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Egyptian club back in Caf Champions League after ban lifted

Ismaily SC

Egyptian club Ismaily Sports Club have been reinstated into the African Champions League after disqualification when their home fixture against Club Africain was abandoned.

Last month, CAF had expelled Ismaily Sports Club from the 2018/19 CAF Champions League because of fans violence that led to their match day two group stage fixture against Cub Africain to be called off.

Ismaily supporters threw stones and water bottles towards the field, which forced Cameroon referee Neant Alioum to order the teams into the changing rooms in stoppage time with the visitors leading 2-1.

But on 24th January 2019, Ismaily SC appealed and CAF communications director Nathalie Rabe announced Sunday that the club would be allowed back into the competition.

CAF’s appeal board ruled in favour of Ismaily on Sunday saying there had been no invasion of the playing area nor evidence it was directed at the visiting team and therefore no grounds for disqualification.

Group C will now have CS Constantine leading with 6 points, followed by TP Mazembe also on 6 points with Club Africain on 3rd with 3 points and Ismaily SC bottom with 0 points.

With Ismaily SC reintegrated into the competition, their fixture against CS Constantine which was supposed to played last week will be rescheduled to a later date.

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Geoffrey Massa joins Police FC

SHOT: Former Cranes captain Geofrey Massa

Former Uganda Cranes captain and striker Geoffrey Massa has joined StarTimes Uganda Premier League side Police FC as part of the technical staff, the club chairman Asan Kasingye confirmed.

“The three of us won the Super League trophy for @UgPoliceFC in 2005. David Yiga a defender & captain, Geofrey Massa, a striker & later @UgandaCranes captain, & myself as Team Manager. Glad that Geoffrey Massa will join the coaching team for his club. Welcome on board legends.” Asan Kasingye tweeted a photo with the caption.

Massa and former club captain David Yiga join the team to work together with head coach Abdallah Mubiru and his assistant.

The duo were part of the famous Police FC team that won the league in 2005 and later went on to win the CECAFA club championship the following year.

Massa played for Ugandan side Police FC, South Africa’s Bloemfontein Celtic and University of Pretoria. He also enjoyed stints in Turkey and Egypt before retiring in 2017.

Police FC are currently in 6th on the 16-table log with 27 points from 18 matches played.

The Cops’ next game is against Kirinya Jinja SSS on 12th February at the Mighty Arena in Jinja.

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Fufa confirms dates for Uganda Cup round of 16 games

Uganda cup trophy

FUFA has confirmed the dates and venues for the 2018/19 Stanbic Uganda Cup round of 16 stage.

The games will be played from 15th to 18th of February 2019. The winners at this stage qualify for the quarter-finals.

Three games will be played on Friday, 15th and also as well as on 16th while one game will be played on 17th and on 18th.

Other schedules like the draw for the quarter-finals after completion of this round shall be provided in line with the FUFA Calendar.

The host region and ground for the final will be communicated in due course.

The winner of the competition represents Uganda in the CAF Confederation Cup as per the rules of the competition. KCCA FC are the defending champions.

Friday February 15th

Wakiso Giants Vs Tooro United – Bugembe

URA Vs Bright Stars – Namboole

Bul Vs Bukedea TC – Njeru

Saturday, February 16th

Kitara Vs Kyetume – Hoima

Vipers SC Vs Kiboga Young – Kitende

Nebbi Central Vs Nkambi Coffee – Luo stadium, Arua

Sunday, February 17th

Proline Vs Onduparaka – Lugogo

Monday, February 18th

Express FC Vs Police – Wankulukukur

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2019 University Football League: Group stages to kick off on February 14

The 2019 Pepsi University Football League group stage draws were held at Kati Kati Restaurant in Lugogo with the games set to kick off on Thursday February 14.

There are 16 teams that have been drawn into four groups of four and teams will have to play each other home and away with the top two in each group progressing to the quarter-finals.

