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Barbie Jay joins Apass – Geosteady fight

IN FIGHTING MOOD: Musician Apass

We have reported about the brewing verbal war between musicians Apass and Geosteady. Well, the fight appears to have expanded with other players joining in, the latest person being ‘Sumbusa’ hitmaker Barbie Jay alias Nsolo Nkambwe.

He is furious with Apass for comparing him to Geosteady.

“Banange am sorry to reply this “Young Urban Excited boy” Bagonza (Apass) aka Comedian. Nze ndi Nsolo Nkambwe. I am a tough animal. You bringing my brother Geosteady in my forest is wrong… I might end up eating him up like a little chicken, at least you would have called Yiya Moze for him they match…….” he advised.

On Tuesday, Apass came out in a post on social media daring his colleague Geosteady to battle him.

“Geosteady Blackman you can’t ask to battle me, I can’t battle with a small fat little man. You are not on my level go and battle with Barbie J not me nze ngyakutagula tagula little man. The people you need to battle are those who can’t read and write plus those who don’t know English not me,” Apass warned.

With less than an hour after the post, Geosteady had hit back.

“Since you know posting and tweeting, drop your concert online hahaha Bambi,” he responded back.

Now that even Yiya Moze has been dragged into this, where do you think it’s headed?

 

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‘Support parliaments to promote diplomacy’ – Kadaga

1. The Speaker, Rebecca Kadaga(L) with President Danny Faure and the new Speaker of the Kenya Senate.

National parliaments need to be facilitated to play an additional role of fostering national diplomacy amongst countries, the Speaker of Parliament Rebecca Kadaga has said.

Speakers and Presiding officers of the Commonwealth meeting in Seychelles

Kadaga, who was in Seychelles, said inter-parliamentary meetings enhanced dialogue among legislators from various countries, some of whose presidents are at loggerheads.

“Parliaments are an integral part of national diplomacy. It is important that we have such meetings, to talk to one another and break barriers that our bosses (Presidents) have,” said Kadaga.

Speaker Kadaga is attending the 24th Conference of Speakers and Presiding Officers of Commonwealth Parliaments in Seychelles, from 8 – 13 January, 2013.

Kadaga cited a time when an unnamed President of an Organization of Islamic Conference (OIC) Member country engaged her in a long discussion, on the sidelines of a Conference, over hostility between Uganda and an unnamed country in the East African region. She reported that following her meeting, and reporting to the President, he eventually visited that unnamed country.

The Speaker also said that foreign envoys also met parliamentarians seeking their views about development priorities for the country before meeting the Ministry of Finance.

“Many times we receive envoys, like the European Union, when they are thinking about new proposals for the country coming to consult about what we think is important for the country before they go to the Ministry of Finance,” she said.

The Speaker also chaired a session on emerging security issues for parliamentarians, where she noted that in performing the law making, representative and oversight roles, parliamentarians are often torn between serving the inherently divided loyalties mainly of protecting their constituents’ interest and the public good.

The conference, which was officially opened by the President of Seychelles Danny Faure, focuses on sharing experiences, collaboration and partnership across the parliaments of the Commonwealth.

President Faure welcomed the delegates to Seychelles and expressed pride that they are hosting the Conference.

He also highlighted the diversity and fundamental unity of all Commonwealth member states.

“We are all committed to the values inscribed in the Commonwealth Charter; democracy, human rights and rule of law. We are all dedicated to the development of free and democratic societies, and the promotion of peace and prosperity to improve the lives of our people,” Mr. Faure said.

 

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OP-ED ARTICLE: TOWARDS A NEW GLOBAL COMPACT ON MIGRATION

UN Secretary General, Anthony Guetaras.

Managing migration is one of the most profound challenges for international cooperation in our time.

Migration powers economic growth reduces inequalities and connects diverse societies. Yet it is also a source of political tensions and human tragedies. The majorities of migrants live and work legally. But desperate minorities are putting their lives at risk to enter countries where they face suspicion and abuse.

Demographic pressures and the impact of climate change on vulnerable societies are likely to drive further migration in the years ahead. As a global community, we face a choice. Do we want migration to be a source of prosperity and international solidarity, or a byword for inhumanity and social friction?

This year, governments will negotiate a Global Compact on Migration through the United Nations.

This will be the first overarching international agreement of its kind. It will not be a formal treaty. Nor will it place any binding obligations on states.

Instead, it is an unprecedented opportunity for leaders to counter the pernicious myths surrounding migrants, and lay out a common vision of how to make migration work for all our nations.

