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EAC military experts discuss regional security in Kampala

ISSUED STATEMENT: UPDF Spokesperson, Brig. Richard Karemire

Military and defence experts from East African Community member states started a four-day conference in Kampala to discuss regional security matters.

The meeting, according to the Uganda Peoples Defence Forces (UPDF), is pursuant to Article 10 of the EAC Protocol on Cooperation in Defence Affairs and in accordance with the EAC Calendar of Activities for the period July – December 2017.

“The purpose of the meeting is to further the Peace and Security Strategy that was adopted in November 2006, the Protocol on Peace and Security, as well as the EAC Conflict Prevention, Management and Resolution Mechanism adopted in January 2012 at the EAC joint meeting of the sectoral councils on Cooperation in Defence. It is also in line with the EAC Peace and Security Protocol set objectives for fostering regional peace and security,” a statement issued by the UPDF on Sunday indicated.

Under the protocol, the militaries from Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Burundi, Rwanda and South Sudan carry out annual activities intended strengthen regional security.

Military sources say the meeting will also discuss the situation in South Sudan and Burundi.

On Monday, the defence experts discussed operations and training of armed forces in EAC. The sectoral committee that is composed of permanent secretaries will meet on Wednesday.

 

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Bisaso named new Express manager

Express FC new Head Coach Shafiq Bisaaso being unveiled

Shafiq Bisaso has been appointed as the new Express Football Club head coach following the resignation of Douglas Bamweyana last week ‘due to management issues within the club’.

The Express FC Vice chairman Hajji Kamudas unveiled the new club head coach at the club offices in Mutundwe on Monday afternoon.

“Allow me introduce to you our new Coach Shafic Bisaso,” Kamudas said.

Bisaso has formerly managed Soana, Sports Club Villa (Jogoo) and Masavu FC. He has also handled the Ssaza teams Ssingo and Busujju.

“As the club, we have entrusted Bisaso with our Club and we believe that he is the right man to propel our club to the next level,” He added

Bisaso will work with club legend Hassan Mubiru and Sam Kawalya as the assistants.

The Red Eagles have struggled this season, and are now 13th with 11 points from 10 games played, standing a point above the relegation zone.

Bisaso begins work tomorrow as Express host table leaders Police at Muteesa II Stadium in Wankulukuku.

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Court adjourns case filed against striking doctors

UMA chairperson Dr. Ekwaru Obuku

The High Court Deputy Registrar Sarah Langa has adjourned to November 23, the hearing of application filed by Uganda Medical Workers Union (UMWU) seeking to stop doctors from negotiating with government about pay increases.

In the application, UMWU wants court to stop Uganda Medical Association President Ekwaro Ebuku and workers MP Sam Lyomoki from discussing the matter until it is resolved.

In the plaint, UMWU says the doctors umbrella association has no authority to represent the medical workers’ interests.

However in his response after rescheduling of hearing of the application, Dr. Ebuku said the Union ‘collapsed long time ago’, and that most doctors abandoned it and joined the UMA.

“It doesn’t exist, you can’t compare union to association because even when the union staged its strikes none of the doctors showed up,” Dr. Ebuku said.

He implored government to address their concerns expeditiously, adding that the doctors are ready to call off strike if members are contented with the government’s offer.

Two weeks ago, doctors under UMA convened a general assembly and agreed to go on strike, protesting government’s failure to increase their salaries and improve their welfare.

And just last week a team of six ministers and other senior government officials met with the UMA members to negotiate for the suspension of industrial action, in vain.

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Top BoU official buys multi-million apartments in Bugolobi

A senior Bank of Uganda (BoU) official with a penchant for investing in the real estate sector has reportedly bought two multi-million flats in the leafy Bugolobi suburb.

According to sources, the said top official has a number of houses spread across the city, in posh areas like Mbuya and Ntinda.

Further, the sources said the BoU official carried out the transaction by proxy, reportedly through the son’s account held with a city bank that recently expanded its portfolio by acquiring another bank.

