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UPL Awards 2017: Who will drive away the Subaru Forester tomorrow?

The UPL Awards Grand Prize: Subaru Forester

Imperial Royale Hotel is the place to be tomorrow when the Azam Uganda Premier League (UPL) awards reward the best performers from the 2016/2017 season starting at 6pm.

Geoffrey Sserunkuma, Emmanuel Okwi and Muhammad Shaban is the trio that was nominated for the category in which one will walk away with the grand prize, a Subaru Forester.

Sserunkuuma was voted KCCA’s Most Valuable Player (MVP) last month after he scored 21 league goals to help his side clinch the league title and holds the favourite tag above his challengers.

Emmanuel Okwi was SC Villa’s best player helping them finish runners up while Onduparaka’s Shabaan, who is now in South Africa on trials with Super Sport United, came third.

It will also be a close call for the best midfielder award between KCCA’s Muzamir Mutyaba, Shafik Kagimu of URA FC and Saddam Juma (now KCCA from Express) who have all had a good season.

Mike Mutebi is tipped to win the Coach of the Year award after leading KCCA FC to the league title ahead of his competitors Abbey Bogere Kikomeko of Kirinya Jinja SS, SC Villa’s Wasswa Bbosa.

 

AZAM UPL AWARDS

Tomorrow: Imperial Royale Hotel, Kampala, 6pm

Champions – KCCA FC

MVP of the season: Geoffrey Sserunkuma (KCCA FC), Emmanuel Okwi (SC Villa), Muhammad Shaban (Onduparaka)

Goalkeeper of the season: Isma Watenga (Vipers), Benjamin Ochan (KCCA FC), Thomas Ikara (Kirinya Jinja SS)

Defender of the season: Halid Lwaliwa (Vipers), Habib Kavuma (KCCA FC), Timothy Awany (KCCA FC)

Midfielder of the season: Saddam Juma (Express FC), Mutyaba Muzamir (KCCA FC), Shafik Kagimu (URA FC)

Top Scorer: Geoffrey Sserunkuma (KCCA FC, 21goals)

Young Player of the year: Allan Okello (KCCA FC), Frank Tumwesigye (Vipers), Thomas Ikara (Kirinya Jinja SS)

Coach of the year: Mike Mutebi (KCCA FC), Abbey Bogere Kikomeko (Kirinya Jinja SS), Wasswa Bbosa (SC Villa)

Best Goalkeeping coach: Kiggundu Stephen Billy (Vipers), Daniel Kiwanuka (KCCA FC), Sam Kawalya (Express FC)

Club CEO of the season: Tamale David (KCCA FC), Lwanga Peter (Vipers), William Bakkabulindi (Proline)

Media Personality (To be selected by awards committee): TV, Radio, Print, Photography, Online

Fan’s player of the year (Voted by fans)

Fair play club of the season (As per statistics)

Fair play individual of the season (To be selected by committee)

UPL best XI (To be selected by committee)

Fan(s) of the year (To be selected by committee)

Referee of the year (To be selected by referee’s committee)

Life Time Achiever Award (To be selected by committee)

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Development aid paradox: Taking bee keepers for a ride

Mr. Simon Turner (in middle) with other receipients

By Eddie Muwumuza

International development aid is all over Uganda. It has seen the incubation and growth of different sectors in Uganda for over forty years. It was therefore a welcome move when a Dutch NGO by the name of SNV proposed to do a market value chain analysis of the honey sector in Buliisa district. Beekeeping has long been a very good option for poor farmers as you do not need much land, honey has high nutritional value, good markets and as we well know honeybees are integral to good farming with pollination of crops.

SNV carried out research on beekeeping in Buliisa district with a US$170,000 (about Shs600,000,000) grant from Total E&P as part of the oil company’s corporate social responsibility (CSR) programme. This research was aimed at improving the honey sector in the region, keeping in mind that TOTAL E&P is active in that area pursuing oil exploration. Being a Dutch-registered firm, TOTAL E&P gave the grant to a Dutch NGO to conduct the study.