This is an urgent task. We have seen what happens when large-scale migration takes place without effective mechanisms to manage it. The world was shocked by recent video of migrants being sold as slaves.

Grim as these images were, the real scandal is that thousands of migrants suffer the same fate each year, unrecorded. Many more are trapped in demeaning, precarious jobs that border on slavery anyway.

There are nearly six million migrants trapped in forced labor today, often in developed economies.

How can we end these injustices and prevent them recurring in future?

In setting a clear political direction about the future of migration, I believe that three fundamental considerations should guide discussions of the compact.

The first is to recognize and reinforce the benefits of migration, so often lost in public debate.

Migrants make huge contributions to both their host countries and countries of origin.

They take jobs that local workforces cannot fill, boosting economic activity. Many are innovators and entrepreneurs. Nearly half of all migrants are women, looking for better lives and work opportunities.

Migrants also make a major contribution to international development by sending remittances to their home countries. Remittances added up to nearly US $600 billion last year, three times all development aid.

The fundamental challenge is to maximize the benefits of this orderly, productive form of migration while stamping out the abuses and prejudice that make life hell for a minority of migrants.

Secondly, states need to strengthen the rule of law underpinning how they manage and protect migrants – for the benefit of their economies, their societies and the migrants themselves.

Authorities that erect major obstacles to migration – or place severe restrictions on migrants’ work opportunities – inflict needless economic self-harm, as they impose barriers to having their labour needs met in an orderly, legal fashion.

Worse still, they unintentionally encourage illegal migration.

Aspiring migrants, denied legal pathways to travel, inevitably fall back on irregular methods.
This not only puts them in vulnerable positions, but also undermines governments’ authority.

The best way to end the stigma of illegality and abuse around migrants is, in fact, for governments to put in place more legal pathways for migration, removing the incentives for individuals to break the rules, while better meeting the needs of their labor markets for foreign labor.

States also need to work together more closely to share the benefits of migration, for example through partnering to identify significant skills gaps in one country that migrants from another are qualified to fill.

Third and finally, we need greater international cooperation to protect vulnerable migrants, as well as refugees, and we must reestablish the integrity of the refugee protection regime in line with international law.

The fate of the thousands who die in doomed efforts to cross seas and deserts is not just a human tragedy. It also represents the most acute policy failure: unregulated, mass movements in desperate circumstances fuel a sense that borders are under threat and governments not in control.

In turn this leads to draconian border controls which undermine our collective values and help perpetuate the tragedies we have too often seen unfold in recent years.

We must fulfill our basic obligations to safeguard the lives and human rights of those migrants that the existing system has failed.

We must take urgent action to assist those now trapped in transit camps, or at risk of slavery, or facing situations of acute violence, whether in North Africa or Central America. We have to envisage ambitious international action to resettle those with nowhere to go.

We should also take steps – through development aid, climate mitigation efforts and conflict prevention – to avoid such unregulated large movements of people in future. Migration should not mean suffering.

We must aim for a world in which we can celebrate migration’s contributions to prosperity, development and international unity. It is in our collective power to achieve this goal. This year’s global compact can be a milestone on the road to making migration truly work for all.

The author is Secretary-General of the United Nations

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Beef traders sent to Luzira over formalin

Six suspects that were arrested in relation with the use formalin have today been convicted to eight months and sent to Luzira prison by City Hall Magistrate Beatrice Khainza.
The convicts were arrested last week by Kampala Capital City Authority (KCCA) health team from various areas of Ntinda, Kalelerwe, Kabalagala, Nakasero among other while in possession with formalin and other catastrophic chemicals used for preserving among other dead corps.
The media exposed the scam when reports emerged that beef traders were using chemicals that are prohibited for consumption to preserve beef and other perishable products.
Prosecution led by Hillary Musimenta averred that the suspects were using those chemicals to preserve meat and fish which they were selling to their customers.
Basing on the fact that they (suspects) pleaded guilty, the Ms Khainza convicted them and adjourned court to today (Thursday) when she has sentenced them.
Adjourning of the matter came after two of the convicts Ibrahim Sekajja and Isma Mutebi asked the Magistrate to have their charges read afresh saying they didn’t understand English and that prompted Ms. Khainza to give today(Thursday) when their plea has been herd.
Their plea yielded nothing instead they were sentenced to eight month in prison.
The sentenced include Erias Katumba, Isa Ssenoga, Isma Mutebi, Umar Kalyango, Baker Mulondo and Ibrahim Ssekajja.