Nkumba University who eliminated Kabale University in the preliminary round are in group A alongside Busitema University, Bishop Stuart University and YMCA Comprehensive.

MUBS were drawn in group D, alongside Kampala University, newcomers International University of East Africa and Uganda Christian University.

The defending champions Kyambogo University are in Group C with Kumi University, Busitema University and KIU/Makerere.

The winner between Makerere University and Kampala International University will be determined by the competitions committee today after fans invaded the pitch when the game had gone to penalties. The two sides were tied on a 1- 1 aggregate score.

The University league is now in its 8th edition and Kyambogo University are the reigning champions.

Groups:

Group A

Bugema University

Nkumba University

YMCA Comprehensive Institute

Bishop Stuart University

Group B

St. Lawrence University

Gulu University

Islamic University In Uganda

Uganda Martyrs University

Group C

Kyambogo University

Kumi University

Busitema University

KIU/Makerere

Group D

Kampala University

International University of East Africa

Makerere University Business School

Uganda Christian University

Attachments area

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AfDB President named 2019 Sunhak Peace Prize Laureate

Dr. Akinwumi A. Adesina

The 2019 Sunhak Peace Prize Laureate Akinwumi Adesina has pledged to do more to advance Africa’s fight against hunger, poverty and youth underemployment. Akinwumi, the President of the African Development Bank, and co-Laureate Waris Dirie, a global champion against Female Genital Mutilation, shared the prestigious US$1million dollar prize at an award ceremony held on 9 February 2019 in Seoul, South Korea.

According to Adesina, “We are in a race with time to unlock the full potential of Africa.” Known globally for his dogged determination to reduce global poverty, Adesina declared “My life is only useful to the extent that it helps to lift millions of people out of poverty.”

Adesina immediately announced he was donating his $500,000 share of the prize to fighting hunger in Africa.

“There is tremendous suffering going on in the world. While progress is being made, we are not winning the war on global hunger. There cannot be peace in a world that is hungry. Hunger persists in regions and places going through conflicts, wars and fragility. Those who suffer the most are women and children,” Adesina said during the award ceremony.

Waris Dirie, has played a leading role in drawling global attention to the fight and against Female Genital Mutilation (FGM), and the need for legislation to ban the practice.

Dirie said, “Female Genital Mutilation scars victims physically, emotionally, and mentally.”

The World Health Organisation estimates that more than 200 million girls and women alive today have been cut in 30 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia where FGM is carried out on young girls between infancy and the age 15.

Adesina who believes a peaceful world will be a food secure world, pointed out that only 1% of the world’s richest own 50 percent of global wealth.

“Nothing is more important than ensuring that we feed the world and eliminate hunger and malnutrition. Hunger is an indictment on the human race. Any economy that claims growth without feeding its people is a failed economy. Nobody has to go hungry, white, black, pink, orange or any colour you can think.”

The President of the African Development Bank told participants including global leaders:

“There must be accountability to the poor. We must reduce global income inequality. We need wealth, yes, but we need wealth for everyone not just a few. Today, the poor are stuck and only end up eating crumbs, if any at all, that fall from the tables of the rich. This sense of exclusion and lack of equity or fairness often drives conflicts. We have an opportunity to reverse the situation through sustainable agriculture as a business, and not as an aid program.”

More than 1,000 influencers from over the world including current and former heads of state and government, private sector leaders, investors, and development experts, attended the SunHak Peace Prize

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Kadaga urges the executive on independence of parliament

Speakers and delegates of the Inter-Parliamentary Union in Geneva, Switzerland.

The Speaker of Parliament, Rebecca Kadaga, has urged the executive arm of government all over the world to respect the independence of parliament, saying it is an inevitable balance required in strengthening democratic governance.