A honey social enterprise, Malaika Honey along with a charity, Wildlife Conservation Society, reviewed the SNV Report. The two organizations claim that the report largely contains false information and misleading which they raised with the giant oil company. “That report is misleading and one could think it was made with the sole intent of soliciting funds from TOTAL E&P,” a Malaika Honey representative said.

Despite there being five beekeeping associations in the region, SNV’s report only mentions one. So the question remains. Why after eight months of comprehensive research did SNV leave out so much important information?

SNV spent eight months in the field carrying out the research that culminated in the report and they interviewed only 18 people in that period. Again in their methodology group, they were showing that they would conduct focus group discussions (FDG’s) during the research but in the final report, they indicate that they did not carry out a single FDG.

The research was led by a young graduate with very little experience in the sector, and that was reflected in the final product. Notably, research conducted for the purpose of the report was not approved by the Ugandan National Council for Science and Technology (UNCST). Every bigger research project carried out in Uganda requires validation from the UNCST.

Two weeks after the publication of the report, SNV submitted a fresh proposal to TOTAL E&P for further funding to bridge the gaps that had been identified in the report. This, some commentators argue, does not augur well about the intentions of SNV.

The SNV report perfectly reflects the current climate of development aid which is supposed to help the poor yet it can end up living off them. In her book ‘Dead Aid’, Dambisa Moyo argues that “development aid was extended to poorer countries in need after the success of the “Marshall Plan” to rebuild war-torn countries in Europe after World War Two.” However, with over fifty years of support from the western countries to Africa, we are seeing development agencies running as businesses and not helping the poor people they are meant to be helping.

Monika Krause in her recent publication ‘The Good Project’ goes into detail how charity has become more about development agencies making programs that look good on paper and are not effective.

She dives into the intricacies of the decision-making process at NGOs and uncovers a basic truth: It may be the case that relief agencies try to help people but, in practical terms, the main focus of their work is to produce projects. Agencies sell projects to key institutional donors, and in the process the project and its beneficiaries become commodities. In an effort to guarantee a successful project, organizations are incentivized to help those who are easy to help, while those who are hardest to help often receive no assistance at all. The poorest of the world are made to compete against each other to become projects—and in exchange they offer legitimacy to aid agencies and donor governments.

If one relates Krause’s view to the work done by SNV, one sees that she describes exactly what happened on the ground in Buliisa.

Mr. Simon Turner who has over a decade expertise as a beekeeping expert in Africa took this matter to the Dutch foreign affairs. They agreed to read the report but refused to address the matter officially. The person who reviewed the report commented informally that the report was indeed misleading the actuality on the ground and highlighted using young inexperienced researchers but refused to go on record.

We often see ambassadors in Uganda criticizing government policy publicly but when it comes to the actions of their own national entities in Uganda, they turn a blind eye.

Mr. Turner urges development aid organizations to refocus and show integrity in helping the poor. He states that charities like SNV the world over are on the frontline of fighting poverty and ensuring good governance and transparency, and in the same way they too should be accountable to the people they are seeking to help. The poor have no voice in this whole matter therefore their voice should be clearly brought out by the charities that seek to help. At this point in time, their work is unaccountable and reports like the SNV report go quietly in the night, leaving US$170,000 that could have been used effectively being misused for the organization’s own business development.

 

 

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DP warns police against interfering with age limit debates

DP President Norbert Mao

The Democratic Party (DP) has vowed to defy police if the force infringes on people’s constitutional rights while debating the presidential age limit cap, party President Norbert Mao, has said.

According to Mr Mao, the police should distance itself from party politics and focus on crime prevention in the country instead of exhibiting bias during the debate.

Addressing a press conference at party headquarters today, Mao said the DP campaign dubbed ‘Togikwatako’ is aimed at curtailing those pushing for the removal of the age limit.