After the initial bank transaction, the money was then wired to an account of a wealthy city lawyer, who also has interest in the real estate sector, to buy the flats.

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Open letter to striking Doctors: Prioritise the patients’ interests

UMA chairperson Dr. Ekwaru Obuku

Dear Doctors

I am Moses Woira, a Ugandan from a family background with many medical and health workers. I have read your demands and agree that the salary you get is little compared to what doctors get in other states. Indeed, it takes years of intensive study, hard physical and mental work, and unsocial hours of duty to become a Doctor therefore, it is legitimate to seek better salaries and allowances reflective of your years of training. I am with you in your demands just like many Ugandans are.

But I must divert from your methodology, and deplore and denounce you for the way you have chosen to have your demands fulfilled. It is conduct unbecoming of a doctor. Bluntly speaking, you should be ashamed to call yourself a doctor. On graduation, you took the Hippocratic Oath but what you are doing is simply violating that sacred oath, which puts you doctors on a higher pedestal in any society – a role model for all.

Think, who goes to government hospitals? It is the poor, deprived and destitute; those who live in huts and shacks on the pavements, the very poor, those with emergencies who constitute the majority of the population. They are suffering and dying because of your actions. Tell me, are they the ones who will make decisions about your demands? Certainly not. So why have you targeted them? What harm have they done to you? Your action is nothing sort of irresponsible and criminal act. Can you not see that by targeting these poor and deprived you are alienating those whom you should be bringing to your side and make them sympathize with your just demands? By your actions, you have not only lost their trust but made them your enemy for the rest of your lives, for the dear ones they have lost on account of your actions will always be remembered.

If this isn’t political, then there is no reason for you learned people to continue striking yet you even still want your jobs back in case the issue is sorted. If I am to ask anyway, will you take back the salary on your accounts for the time you have taken off duty? I say this without fear of contradiction because many people have died in my presence ever since you started striking and I know the pain that the families of these people are going through. By your actions, you have given proof of moral decline to a level of decay. I am very sure in the earlier days of Independence, health workers never proved to be disastrous like you are presently. Maybe I should also say that issues suffered by today’s doctors were unknown during those days.

I support your issues raised by Dr. Obuku for any unjust law or unfairness to you but not in a way that harms innocents. Think of protesting in a different way which doesn’t harm the poor and the disadvantaged. Go back to work, see these patients, make them aware to your plight, gain their sympathy and bring them on your side as these other issues are sorted by the Commission that was put in place to work on the salary disparities.

I know many of you are ripping a lot of money during this period because some of us have analyzed your strike and found out the other side of it.

A doctor friend told me that ever since the strike started the statistics show that private hospitals, clinics and pharmacies have got high numbers of patients and this has really worked out for all these doctors who have private workplaces, as you are now directing all patients to your private work places and overcharging them for the services. As a person who foresees issues at times, I see you still want the strike to go on because you are ripping a lot of money from patients who are using your facilities. But as you do that just know you are punishing your fellow human beings. Indeed, being a doctor shouldn’t let you think that you next to God and you have to act and arrogantly speak like the ring leader has been doing since the activism started.

For now I will stop at that and look at you enjoying money at your clinics as poor Ugandans who can’t afford bills at your private hospitals and clinics are dying.

Michael Woira

Patriotic Ugandan.

 

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Mugabe: Army operation wasn’t a threat to my authority as President

Zimbabwe president, Robert Mugabe has ruled out resignation despite increasing pressure.

In a special address to the nation, Mugabe, who insisted he was still President, called for reconciliation on the ongoing impasse in the country.

“I am aware that many developments have occurred in the party or have been championed and done by individuals in the name of the party. Given the failings of the past and the anger these must have had. Such developments are understandable, but we cannot be guided by bitterness and vengefulness, they would not make us any better party members of Zimbabweans,” Mugabe noted in an address to Zimbabweans.