Kadaga said issues relating to the independence of parliament; its responsiveness in addressing service delivery needs of citizens should top the agenda of the upcoming Fifth World Conference of Speakers (WCS).
“The upcoming conference should focus on the continued attempt by the Executive to water down the powers of Parliament and the need to affirm Parliament’s centrality in service delivery,” she said.

Kadaga, including several regional and world Speakers of Parliament are attending the preparatory meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.

Recently Kadaga criticised the executive for postponing the debating and passing of long pending Bills, which she said was an attempt to paralyse parliamentary business.
In Parliament, government business takes precedence, and is stewarded by Prime Minister Ruhakana Rugunda.

Kadaga called upon her international counterparts to use the imminent conference to make a unified case for the independence of Parliaments in the globe, which she said is waning amidst growing assertiveness by the executive.

Speakers of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) member countries are in attendance, including Kenya’s Senate Speaker Kenneth Lusaka, who is making a bid for his country to host the upcoming WCS.

Kadaga said Uganda took a principled position to be an active member of IPU, an undertaking she said is manifest and was underscored by Uganda’s hosting of the IPU conference in 2012.
The preparatory meeting is purposed to set the agenda for the WCS and among others deepen relations between the IPU and the United Nations, where the Speakers are seeking direct representation as National Assembly heads.

Kadaga reiterated Uganda’s preparedness to host the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association (CPA) conference in September.

Attachments

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Africa’s leaders gather to launch new health financing initiative as US$200 is pledged

African Heads of States

African Heads of State and government, Ministers of Health and Finance, business leaders and global partners gathered yesterday ahead of the 32nd Summit of the African Union (AU), to launch a new initiative aimed at increasing commitments for health, improving the impact of spending and ensuring the achievement of universal health coverage across Africa’s 55 countries.

With the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development just over a decade away, President Paul Kagame of Rwanda and AU Chair, convened the Africa Leadership Meeting: Investing in Health to encourage African governments and global partners to translate commitments into measurable actions, align spending with country and continental priorities, and identify efficiencies that will improve millions of lives across the continent.

“Governments should surely be willing and able to increase domestic investment in healthcare. A good indicator of this is the progress we have made toward securing the financial health of the African Union and mobilising our own resources for joint priorities, such as the Peace Fund. We should be the first ones to contribute to efforts that directly benefit our people,’’ said Kagame.

Moussa Faki Mahamat, AU Commission Chair declared, “We set ambitious health targets for 2030: ending epidemics and achieving universal health coverage for all. But the reality is that without substantial increases in domestic investment, and a radical change in the way health is harmonised to domestic and continental priorities, we will soon lose any realistic chance of reaching these objectives. Member States and Africa’s partners must reorient health spending and health systems to target the diseases across the life cycle that have the greatest measurable impact on mortality and human capital development. We have a responsibility to African citizens to increase our investments today and we must not turn our back on them.”

Since the Abuja Declarations in 2000 and 2001, Africa’s progress in improving health outcomes has been significant. Life expectancy has increased by more than a decade, deaths from infectious diseases like malaria have halved in Sub-Saharan Africa, and under 5 mortality rates have seen an increased rate of reduction.

However, enormous challenges remain. More than half of Africa’s population currently lack access to essential health services, and millions die every year from commonly preventable diseases. Meanwhile, only three AU Member States dedicate 5 percent of GDP to health, as set out in the Abuja declarations. Between 2016-16, 30 Member States increased the percentage of government budget invested in health, while 21 decreased their investment.

The new initiative is the first platform of its kind bringing together governments, business leaders and the global development community, to coordinate efforts and resources for health.

“I am tremendously inspired by this African-led initiative to boost investments in health across Africa,” said Peter Sands, Executive Director of the Global Fund. “To end epidemics, strengthen health systems and deliver universal health coverage, we all have to step up our investments in health.”

The meeting saw public and private sectors, as well as donor governments, pledge up to US$200 million to help end epidemics and bring universal health coverage to all. Higherlife Foundation, the Government of Ireland and Government of France all committed to increased financing of health in Africa, with the Government of Japan tabling universal health coverage as an agenda item at the G20 Osaka Summit later this year, carrying forward commitment to and collaboration on health.