“This is a defiance campaign with a difference of strategy and leadership and this time’s difference is organization aimed at making grounds hot for the likes of Col. Abiriga’s,” Mr. Mao said. Abiriga, the MP for Arua Municipality, is so far the most pronounced protagonist for the removal of the age limit, deemed a means of keeping President Yoweri Museveni in power beyond the constitutional age cap of 75 years.

‘’We must push our way to Constitution Square to claim for our constitutional rights,” Mao said, adding that the Square “is not meant to campaign for blood donation, hepatitis B’ nor resting place for police officers.”

After launching the Togikwatako campaign at DP headquarters last week, Mao and other DP leaders were arrested and detained at the Central Police Station while they attempted to go to the City Square to put up a banner decampaigning the removal of the presidential age limit cap.

“This campaign is like killing a snake, you don’t need to ask permission, this time they are hitting it at the head because others have just been injuring it making it more vicious,” he said.

He promised to ask the Speaker of Parliament Rebecca Kadaga to give reasons why she says that debate on lifting presidential the age limit is immature.

“Can you believe a goat which says I will not eat potato leaves,” Mao said adding that President Yoweri Museveni is power hungry.

According to Mao, Kadaga is first and foremost a Member of Parliament who should involve herself in soliciting for signatures aimed at stopping the lifting of the presidential age limit. He promised to also engage some suspected anti-age limit removal National Resistance Movement (NRM) MPs like Okot Ogong, to join the ‘campaign’.

 

 

 

 

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Ugandan economy to grow at 5.2 percent

Minister David Bahati during the presser to at Media Centre early this year.

Uganda’s economy has started regaining from a slump and is expected to grow at 5.2 percent in the new financial year 2017/18, the latest Uganda Economic Update published by the World Bank and launched today in Kampala shows. If achieved, the new growth rate would better the 3.5 percent the bank awarded the country last financial year, much as the government of Uganda official economic growth stood at 3.9 percent as read by the finance minister in the new national budget in June.

The Economic Update, launched by the State Minister for Finance David Bahati at the ministry’s headquarters in Kampala, further projects that the country would realise a 6.0 percent economic growth in the financial year 2018/19 should all factors remain constant.

Commenting on the Economic Update, Minister Bahati said that it presents a positive picture of growth and that government is undertaking efforts to push the economy back on the right track. “We are pleased that the Economic Update has shown that the economy is growing,” Minister Bahati said of the report.

But for now, at the projected economic growth of 5.2 percent, the country’s private sector, which is a key engine of economic growth would continue to face challenges of low levels of business confidence, the strife in neighbouring South Sudan and the high cost of credit.

But the update on the positive note states that the overall investment growth is expected to be boosted as foreign directive investment in the extractive sector increases, more so, citing the recent oil pipeline agreement signed by governments of Uganda and Tanzania.

The Update which is calls for the public-private partnerships (PPP) to finance major infrastructural projects, suggests that government improve tax collection measures so as to collect more revenue for projects. “Revenues collected are to low to support large infrastructure base and this is further threatened by government’s renewed tendency to grant tax exemptions,” it reads.

Presenting the update, Ms Rachel Sebudde, World Bank’s Task Team Leader, Uganda Economic Update, said that Ugandan government must be careful to avoid circumstances that could lead to unnecessary hike in financing of infrastructural projects like roads and electric power dams.

Estimates show that Uganda loses US$ 300 million per year in inefficient infrastructure spending mostly through underpricing and inability to complete projects within the cost and on schedule. Currently it is estimated Uganda spends one billion US dollars annually on infrastructure, even as analysts say the country needs to spend US$1.4 billion per year in the medium term to bridge the infrastructure gap.

Ms Sebudde advises government to use the PPP arrangement, saying it’s the cheapest approach of financing infrastructural projects, but government, she says has to have capacity in negotiating contracts.