“Our policy of reconciliation which we pronounced in 1980 and through which we reached out to those who had occupied and oppressed us for nearly a century and those we traded fire with in a bitter war surely can not be unavailable to our own both in party and nation. We must learn to forgive and resolve contradictions real or perceived in comradely Zimbabwean spirit.”

Towards achieving this, he said had just held a meeting with security organs which mounted an operation Wednesday that saw him confined in his home.

“Fellow Zimbabweans we are a nation born out of protracted struggle for national independence. Our goals and ideals must guide our present and structure our future. The tradition of resistance is our collective legacy whose core tenets must be subscribed by all across generations and times.

“Indeed, this was a great concern for our commanders, who themselves were methods of that revolution and often at very tender ages and at great personal peril. We still have in our various communities, veterans of that founding struggle who must have found the prevailing management of national and party issues quite alienating. This must be corrected without delay including ensuring that these veterans continue to play central roles in the lives of our nation.”

Speaking out on Wednesday’s operation that saw him confined at his home by the Zimbabwe Defence Forces, Mugabe said there was no law broken by the army.

“The operation did not amount to a threat to our well cherished constitutional order, nor was it a challenge to my authority as head of state of government, not even as commander in chief of the ZDF, the command element remained respectful with the dictates of constitutionalism.

“True, a few incidents may have occurred here and there but these are being corrected. I am happy that throughout the short period, the pillars of the state remained functional.”

He said that Sunday’s meeting with the command element focused on the need “for us to collectively start processes that return our nation to normalcy so all our people can go about their business unhindered in an environment of perfect peace and security assured that law and order will prevail as before and endure well into the future”.

The meeting was facilitated by a mediating team led by Fr Fidelis Mukonori of the Catholic Church.

“Even happier for me and arising from this meeting is a strong sense of colleaguealiaty and comradeship. Now biding the various arms of our security establishment. This should lead to greater peace and offer an abiding sense of security in communities and in our entire nation.”

“Of greater concern to our commanders are the well founded fears that the lack of unity and commonness of purpose in both party and government was translating into perceptions of inattentiveness to the economy, open public spats between high ranking officials in the party and government exacerbated by multiple conflicting messages from both the party and government made the criticism levelled against us inescapable.”

Nevertheless, he says all of these will be responded to with great urgency. “In respect of the party, and the party issues raised by the commanders and the general membership of ZANU PF, these too stand acknowledged, they have to be attended to with a great sense of urgency.”

He urged his party members that the way forward can’t be “based on swapping, vying cliques that ride roughshod over party rules and procedures”.

He added advised that “there must be a net return to the guiding principles of our party as enshrined in its constitution which must be applied fairly and equitably in all situations and before all members”.

“The era of victimisation and arbitrary decisions must be put behind so as we all embrace a new ethos predicated on the supreme law of our party and nourished by an abiding sense of camaraderie,” he read as the army chief Constantino Chiwenga who led the military takeover earlier this week helped him turn the pages.

Mugabe further added that all matters will be discussed and settled in the forthcoming congress within the frame work “of our clear road map that seeks to resolve once and for all any omission and contradictions that have affected our party negatively”.

“The congress is due in a few weeks from now, I will preside over the processes which must not be prepossessed by any ax calculated to undermine it or compromise the outcomes in the eyes of the public.”

Meanwhile, his party members who have replaced him with his former Vice President, Emerson Mnangangwa have given him up to mid-day to tender in his resignation or face impeachment.

In related news, SADC has called for an urgent extraordinary organ troika summit on the political situation in Zimbabwe. The meeting set for Tuesday will be held in Angola and all presidents of SADC countries are expected to attend.

 

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Israel to deport 40,000 African refugees

MADE ANNOUNCEMENT: Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has announced an unspecified international deal to expel some 40,000 African asylum seekers from the country. The Israeli Cabinet also voted to shut down a migration center.

The Israeli prime minister said Sunday he had reached an “international agreement” that allowed his country to deport around 40,000 African refugees.

