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It is time the ‘predators’ of immature fish are reined in

President Yoweri Museveni has said that the Uganda Peoples Defence Forces (UPDF) will be deployed on Uganda’s water bodies to assist the fishing communities in protecting lakes from over-fishing and the catching of immature fish.

While addressing the people of Busia recently, the President also noted that the fisheries ministry had deployed ‘protection’ officers, who had instead turned to corruption and extortion of both the fishermen and fish traders, thereby exacerbating the already bad situation.

It is worth noting that the catching of immature affects the national economy, since most of the fish harvested is sold outside Uganda for selfish gain by private individuals, who don’t even pay taxes for fear of being apprehended because of engaging in an illegal activity in the first instance.

Also, some of the people involved in immature fishing use illegal fishing gear that quickens the depletion of stocks while others at times engage in unauthorized chemical use, rendering the waters dangerous for use by the unsuspecting communities living near the water source.

Similarly, because the activity is carried out discreetly, the people, mostly the children who depend on the fish for food are denied nutritious meals, leading to diseases arising from malnutrition. All these aspects combined affect the planning at Treasury, since they are unaccounted for and cannot be pegged to any predictable end.

So, it is time to rein these immature fish predators who deny the country a good and sustainable income; something that can only be achieved through organised and prudent fishing methods.

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UPDF to deploy against immature fish catching

The Uganda Peoples Defence Forces (UPDF) is to be deployed to assist the fishing communities of Uganda in protecting lakes from over-fishing and the catching of immature fish, President Yoweri Museveni has said.

“Lake Victoria is here but it’s a dead lake because it has no fish. You need to help us to protect these lakes and we revamp them for the future of the country’s fishing industry. Borrow lessons from the cattle keepers who never eat female calves because they are the future of their herds as they are the ones that will produce and multiply the cattle stock,” Museveni said.

The President said that because the indigenous fishing communities had failed to protect the lakes, the Fisheries Ministry resorted to deploying of fisheries protection officers who have worsened the situation by engaging in mass corruption and extortion of fishermen and traders.

He appealed to communities that live near the lakes and the water bodies in the country to do away with the negative vices of overfishing and fishing of premature fish which he said pose a great danger to the fishing industry in the country.

The President was yesterday addressing a public rally at Masafu Sub-County grounds, Buwanda Village in Busia district to promote the Operation Wealth Creation campaign. The campaign is aimed at ensuring that each household engages in enterprises for food security and income generation to fight poverty.

The President announced that government plans to gazette Busia as an export promotion zone and said that many industries will be put up in the border district to promote industrial trade.

The President said that government will continue to work on service delivery but urged the population to engage in modern agro production to fight poverty.

“Recent research has shown that 83% of families in Busia district are engaged in subsistence agriculture while only 17% are in commercial agriculture. How do you expect to get rid of poverty in the district,” he said.

He cautioned the people against land fragmentation which he said was dangerous for the future of the agricultural sector and warned that the continued fragmentation of land will result into irreversible poverty in Uganda which is largely an agricultural economy.

On health the President said that government had done well in the immunization of children that has seen the country experience rapid population growth under the NRM regime from 14 million in 1986 to 35 million people today. He however said that the population needs to exercise quality hygiene and nutrition to avoid contracting some disease. He also warned them against living reckless life styles that such as promiscuity, drug abuse and alcoholism that he said were dangerous for their lives.

He announced that government will tarmac Tororo-Busia road and Musiita-Majanji road and that more roads will be tarmacked as the government has prioritized and allocated sufficient funds to the road sector. He also urged Movement supporters to understand the importance of prioritization in the implementation of government programs.

“We are now working on several roads with our locally generated revenue and we shall do more but we have to prioritize because if we tackle many programs at the same time we will make no impact and deliver nothing. That prioritization approach helped us in the bush as we used limited resources but registered many victories,” he said.

On security the President said that the country is peaceful because the National Resistance Movement built a strong army with a national character which is pro-people and non-sectarian.