So far Uganda has had 24 projects financed through the PPP totaling US$1,830.69 million, but this represents 8.3 percent as Uganda’s share in sub- Saharan African region.

Ms Sebudde, however, says Uganda should ready itself for the PPP through training human resource, and putting legal frameworks such as policies, laws and guidelines, saying failure to do this would lead to a country losing out to the private sector who are out to make abnormal profits at the expense of government.

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Europe, African ministers meets over illegal migration

Desperate immigrants trying to find their way to Europe

European and African ministers have met in Tunisia about efforts to regulate the flow of refugees from Africa to Europe, primarily along the deadly central Mediterranean route originating in Libya.

In a declaration Monday in Tunis, the capital, the ministers said they agreed on a multi-pronged approach to the crisis, including informing people about the risks of illegal migration and the possibility of voluntarily returning home, addressing why migrants leave home and beefing up actions against human traffickers.

Participating in the meetings were interior ministers from Algeria, Austria, Chad, Egypt, France, Germany, Italy, Libya, Mali, Malta, Niger, Slovenia, Switzerland, Tunisia and Estonia, which currently holds the EU Council presidency.

Through the first half of 2017, nearly 84,000 migrants arrived in Italy by sea, 20 percent more than during the same period last year. Detention centers and temporary shelters that Italy has for migrants have reached their maximum capacity of 200,000 people, but there are many other migrants in the country working illegally.

The meeting in Tunisia focused on Libya, French Interior Minister Gerard Collomb said, since 95 percent of the migrants crossing the sea to Europe set sail from Libya. The ongoing political upheaval in Libya makes the problem worse, Collomb said, adding: “As long as a stable government is not in place, the control of this flux cannot be assured.”

The European Union has proposed training and financing to increase the capabilities of Libya’s coast guards, and last week the bloc also approved new rules for refugee-rescue ships operating in the Mediterranean. The vessels that charities operate to rescue refugees stranded on the open sea are now forbidden to coordinate their movements, either by phone or signal lights, with people-smugglers who pick up would-be migrants in Libya and sometimes leave them stranded at sea.

The refugee-rescue ships also are now required to stay out of Libyan territorial waters, where they previously have picked up asylum-seekers close to shore. Any vessel that breaks the new rules risks being banned from Italian ports.

Humanitarian ships now pick up more than a third of all migrants attempting the perilous Mediterranean crossing from Libya to Italy, compared to one percent in 2014.

Not all stranded migrants are rescued. More than 2,200 people died this year during unsuccessful attempts to cross the Mediterranean, according to the International Organization for Migration.

In their final declaration in Tunis, the ministers agreed that their countries should try to address “the root causes of irregular migration” and “strengthen the exchange of strategic and operational information on criminal networks for trafficking in human beings.”

The statement said public development aid is needed to fight the causes of migration and create more opportunities at home, as well as to help border authorities with training, equipment and infrastructure.

“We have to stick together,” said Dimitris Avramopoulos, European commissioner for migration. He insisted “Europe is not a fortress,” but added that legal migration procedures must be followed.

 

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BOU top staff divided over Crane Bank

A photo montage of BoU Governor Emmanuel Tumusiime Mutebile, businessman Sudhir Ruparelia and Crane Bank

Top officials at the Bank of Uganda are divided over the procedures undertaken by the Central Bank that have led to the current stand-off between BoU and city businessman Sudhir Ruparelia, the owner of now-defunct Crane Bank.

According to sources, some top managers argue that the BoU, through its Bank Supervision Directorate headed by Ms. Justine Bagyenda, failed to execute its mandate, a development that partly culminated in the case that is currently before the Commercial Court.

Another issue, the Crane Bank protagonists at the Central Bank argue, is that the BoU had not exhausted all avenues that could lead to a negotiated settlement of the stand-off.