The asylum seekers, mainly from Sudan and Eritrea, entered Israel through Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula in the early and mid-2000s.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s Cabinet also approved plans to shut down the Holot migrant detention center in southern Israel and gave asylum seekers a three-month deadline to leave the country or face deportation.

Activists say that refugees from Sudan and Eritrea cannot return to their ‘dangerous’ homelands.

The Israeli government says the African migrants are “infiltrators” and not genuine refugees.

“The infiltrators will have the option to be imprisoned or leave the country,” Israel’s Public Security Ministry said in a statement.

“This removal is enabled thanks to an international agreement I achieved that enables us to remove the 40,000 remaining infiltrators without their consent. This is very important,” Netanyahu said at the start of his Cabinet meeting.

“This will enable us to close down Holot and allocate some of the large funds going there to inspectors and removing more people,” the prime minister added.

It is unclear whether the African asylum seekers would be sent back to their homelands or a third country.

In a Twitter statement, Gilad Erdan, Israel’s public security minister, said the Holot closure was conditioned on “us seeing that the policy of removing infiltrators to a third country was indeed taking place.”

Neither Erdan nor Netanyahu provided details about the third country.

Activists say that refugees from Sudan and Eritrea cannot return to their “dangerous” homelands.

“Instead of turning away refugees within its territory, Israel can and should protect asylum seekers like other countries of the world, instead of imprisoning them or deporting them to continue the journey as refugees,” a coalition of human rights organizations in Israel said.

 

 

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Medics’ strike: Police doctors join forces’ treatment drive

SSP Emilian Kayima's statement released today.

Following industrial action by medics around the country, police doctors have joined their Uganda Peoples Defence Forces (UPDF) and Uganda Prisons Services (UPS) colleagues to treat the sick.

ISSUED STATEMENT: New Police Spokesperson SSP Emilian Kayima

The Inspector General of Police Gen. kale Kayihura on Friday gave directives to the Director Uganda Police Health Services to support the ministry alongside the others that are supporting the ministry to with, the UPDF and UPS,’ police spokesperson Senior Superintendent of Police Emilian Kayima wrote in a release issued today.

According to SSP Kayima, the police force has 94 health centres across the country, which are currently offering maternal, dental and general health care treatment to civilians, ‘totally free of charge’.

Two weeks ago doctors went on strike, demanding better pay and an improvement of their working conditions. Since then there have been various engagements between government officials and the striking doctors led by Uganda Medical Association (UMA) chairperson Dr. Ekwaro Obuku, aimed at ending the strike to no avail.

In the ensuing period the standoff prompted President Yoweri Museveni to threaten sacking the doctors, but that too has not done much to make them return to work.

The doctors’ strike comes at a time when other public sector workers like State Attorneys and Prosecutors are also on strike, demanding better working conditions.

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ZANU-PF set to dismiss the Mugabes

DURING THEIR HEYDAYS: Robert Mugabe and his embattled wife Grace Mugabe

Robert Mugabe’s efforts to cling to power appeared close to collapse as tens of thousands marched through Zimbabwe’s cities calling for his resignation, while the ruling party prepared to dismiss him.

The 93-year-old president is due to meet the army commanders who took power last week, a statement broadcast by the state-run TV channel said.

The face-to-face encounter is only the second since the military takeover five days ago and will take place as leaders of Zanu-PF convene to endorse a motion demanding that Mugabe resign as president and stripping the party leader of his post of first secretary. Parliament is expected to start impeachment proceedings next week.

Sources close to the military said the president had asked a Catholic priest and lifelong friend to act as an intermediary in talks with generals. Mugabe had previously rejected similar offers of mediation, suggesting that he was close to making a significant concession.

Few options are now open to the autocrat, who has ruled Zimbabwe through a mixture of ­coercion, bribery and revolutionary rhetoric for nearly four decades. Support in some branches of the security establishment – including the police – has evaporated and high-profile political supporters have been detained.

