganda is self-sufficient in leather for shoe-making, making leather-bags, making leather-covered car-seats etc. We shall, then, target the whole spectrum of industries.There are, then, the myooga. Omwooga (singular) emyooga (plural) are Runyankore words meaning a specialization sector (blacksmithing, carpentry, pottery etc.). We identified the following myooga:

  1. Boda Boda Association;
  2. Women Entrepreneurs’ Association;
  3. Carpenters’ Association;
  4. Salon Operators’ Association;
  5. Taxi Operators’ Association;
  6. Restaurant Association;
  7. Welders’ Association;
  8. Market Vendors’ Association;
  9. Youth Leaders’ SACCO;
  10. PWDs’ Association;
  11. Produce Dealers’ Association;
  12. Mechanics’ Association;
  13. Tailors’ Association;
  14. Media Operators’ Association;
  15. Fishermen’s Association;
  16. The Performing Arts’ Association.

Each of these will have a district-wide SACCO with branches at convenient points (Parish or Sub-county).These mwooga – specific and district-wide SACCOs may be better than the katogo (mixed grill) ones that were, moreover, numerous and not covering specific geographic areas. These myooga SACCOs will cover all the miscellaneous activities that are not agriculture. Agriculture is still being covered by OWC and Uganda Development Bank (UDB), the latter for the rich. These myooga SACCOs will also cover some of the social groups: Women, Youth leaders, PWDs and some are suggesting the Elders.The final and also district-wide will be for the elected leaders of the Local Government or the political Parties. Many of these either get no pay or low pay. Yet, they are not allowed to access the other Wealth funds on the grounds that they are leaders. This is not fair, especially, since they use their time for the benefit of the community and, sometimes, they do not have enough time for their own affairs. The leaders SACCO will fill this gap and they should remain members even when they retire.All this is choo (waking up) from working for the stomach only (tic me cam keken) using Government money. The people of the parish of Rwengaaju, Kabarole, however, demonstrated that you did not have to wait for Government money. As soon as they got my message in the year 2008, they formed their SACCO and raised money from among themselves starting with Shs.3million from 60 members. You can, on this, contact Mr. Richard Nyakana on telephone who is the leader of these farmers and other wealth creation warriors.I invite all of you to join in this sensitization effort so that our society is transformed. We cannot go on with a society that still accommodates irrational archaic practices in the modern times when the Americans are celebrating 50 years of going to the moon and coming back. It is suicidal.I thank you.Yoweri K. Museveni (Gen. Rtd.)PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF UGANDA

International Youth Day tomorrow.

Uganda will tomorrow,Monday August 12,2019 join the rest of the world to celebrate International Youth Day,in conformity with the UN General Assembly resolution and agreement of United Nations in 1999.
Youth in Uganda are the youngest population in the world, with 77% of its population being under 30 years of age.
Being a youth in Uganda stops at the age of 35.
There are about 7,310,386 youth from the ages of 15–24 years of age living in Uganda. 
Uganda national youth secretariat has already confirmed,basing on their last national organizing committee meeting for International Youth Day celebrations last Friday.
This day is dedicated to the youths around the world.
National celebrations in Uganda will be held in Jinja district at St Gonzanga Primary School Kagoma,eastern Uganda.
Theme: “Transforming Education for Responsible Citizenship and Employment Creation”.
Invited and expected guest of honor: President of the Republic of Uganda,H.E YK Museveni.

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