“Over the past many years the Crane Bank was intermittently awarded several accolades as the best-performing bank, so how can it all of a sudden become the worst?” a source, one of the top managers in BoU wondered.

The source added: “Clearly someone was not doing their job and that cannot be faulted on Sudhir alone; indeed, it seems like a shared omission of responsibility which can also be settled out of court.”

Through MMAKS Advocates and AF Mpanga Advocates, the BoU sued businessman Ruparelia and his business arm, Meera Investments, in efforts to recover US$93.8 million and Shs60.3 billion (over Shs300 billion) allegedly siphoned from Crane Bank, an accusation that is contested by the businessman.

Efforts to contact the BoU Director of Communication Christine Alupo were by press time, futile.

Last year the BoU took over management of the Crane Bank, and early this boarded it off to the dfcu Bank for a yet-undisclosed sum of money.

 

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Garang widow ‘reconciles’ with President Kiir

WANTS PRESIDENT KIIR OUT: Rebecca-Nyandeng-Garang

Rebecca Nyandeng, widow of South Sudan founding father John Garang and former adviser on gender affairs to the president, told South Sudan in Focus that in a meeting in Kampala last week between her, President Kiir, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, and former detainees, she and Kiir agreed to seek a solution to South Sudan’s political crisis.

Nyandeng, who a few months ago had called on government soldiers to lay down their weapons saying that would leave the President with no power, said it was Kiir who asked for reconciliation with her.

“For me, reconciliation between me and him; we don’t have any problem; our problem is how we can rescue people of South Sudan. It needs all of us to come together so we can see how we can mend the fence,” Nyandeng told South Sudan in Focus.

Nyandeng said despite her new relationship with Kiir, she will not return to the country until all of its political forces are reunited.

Asked about the terms of her reconciliation with Kiir, Nyandeng responded: “President Kiir called me mom, and if President Kiir call me ‘mom,’ then I am the mom of all people of South Sudan. If I am the mom of the people of South Sudan, I will not leave them out; I want everybody to be included. I want peace, comprehensive peace,” she said.

Asked how she will convince the doubting Thomases of South Sudan who only believe she has reconciled with Kiir if they see her in Juba, Nyandeng answered with a question of her own: “When they were doubting, what happened to them? Jesus Christ appeared to them!”

Pressed on when she will return to the South Sudanese capital, Nyandeng said, “When Jesus Christ appears to me, that is when I will be going back to Juba.”

Nyandeng said she wants her people to be reunited. “I want them to come together, and I pray for that. We need to see that all the people who are aggrieved come to the table,” she adds.

Nyandeng said South Sudan is her country and wondered “why should I not go back?”

“Mama Nyandeng,” as she is known in much of South Sudan, added, “I will not leave all those children outside. What am I going to do with the big son when the younger children are outside the country?”

 

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Africans should learn to market themselves better

Ms Natasha

By Natasha Mariam

Africa is one of the most beautiful continents in the world with rich cultures, good weather, food, people and good natural sceneries.

With all these one would expect us to be one of the most developed continents in the world but due to lack of love and patriotism for our motherland Africa, we have continued to be one of the poorest continents in the world. I am specifically disappointed by the way some Africans especially those that have a chance to market the good things about our continent are instead demoting it.

Do we just don’t love our countries? One may ask, for example certain individuals when given a chance to speak to media both local and international media instead of saying the beautiful things about their countries they say things that paint a bad picture of their countries.  I believe we should learn to say positive things about our countries, we should be proud of our heritage despite the few challenges we have as a continent. Uganda hired international public relations firms to assist in the promotion of tourism which is a good thing; however it needs to be supported by individuals from Uganda that have physically experienced all the good things in Uganda and therefore are in a better position to market it.