On Saturday the streets of Harare were filled with people chanting, singing and waving placards. Many embraced soldiers. The march had the approval of military authorities and will boost the inter­national image of the generals who took control last week.

However, analysts said the celebrations were also evidence of a huge desire for democracy in Zimbabwe, not just the departure of the world’s oldest leader.
The presidential motorcade left Mugabe’s sprawling residence in Harare yesterday evening, booed and jeered by protesters who had gathered outside.

Piers Pigou, an expert with the International Crisis Group, said the march was “both an opportunity and a major challenge” for the military and the still dominant Zanu-PF, Mugabe’s political vehicle. “The language being used shows that people were out not just to support Zanu-PF and the army … What we have seen on the streets suggests that ordinary Zimbabweans want an alternative to the centralising, controlling ­narrative,” he said.

The military has said its takeover was to remove “criminals” close to the president, a reference to Grace Mugabe, the first lady, and her G40 ­faction.

Most observers believe the former vice-president Emmerson Mnangagwa is likely to take charge when Mugabe finally relinquishes power. Mnangagwa, 75, is a former intelligence chief and ­veteran Zanu-PF official responsible for the repression of opposition parties in elections between 2000 and 2008. He was fired by Mugabe two weeks ago.

Opposition leaders have called for the formation of an inclusive transitional government but risk being sidelined by the army and Zanu-PF. There are also concerns that the military will maintain significant influence in the future.

Since taking power, the military has arrested about a dozen senior officials and ministers loyal to Grace Mugabe, 52. She has not been seen since the take­over. Sources said she was in her husband’s Harare residence when he was detained and has not left. Zanu-PF branches in all 10 provinces called on Friday for Mugabe to be recalled as first secretary of the party.

The motions also called for Grace Mugabe to be stripped of her post chairing the Zanu-PF women’s league. She is a divisive figure who has outraged many with her extravagance, violent outbursts and political ambitions. Mugabe could theoretically continue as president, even if he were no longer leader of Zanu-PF, but this would be difficult in practice, party insiders said.

Relatives said he and Grace were “ready to die for what is correct” and had no intention of stepping down to legitimise the military coup. ­Speaking to Reuters from a secret ­location in South Africa, Patrick Zhuwao, Mugabe’s nephew, said on Saturday that his uncle had hardly slept since the ­military ­take­over, but his health was ­otherwise good.

The coup is thought to have been prompted in part by fears among the military and its allies in the ruling party of an imminent purge of Grace Mugabe’s rivals that would have allowed her to exercise greater power. Zimbabweans abroad demonstrated against their president yesterday. Hundreds in Britain gathered outside the embassy in London calling on Mugabe to step aside. Similar rallies were held in South Africa and Namibia.

Mugabe’s downfall is likely to send shockwaves across Africa, with Uganda’s Yoweri Museveni to the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Joseph Kabila, facing pressure to step aside.

The failure of regional powers to explicitly support the military inter­vention has angered many in Zimbabwe. South Africa’s president, Jacob Zuma, said yesterday the continent was committed to supporting ‘the people of Zimbabwe’.

 

 

 

 

 

 

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FUBA series continue as A1 Challenge is eliminated

Jam Session in an action-packed game at the MTN Lugogo Arena

Last night KCCA Leopards edged out A1 Challenge after a grueling match that ended 64 to 57, leading to the elimination of the latter after losing three of the Best of Five games.

By press time, in the other semi-final UCU Lady Canons was leading JKL Dolphins and the winner will face KCCA Leopards in the finals.

The last game of the night, Game 3 between KIU Titans and Pemba Warriors ended with a 66-61 points, giving KIU Titans a 2-1 lead in the best of five games.

Game 4 of the series continues on Sunday and more teams will be eliminated. The best female players of the night were Maureen Amoding and Susan Amito of KCCA Leopards with 15 points, while the best male players were KIU Titans’ Geoffrey Soro with 20 points and Phillip Ameny aka Big Phil with 19 points.

 

 

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