“We had problems in 1960’s because leaders were focused on tribal and religious sectarianism. You leave a good soldier and go for a bad soldier because you are looking for your tribesman and you can’t build strong force on those lines,” he noted.

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South Sudan rebels to ‘ratify’ peace pact tomorrow

CONGS! President-Yoweri-Museveni-congraculates-President-Salva-Kiir-of-South-Sudan-for-signing-the-peace-agreement-as-Ethiopian-Prime-Minister-Haile-Mariam-Desalegne-applauds./ FILE PHOTO

South Sudan’s rebel leader says his group will ratify the recently signed peace agreement on Tuesday as part of efforts to restore peace and end the country’s nearly two year long conflict.

Former Vice President Riek Machar told VOA he is committed to the full implementation of the agreement. But he said he has petitioned mediators and regional leaders about the government’s continuous violation of the peace agreement signed by both parties.

“My team will be ratifying this most likely on the 8th (of September) and the cease-fire has not been holding. So we need the cease-fire to hold first and a workshop conducted for the permanent cease-fire and security arraignments, then after that we can kick off the second phase of forming the transitional government of national unity,” he said.

President Salva Kiir signed the agreement 15 days later than originally scheduled after expressing reservations about stipulations in the accord, which he said undermines South Sudan’s sovereignty.

So far, both sides have accused each other of violating the cease-fire agreement but Machar said the administration is to blame for endangering the accord.

“I can’t say I am satisfied because the government has been breaking the cease-fire. It has not stopped its offensive despite the fact that the government declared a cease-fire. So, this is not satisfactory,” he said.

Machar called on South Sudanese and the international community to pressure the administration in Juba to ensure a full implementation of the cease-fire agreement.

“I have complained, I have protested on the violations done by the government, and I have written to IGAD [Intergovernmental Authority on Development] leaders and those who witnessed the peace agreement.”

Machar’s comments came after reports that the U.N. Security Council was considering imposing sanctions following accusations of attacks that could endanger the peace agreement. Machar denied his rebels violated the accord.

“We have done nothing [wrong] we are only defending ourselves. The government has barges on the Nile [and] they were attacking our positions. We responded, we sunk some of the barges. The government is using helicopter gunships for the last four days, and also occupying our bases and we don’t see any reason for such,” Machar said.

“The U.N. sanctions should be targeting the government because they are the ones on the offensive. They are the one violating the cease-fire agreement,” he said.

Last week, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry called President Kiir to discuss the cease-fire violations. A State Department spokesman said: “President Kiir confirmed to the Secretary that he is committed to the implementation of the peace agreement and the cease-fire.”

A workshop to discuss the cease-fire, and how security in the country will be maintained during a 30-month transitional period, was postponed late last week, and a South Sudan official said a new date will be announced as soon as possible.

Both the government and Machar’s SPLM-in-Opposition (SPLM-IO) insisted that they are not to blame for the delay.

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FDC to discuss TDA membership

Dr. Besigye and Gen. Muntu earlier in the day.

The newly-constituted National Executive Committee (NEC) of the Forum for Democratic Change is meeting today to among other issues discuss the party’s membership to The Democratic Alliance.

The Leader of Opposition in Parliament Wafula Oguttu, who stood in for the FDC spokesperson Semmujju Nganda, said that the meeting, where the party’s 17 newly elected executive committee members were also sworn in, is very important because it would help them discuss the TDA issues.

“We are going to agree how to move forward in the elections and decide when to pick TDA forms,” Mr Wafula Oguttu said adding: “TDA has a process, we are going to sit and discuss as a committee; we shall rally behind what has been decided by NEC.”

Wafula Oguttu noted that although there were ‘some disagreements’ at the delegates conference held at Namboole Stadium last week, the party had moved on. “Every time we are improving on our delegates conference; we learn from our mistakes,” Wafula Oguttu said and added: “There are differences but they make us united, we came out strong.”

With the deadline for returning TDA nomination forms looming, FDC needs to sort the internal differences in time so that it is able to forward a candidate who will be supported by all party members.