In Uganda especially the opposition and even some media houses have a tendency of looking out for the bad things about an issue because they think it helps them sell their ideas forgetting that it is equally bad for them. There may be freedom of speech in Uganda where by people are free to say whatever they want however, they have  continued to take it for granted  and instead of using it positively to sell our country, they have continued to say things that demote the country. For example the recent Kasese killings, the opposition and media exaggerated the entire situation blaming the government for killing civilians yet it was doing the right thing, the international community was alarmed which I believe partly affected  Uganda’s  tourism given the fact that Kasese is a major tourism destination and this affected our revenues which hinders development.

Media is one of the major groups of people who should be doing the marketing but again it has done more harm than good because instead of telling the story to the rest of the world as it is, media houses on this African continent are again getting content from foreign media houses like the Associated Press, Agency France Presse (AFP), BBC and many others whose value and mission we don’t know. Some of the African news have often been decided in far-off Western capitals – London, Paris, New York – and written by dashing foreign correspondents that do not understand the local complexities and base their narrative on misleading generalizations. Sometimes the reports are wrong or distorted and far away from the situation on the ground.

One important thing we should know is that the countries  that are good at nation branding are the ones that have developed a very clear self-concept of their culture and have greatly developed and similarly all responsible governments, on behalf of their people, institutions, and companies, need to discover what the world’s perception of their country is” and develop a brand management strategy which I think countries like Uganda have done through their re-branding campaign but this cannot be successful if some other people are always showcasing the bad public relations in the media and wherever they go because of political differences.

Leaving that aside, I applaud countries like Rwanda which have continued to thrive due to the love its people have for their country. Rwanda is one of the few countries in Africa where its citizens are accountable for whatever they say against their country. Am not saying people should not come out to say the wrongs with their governments but they should be said exactly as they are and not exaggerated as this gives a wrong perception for the country.

I remember one of the great American journalists who said that “Truth is the best Propaganda and lies are the worst”. So, whoever lies in the guise of benefiting or gaining readership, listenership or viewership is doing injustice to our good continent Africa. Questions have been running through my mind and have been asking myself about what can be done to market our countries world over but this is kind of rhetorical because all Africans have the answer.

African governments should invest in patriotism lessons at all levels of education for their countries as this will educate people about their history and will also give them direction about the future, it will also deepen love and commitment to their countries, this is so because certain people do not know the benefits and challenges of being patriotic therefore if governments can invest in patriotism programs, certain problems will be controlled. People have tendencies of relating patriotism to ruling parties which is wrong because patriotism is non-partisan but rather looks at the good of the country as a whole.

Africans should be more optimistic than pessimistic about the different situations they are going through keeping in mind that some of them are part of the development process for example they should assist their governments build strong institutions that will make it hard for vices like corruption to flourish.

Finally, the Western media, opposition political parties and bad social media users who peddle lies cannot afford to ignore the progress that Africa is making without risking their relevance. Yes, Africa has problems, but the continent is on the move and as Africans we should tell our story to the whole world as it is.

 

 

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Businessman ordered to pay step children Shs60M, surrender estate

Symbol of Justice

The Commercial Court has ordered a Kampala businessman, one Haji Wahab Semakula Kibuuka to pay Shs60million to his four step children after losing a case brought against him in regard to the administration of the estate of the late Sarah Wahab Wanyana.

Justice Percy Night Tuhaise, who was in charge of the case further declared Kibuuka not a widower of the late Wanyana and thus ordered for the revocation of the letters of administration issued to him.

She also ordered that the defendant’s name be cancelled from the certificate of title and land register in his capacity of the administrator of the estate of the late Sarah Wahab Wanyana, and the names of the deceased Sarah Wanyana are to be reinstated on the title; and that the defendant is not a beneficiary to the estate of the deceased.

It all began on June 11, 2011 when Wanyana who was cohabiting with Kibuuka died. At the time of her death, she had two children with him, though she had four other children before they met.The four children are; Pual Tumusiime, Irene Kamugisa, Godfrey   and Herbert Beitwa.