Meanwhile, African leaders urged countries to increase efficiency in their health sectors. The World Health Organization estimates that efficiency improvements could unlock at least 20 per cent, and as much as 40 per cent, of current spending on health, creating significantly better outcomes. More effective tax and revenue collection systems were also discussed, noting that improvements in these areas could have the potential to raise an additional US $200 billion annually.

African leaders and global partners alike noted that the return on investment from increased and improved health financing is remarkable – 9-20 times the level of investment. $30 per person can generate US $100 billion in economic gains five years later.

The President of of Ethiopia Sahle-Work Zewde, noted, ‘Africa needs transformational leadership. We must bring hope and opportunity to our people and offer them full and prosperous lives. Growing our continent will be impossible if we do not put significant investments in health.”

Recent months have seen concerning news which puts decades of progress at risk: measles and malaria cases rising, the rising toll of Ebola, and a rise in vaccine-derived polio outbreaks. Adding to the challenge is the fact that development assistance for health has stagnated since the 2008 financial crisis. While Africa accounts for 24 per cent of the world’s disease burden and for 16 per cent of the global population, it receives just 1 per cent of global health spending.

The CEO of Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance commented Dr Seth Berkley, “Since 2000, more than 293 million children in Africa have been immunised thanks to Gavi support. While we know that governments across the continent face a range of competing, worthy priorities, it’s inspiring to see so many choose to put the health of their population first. Gavi commends the African Union and the Government of Rwanda for their leadership in improving health outcomes for the continent and stands ready to support countries in their efforts towards building sustainable immunisation and health programmes to help ensure no child dies from a preventable disease.”

The Co-Chair, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Bill Gates said, “The time to mobilise domestic resources for health is now. The nations of the African Union have set bold, ambitious targets. If governments increase their investments in health, not a decade from now, but immediately, we know it is possible to meet set targets. We can end the epidemics of AIDS, TB, and malaria. We can achieve universal health coverage and grow Africa’s economy in the process.”

The Director-General, World Health Organization Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, commented, “Universal health coverage is not a luxury only rich countries can afford. All countries can make progress with the resources they have. The Addis Ababa Call to Action is a powerful commitment from African Union leaders to increase domestic financing for health, and to hold themselves accountable for that commitment.”

The Addis Ababa Call to Action will formally be adopted during this Summit with a Declaration read by President Kagame.

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Livestock research agency to produce feeds supplements in March

Goats on the farm.

The National Livestock Resources Research Institute (NaLRRI) has said it is in the process of beginning to produce animal feeds supplements with actual production planned to start in March this year.

Dr. Ambrose Agona, the executive director at NaLRRI says they are about to complete assembling of machines to produce animal feeds.

According to Agona the new development follows a recent cabinet approval of the Animal Feed Bill 2018 that is aimed at regulating suppliers of animal feeds to eliminate fake and dangerous feeds on the local market.

The director of research at NACRI Swidiq Mugerwa said that the factory would produce 10 tonnes of the supplements per hour. Farmers will provide the ingredients to be used in the production.

The state minister for Agriculture (Animal Husbandry) Joy Kabatsi said the new policy, is considering giving NaLRRI the mandate to test all imported and locally made feeds before they are put onto the market.

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FAO Food Price Index rises in January

Food-items in Ugandan market.

Global food prices began the year on a buoyant note, as the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) Food Price Index averaged 164.8 points in January 2019, up 1.8 per cent from the previous month.

A sharp rebound in dairy price quotations and firmer prices of palm and soy oils drove the increase, FAO says. The Food Price Index, an indicator of the monthly changes in international prices of a basket of food commodities, was still 2.2 per cent below its January 2018 level.