Meanwhile, Dan Mugarura, the FDC electoral commission chief noted that with the swearing in of the new 17 executive members, the NEC was now fully constituted and would make decisions for the party.

“We are subscribing to TDA while others finished, we wanted to have a full NEC to make resolutions on TDA,” Mr Mugarura said and commended the new NEC members for their service to the FDC.

Speaking at the same function the FDC flag bearer for the 2016 presidential elections Dr. Kizza Besigye, also commended the newly-sworn in members and committed himself to ensuring party cohesion.

“My task is just beginning; we are setting the stage and when ready, we will unveil the curtains,” Dr Besigye said and pledged to work closely with his rival for party flag bearer Major General Mugisha Muntu.

Last week Gen Muntu lost the flag bearer candidacy to Dr Besigye by a wide margin, prompting speculation of a split between members of the two rival camps. However, Gen Muntu has already conceded defeat and also urged his supporters to support Dr Besigye’s presidential bid.

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Mbabazi starts ‘consultative meetings’ in Mbale

Former Prime Minister John Patrick Amama Mbabazi is in Mbale for consultative meetings ahead of his 2016 presidential bid.

Mbabazi, who is addressing delegates from the Elgon region at the Mbale-based Protea Hotel, will later proceed to the Cricket Grounds to address a rally.

Mbabazi was set to start his consultative meetings in Mbale in July but was stopped and arrested by Andrew Felix Kaweesi, the then Director of Operations in the Uganda Police Force.

Mbabazi

But this time round, in a letter dated September 1, 2015, the Inspector General of Police General Kale Kayihura cleared Mbabazi to carry on with his consultative meetings, but directed the former Premier to comply with the Public Order and Management Act (POMA).

“You furnish the respective District Police Commanders with evidence to use premises by owners and managers,” reads the letter in part.

Meanwhile, sources in Mbale indicate that unlike the July 9 incident when Mbabazi was stopped from travelling to Mbale, this time there is no massive deployment by security agencies.

The source further said that this time the turn-up of supporters is low, possibly because parents are taking their children back to school ‘so they cannot ignore such a responsibility to attend a campaign rally’.

The source also hinted at the National Resistance Movement (NRM), grassroots primaries, saying they could have affected the turn-up for Mbabazi’s rally.

Empty Mbale cricket ground where Jpam is supposed to hold a rally.
Empty Mbale cricket ground where Jpam is supposed to hold a rally.

On June 16 this year Mbabazi, a former NRM Secretary General, declared he would contest for presidency and chairmanship of the party. However, unfolding events made it impossible for him to secure a party ticket, forcing him to run as an Independent candidate, subject to endorsement by his supporters in about two-thirds of the districts in Uganda.

Meanwhile, it is not known yet how the delegates attending Mbabazi’s consultation were selected since no known election of his officials has taken place.

By filing time, efforts to talk to a member of Mbabazi’s team for details about the selection of delegates were futile.

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Which European football clubs should Africans support?

In a bid to support football and other related sports like most Ugandans have done in the past, from when football was broadcast both on television and radio in the eighties, many Ugandans have followed the ‘attractive and entertaining’ game played by Europeans, leaving our country and club football to go into oblivion.

As a patriotic African and a young journalist in Uganda, this to me raises a big concern as to whether we Africans should support European clubs like Manchester United, Arsenal, Real Madrid and Barcelona, among others.

In a research carried out in 2010 in Uganda, Man-U and Arsenal had four million fans out of a population of 35 million compared to our own local clubs SC Villa and Kampala Capital City Authority [KCCA ] which had one million; something very embarrassing!

So, for professional purposes I tried to find out why and how this was happening in Uganda. Later, I discovered the reasons and I would like to share them with the readers.

In their minds, many Africans find their football attractive and entertaining; European football changes their lives through betting and Ugandan football is corrupt, tribal and less attractive. To me, these reasons are somehow reasonable but not satisfactory.