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Draws for the 2018 Uganda Cup held

The Federation of Uganda Football Associations under the competitions department today held the draws for the 44th edition of the Uganda Cup for the round of 64 stage.
The matches will be played starting on the weekend of 20th January 2018.
The final will be played during the last weekend of June in Kumi district.
Kampala Capital City Authority FC won the 2017 Uganda Cup with a resounding 2-0 performance over Paidha Black Angels. The tie was played at the Green Light stadium in Lira.

Uganda Cup (Round of 64) full draw:

Simba Vs Paidha Black Angels – Gayaza
Onduparaka Vs Light S.S – Green Light Stadium, Arua
Kyetume Vs Luweero United – Mukono
Seeta United Vs Kirinya-Jinja S.S – Seeta
Nabitende Vs Bumate – Iganga
Pallisa United Vs Nyamityobora – Pallisa
SC Villa Jogoo Vs Hope Doves – Masaka Recreational Stadium
Bronken Vs Vipers – Kasese
Kireka United Vs Tigers – Namboole Stadium Outside playground
Greater Masaka Vs Police – Masaka Recreational Stadium
Kansai Plascon Vs Buitaba – NARO Ntawo grounds
Lira United Vs Kataka – Lira
Ntoda Vs Soana – Ntungamo
Express Vs Kachumbala Rock Stars – Mutesa II Wankulukuku Stadium
Synergy Vs Bukedea Town Council – Masaka Recreational Stadium
Doves All Stars Vs Agape – Arua
Rushere Vs Kamuli Park – Rushere
Kabale Sharp Vs Busuula Sports Club – Kabale Municipal Stadium
Mbarara F.C Vs KCCA – Kakyeeka Stadium, Mbarara
Lungujja Galaxy Vs Mbarara City – Mutesa II Stadium, Wankulukuku
Vuura Vs Bright Stars – Moyo
City Lads Vs Kira United – Lugogo, Kampala
Bugwere Vs Ndejje University – Bugwere
Ntinda United Vs Young Elephants – Kamwokya playground
Proline Vs Nkambi Coffee – Lugogo, Kampala
Water Vs Maroons – Kyambogo
Masavu Vs Jinja Municipal Council Hippos – Fisheries Training Institute playground, Bugonga – Entebbe
Suncity Vs BUL – Kasese
Busia Fisheries Vs UPDF – Busia
URA Vs KJT – Mandela National Stadium, Namboole
Kitara Vs Koboko Rising Stars – Boma playground, Hoima
Amuka Bright Stars Vs Saviour – Lira

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Besigye launches ‘Tubalemese’ campaign to curtail gov’t

Kizza Besigye

Former presidential candidate Dr. Kiiza Besigye has today implored security organs to join him in the campaign against the current regime following the signing of age limit bill into law by president Museveni.
In December last year 317 legislators voted for amendment as 97 voted against the expunging of both the lower and upper presidential age limit that was capped at 35 and 75 years and increasing their terms in office from five to seven years.
Speaking at the launch of ‘’Kulemesa (curtail) campaign ’’ that is aimed at awakening and empowerment of our citizens against the current regime, Dr. Besigye said security operatives should do what they can to disable what is happening because it’s legitimate to disable the regime we have in Uganda.
‘’Security operatives suffer most in this country yet they work 24 hours and earn less, they should join us in the campaign of failing the regime that is holding the country hostage’’ he added in a press briefing held at FDC offices at Katonga road.
He howeve,r warned Ugandans of supporting the military junta saying it will be risk of laying wrath on them, ‘’If we identify you, you will added you to the list of people that are meant to be isolated.
He further noted that regime relies on dysfunctional security which has led to massive killings of people where has become Museveni a visitor of all victims must be brought down.
According to Dr. Besigye, their option of nonviolence is deliberate, “we can bring down the regime without throwing a stone, and every person has to act in a bid to fail this regime’’.
Adding “This campaign can be concluded fairly quickly if everybody acts, whether these people (legislators and the president) increase their terms in office, they should first finish this one before thinking of the other two years’’.
With this campaign, he says they will launch a national assembly that will include people’s representatives from the 317 constituencies that were betrayed by their supposed representatives.
“These representatives that betrayed people must be subjected to total isolation and rejection, We are going to isolate them socially, politically and economically as well as boycotting their shops and schools’’.

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India bans PwC from auditing listed companies for 2 years

Media persons and policemen gather outside the office of PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC), the auditors of Satyam Computers Services, in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad.