These dragged their step father to court accusing him of fraudulently petitioning the High Court on June 28, 2011 for letters of administration which were granted to him on November 4, 2011.

They told court that he intentionally left them out despite being children of the deceased and known to him. To them, he obtained the grant by fraud, illegality and concealment of material facts, and that he has committed acts of fraud and dishonesty prior to and since assuming administration of the estate.

In his defence, Kibuuka told court that he is the administrator of the estate of the late Wanyana to whom he was legally married.

He also informed court that he had sold off some of the properties of the estate to clear what he said loans accrued by the estate.

However, he failed to prove in court that the two were legally married at Bbutto Masjid Taqua Bweyogerere in which he claimed the couple was united was not in existence in the year he claims they got married.

“The marriage of 1982 could therefore, not have been solemnized by the said Mosque; and the Imam who purportedly signed it could not have existed in that Mosque as Bbutto Masjid Taqua Bweyogerere, the Mosque which purportedly issued the marriage certificate was built in 1986.”

Another contradiction was, Kibuuka claimed to have sold one of the properties of the estate at Shs100 million but it was later discovered that it was sold at Shs320 million.

“Kibuuka himself stated in paragraph 8 of his sworn witness statement that he sold land comprised in Kibuga Block 13 Plot 91 at Uganda Shillings 100,000,000/=. However, during cross examination, he testified that he sold it at Uganda Shs 320,000,000/=. Annexture “I” to Exhibit P1, the sale agreement between Ibrahim Ssemwogerere and Vincent Kasumba, an agreed document, shows that the land was sold at Uganda Shs 320,000,000/=.”

He claimed that he sold it to pay debts but failed to prove in court that debts he had paid off.

The late Sarah Wanyana estate included Kibuga Block No 13 Plot 81 land at Najjanankumbi; Kibuga Block 13 Plot 391 land at Najjanankumbi; Block 218 Plot 1611 land at Najjera; LRV 2288 Folio 6 Plot 57A land at Katalima Road; and 40% shares in Winston Standard Academy).

“Regarding general damages, there is evidence that the defendant (Kibuuka) obtained the grant by fraud and used it to sell off property that formed part of the estate of the late Sarah Wanyana to the prejudice of the plaintiffs who were beneficiaries to the estate.

The land sold was registered land situated in prime areas in Kampala. This would entitle the beneficiaries to general damages as beneficiaries to the estate. I would in the circumstances award general damages to the tune of Uganda Shs 60,000,000/= (sixty million).”

“New administrators should be appointed in a meeting of all beneficiaries to the estate of the late Sarah Wahab Wanyana Mukaka (the deceased) within two months from the date of this judgement. A permanent injunction restraining the defendant (Kibuuka) from dealing with the estate of the late Sarah Wahab Wanyana Mukaka (the deceased) is issued.”

 

 

 

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Uganda to face Rwanda in CHAN qualifiers

Uganda Cranes progressed to the second round of the CHAN 2018 qualification after beating of South Sudan 5-1 in Lugogo on aggregate following a goalless draw in Juba.

Five goals from KCCA FC duo Paul Mucureezi (4) and one from Derrick Nsibambi helped Uganda secure the victory while Khamis Leon Uso pulled back one for the visitors.

The Cranes are now one step away from qualifying for the tournament with Rwanda in their way.

Rwanda qualified for the third qualification round of the 2018 African Nations Championship (CHAN) after eliminating Tanzania on 1-1 goals aggregate following a goalless draw in the second leg played on Saturday at Kigali Stadium.

Uganda and Rwanda will play two games home and away and the winner gets a place in the CHAN tournament that will take place next year in January.

Uganda has played in the CHAN competition for two times, in Sudan 2011 and Rwanda 2016 failing to leave the group stages i­­­­­­­­n both.

The CHAN tournament is reserved for players who feature in their respective domestic leagues across Africa, will be staged from January 11 to February 2, 2018 in Kenya.

 

 

 

 

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