In the 70s when Ugandan football both at national and club level was at its peak, with Uganda reaching the African Cup of Nations finals against Ghana in 1979 that we eventually lost 2-0 in Accra with the likes of Phillip Omondi, Polly Ouma, Tom Lwanga, the country was on the sports world map.

Liverpool-Arsenal

Then, back home, clubs like KCCA, Simba and SC Villa were dominating the CECAFA region, tussling out with other regional giants like Gor Mahia and AFC Leopards of Kenya; Young Africans and Simba of Tanzania; El Merriekh and Al Hilal of Sudan. During that time in Amin’s regime, it is believed that sports was supported by the government unlike today where the sports fraternity claws for support.

All said, it brings me back to the question of which European clubs an African should support; my opinion would be that Africans support clubs that in turn ‘support us’ in different ways like having African players on their payroll.

These players bring joy and revenue home, thereby improving the livelihoods of many in Africa, their ancestral continent.

These clubs include Chelsea, Swansea, Manchester City, Westham United, Lyon, Marseille, Lille, Red Bull Salzburg and CSKA Moscow and have helped players like the Toure brothers, the Ayew brothers, Song, John Obi Mikel, Ibrahim Ssekagya, Mwesigwa, Drogba and Baba Rahma among others.

These, unlike ‘the mighty Man-U’ and Arsenal, have for the past four years not had an African player in their ranks but still command a big fan base in Africa!

This begs the question, which clubs should Africans supports?

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Egyptian tycoon wants island for immigrants

An Egyptian Telecoms billionaire has proposed buying a Mediterranean island to shelter refugees fleeing from Syria and other countries.
Naguib Sawiris, who is believed to be worth $2.9billion, announced his idea on Twitter this week.
 “Greece or Italy sell me an island, I’ll call its independence and host the migrants and provide jobs for them building their new country.” adding: “Crazy idea… Maybe but at least temporary until they can return to their countries??!!” “Of course it’s feasible. You have dozens of islands which are deserted and could accommodate hundreds of thousands of refugees,” Sawaris tweeted.
The billionaire’s ‘offer’ comes in the wake of grisly photos of a Syrian child, three-year old Aylan Kurdi, who lost his life at sea while his family was trying to cross from Turkey to Greece. The mother and brothers also died in the fateful journey, while the father, a survivor of the tragedy has since returned to Syria, counting his losses.
Sawiris’ comments also come after a week of harrowing events, which have forced the world to acknowledge the scale of the refugee crisis taking place in Europe, and the billionaire estimates an island off Greece of Italy to host the immigrant refugees could cost between $10-$100million.
He however,  reservations about investment in infrastructure and also admitted the plan has other challenges, including whether Greece or Italy could be persuaded to sell an island, as well as arranging jurisdiction and customs regulations.
But he insisted refugees who came to it would be treated as ‘human beings’, complaining: “The way they are being treated now, they are being treated like cattle.”
 “No sane person with integrity would look at the news and decide not to take action,” he was quoted as saying.
Sawiris cited the 32,000 strong El Gouna, a resort town he developed on the Red Sea in Egypt, as an example of a “desert land that he turned habitable.”
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Election fever hits EA countries