The FAO Cereal Price Index averaged 168.1 points in January, up marginally from December. Prices of the major grains were generally firm amid tightening export supplies and robust world demand.

The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index rose 4.3 percent from the previous month, led by palm oil values responding to a seasonal production decline in the major producing countries. International soy oil prices also rose on the back of robust import demand for South American supplies.

The FAO Dairy Price Index rose 7.2 per cent from December, reversing seven months of falling prices. Limited export supplies – due to strong internal demand – from Europe were the primary factor behind this, along with anticipated seasonal tightening of export availability from Oceania in the coming months.

The FAO Sugar Price Index rose 1.3 per cent, a move largely influenced by the appreciation of the currency (Real) of Brazil, the world’s largest exporter, against the U.S. dollar.

The FAO Meat Price Index was almost unchanged from December. The January value was calculated assuming stable meat prices in the United States of America, where official data were not available due to the government shutdown. Elsewhere, international price quotations for bovine, pig and poultry meat remained steady, while ovine meat prices declined in step with ample exportable supplies in Oceania.

In its latest Cereal Supply and Demand Brief, also published today, FAO lifted the world’s 2018 cereal production estimate to 2 611 million tonnes, reflecting upward revisions of maize, wheat and rice.

Production prospects for wheat are positive for 2019, with the early outlook pointing to significant rebounds in the European Union and the Russian Federation.

Prospects for maize, soon to be harvested in the Southern Hemisphere, are generally strong in Argentina and Brazil, while dry weather has adversely affected plantings and yield prospects in South Africa.

FAO raised its estimate of world cereal utilization in the 2018/19 season to 2 657 million tonnes, which would represent a 1.7 per cent increase from the 2017/18 level. The use of grains to feed livestock is expected to increase, with Australia needing more wheat due to the impact of dry weather on grazing pastures and China, Mexico and the U.S. expanding the use of coarse grains to an all-time high.

As utilization is foreseen to outpace output, world cereal stocks are projected to fall by 45 million tonnes, or 5.6 per cent, from their record-high opening levels. This would result in the world stocks-to-use ratio for cereals declining to 28.5 per cent, down from a nearly two-decade high of 30.8 per cent in 2017/18.

International trade in all cereals will likely approach 416 million tonnes in the 2018/19 marketing season, marginally below the 2017/18 record volume, according to FAO’s latest forecast.

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Young players die in Brazilian football club’s training ground fire

Several vehicles were on fire in the car park

A fire has engulfed a dormitory at the youth team training centre of one of Brazil’s biggest football clubs, Flamengo FC killing 10 people.

The victims have not been named but are said to include young players staying at Ninho de Urubu, the training ground of Flamengo football club in Rio de Janeiro.

Three teenagers were also injured, one of them seriously.

The cause of the blaze is being investigated.

However, one young player said the fire started in an air conditioner in his room.

“The air conditioner caught fire, and I ran out,” said Felipe Cardoso, a player with the under-17 side. “Thank God I managed to run and I’m still alive.”

Flamengo is one of Brazil’s biggest and best-known clubs internationally. They play in the Campeonato Brasileiro Série A league where they finished in second place last season.

Brazil football legend Pelé described the club as “a place where young people pursue their dreams”.

“It’s a very sad day for Brazilian football,” he tweeted.

Former Brazil star Ronaldinho offered his condolences for the “terrible tragedy” in a tweet on Friday morning. He published the club’s crest in black-and-white alongside the message.

None of the victims has been identified but the youth players are said to be aged between 14 and 16. One of the three injured, a 15-year-old boy, suffered severe burns and was transferred to a specialist hospital, reports said.

The area has been hit by severe storms and heavy rain in recent days and the weather may have left the facility without water or electricity when the fire struck, G1 reported.

The club’s most prominent former players include World Cup winners Ronaldinho, Bebeto and Romario.

As well as being one of Brazil’s most successful football clubs, Flamengo also has basketball, rowing, swimming and volleyball teams.

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