India’s securities regulator has banned the global accountancy firm PwC from auditing listed companies in the country for two years, after it failed to spot a $1.7bn fraud at the defunct Satyam Computer Services. In a damning 108-page report, the Securities and Exchange Board of India wrote that PwC had neglected to check “glaring anomalies” in the financial details reported by Satyam, whose downfall was one of India’s worst financial scandals in recent years.

For about five years beginning in 2003, Sebi wrote, Satyam inflated its revenue by accounting for 7,561 fake invoices. The fraud persisted in part because PwC, Satyam’s auditor, “did not independently check the veracity of the monthly bank statements”. It relied upon assurances from Satyam “without any further examination or inquiry into the matter and ignored the balance confirmations received directly from banks which were showing true balance”, the regulator wrote. As well as the auditing suspension, Sebi ordered PwC to disgorge wrongful gains of about Rs130m ($2m). PwC said it was “disappointed”, adding that it would seek a stay on the order before it became effective at the end of March, on the grounds that it was out of line with a prior High Court order.

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URA FC advance to Mapinduzi cup final

Uganda Revenue Authority advanced to the final of the 2018 Mapinduzi cup after defeating Tanzanian club Yanga 5-4 in a penalty shootout. Fulltime had ended goalless.
Patrick Mbowa, Ibrahim Kibumba, Shafik Kagimu, Jimmy Kulaba and Brian Majwega scored URA’s spotkicks.
The tax collectors will face Tanzanian premier league side Azam in the final this Saturday at the Amaani stadium in Zanzibar.
Azam defeated Singida United 1-0 with a late goal from shabaan Idd.
It will be a replay of two sides who met in the group stages in which URA won 1-0.
URA and KCCA FC are the only Ugandan sides to have won the tournament.

2018 Mapinduzi Cup final
January 13, 2018
URA FC Vs Azam FC
Amaani stadium, 8pm

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New Angola president sacks Dos Santos son as head of sovereign wealth fund

President Joao Lourenço

LUANDA (Reuters)- Angolan President Joao Lourenço removed the son of his long-serving predecessor Jose Eduardo dos Santos as head of the country’s $5 billion sovereign wealth fund on Wednesday, the latest in a series of moves that sidelined dos Santos allies.
Lourenço, who took office in September when dos Santos stepped down after nearly four decades in power, has swiftly wrested control of key areas of the state by pushing aside powerful figures associated with his predecessor.
He announced on Wednesday that he was replacing the board of the fund, including its head Jose Filomeno dos Santos, after an external inquiry into the fund’s performance and governance.

The new board chairman was named as Carlos Alberto Lopes, a former finance minister.
Last month Lourenço dismissed the former president’s daughter Isabel dos Santos as chairwoman of the state oil company Sonangol, replacing her with Carlos Saturnino, an oil industry veteran.
Lourenço has also appointed allies and former prime ministers Lopo Fortunato Ferreira do Nascimento and José Carlos Marcolino Moco as non-executive directors of Sonangol, further solidifying his power within the company.
Oil accounts for a third of Angola’s gross domestic product and more than 95 percent of its exports, according to the World Bank, making the leadership of Sonangol one of the most important and powerful jobs in the southwest African country.

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Apass and Geosteady in catfight

IN FIGHTING MOOD: Musician Apass

Singer Apass without a doubt seems to be in the right shape for a fight, if we are to go by his most recent post on social media.

STANDS WARNED: Musician Geosteady

And he has already named his opponent. According to his message, he would like to have Geosteady as the first victim this year.

“Geosteady Blackman you can’t ask to battle me, I can’t battle with a small fat little man. You are not on my level go and battle with Barbie J not me nze ngyakutagula tagula little man,” Apass warned.

“The people you need to battle are those who can’t read and write plus those who don’t know English, not me. By the way little Geo, who tricked you into thinking onsobola … wedeko mukwano I am warning you viola aka Geosteady Shortman.”

But in a space of hours, Geosteady had already responded, saying he was tired of entertaining Apass’ fans and it was high time the dancehall singer released new songs.

“My brother I know you make a lot of practice Home paka mukiyungu but now this level is for only people with Microphones in public. Okwogera enyo sikuyimba bambi; Baby Teacher Wakikyenga. I have helped u a lot entertaining your fans. I’m gonna stop Mr nkuyambye ekimala. Since you know posting and tweeting drop your concert online hahaha Bambi.”

Anyway, fans will keep asking: “who is a better singer between the two?”

 

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