While opposition parties in Uganda are still squabbling over the modalities of choosing a joint candidate for the 2016 presidential elections, their counterparts in Kenya have already picked the flag bearers for the 2017 presidential elections.
Speaking to the media recently, opposition stalwart Mr Moses Wetang’ula said his party Ford Kenya had already endorsed him as its flag bearer, while Mr Raila Odinga and Stephen Musyoka have been endorsed by the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) and the Wiper Democratic Party as flag bearers, respectively.
“Each constituent party has already picked its candidate, Ford Kenya has picked me, Wiper Democratic Party has agreed on Kalonzo Musyoka and ODM has former Prime Minister Raila Odinga,” Senator Wetang’ula was quoted as saying.
Mr Wetang’ula made the remarks ahead of a two-day midterm review meeting currently underway in Great Rift Valley Lodge and Resort in Naivasha, aimed at evaluating the progress made by the opposition since the March 2013 elections.
However, despite the issue of opposition flag bearer not being on the agenda. speculation is rife it will take centre stage.
‘Although the issue of how or when to pick the coalition’s flag bearer was not listed as part of the agenda for the two-day meeting that started yesterday, most of the participants said they would want it discussed,’ the Daily Nation states, adding that members ‘would be rooting for an open and transparent process in picking the coalition’s torch bearer’.
“We want a process that will see all the principals compete for the coalition’s ticket in a democratic manner,” Kiminini MP Chris Wamalwa, was quoted as saying.
The East Africa region is ensconced in a cycle of elections, with the Tanzania elections set for October this year, followed by Uganda’s election slated for February next year.
Earlier in July Burundi held a controversial election in which Pierre Nkurunziza was returned was returned as president, while Kenya and Rwanda will go to the polls in 2017.
Interestingly, despite being two years away, the election processes in Rwanda have elicited enormous anxiety, because of the expiry of President Paul Kagame’s constitutional two-seven year mandate, which ends in 2017.
Already, there are indicators he may stay on, after several individual petitions and nation-wide ‘consultations’ carried out by the Members of Parliament, established that majority of Rwandans want the Constitution amended to allow Kagame run for a third term.
In Tanzania, one of the region’s most stable countries, the ruling Chama Cha Mapinduzi (CCM) has come under intense pressure after opposition parties coalesced under former Prime Minister Edward Lowassa to challenge CCM flag bearer John Magufuli, in what is considered the ‘toughest’ election in the country’s history.
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Migrant crisis: IOC announces £1.3m refugee fund

IOC

The International Olympic Committee has announced a £1.3m emergency fund will be made available to national Olympic committees in order to help refugees.

“We have all been touched by the terrible news and the heartbreaking stories in the past few days,” said IOC president Thomas Bach.

“We made a decision that we needed to make this fund available immediately.”

On Thursday, German football club Bayern Munich announced they would set up a ‘training camp’ to help refugees.

National Olympic committees will be asked to submit programmes to benefit from the fund, which is made up of £650,000 from the IOC and £650,000 from the Olympic Solidarity Commission.

British sport has also reacted to the crisis, with supporters’ groups for Aston Villa and Swindon Town among those who have said they will hold up ‘Refugees Welcome’ banners at their next home matches.

Scottish champions Celtic have also offered their support. A share of proceeds from events surrounding the upcoming 30th anniversary of former manager Jock Stein’s death will be donated to the refugees’ cause.

 

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Hillary Clinton says she regrets using private email

Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton
Hillary Clinton

Hillary Clinton has said she wished she had made a “different choice” and not used a private email account while serving as US secretary of state.

“I’m sorry this has been confusing,” she told the cable news channel MSNBC.

Her use of private email has generated a barrage of criticism as Mrs Clinton runs for the Democratic presidential nomination for the 2016 election.

Critics say that her set-up was not secure, contrary to government policy, and meant to shield her from oversight.

Political analysts – including fellow Democrats – have said the Clinton campaign has stumbled in its response to the controversy and Mrs Clinton had not seemed contrite – at times even making jokes about the email issue.

A more sombre Mrs Clinton took full responsibility in Friday’s interview, saying she didn’t “stop and think” about how use of a private email account would be perceived.

It has been a major issue in the presidential race. Polls show an increasing number of voters view her as “untrustworthy” due in part to the questions surrounding her email use.

Under US federal law, officials’ correspondence is considered to be US government property.

Government employees are encouraged to use official email accounts although some top officials have used personal accounts in the past.

In March, Mrs Clinton said she and her lawyers made the decision over what would be considered work-related email when the state department asked for records from former secretaries of state.

The emails deemed work-related were about half of the 60,000 emails she sent in total during her time in office. The emails she deemed personal were deleted, Mrs Clinton said.

Since then, the state department has been releasing the emails to the public in batches about once a month.

 

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