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Full 2015-16 budget speech

The president and MPs during the 2016 budget reading
The president and MPs during the 2016 budget reading
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni
H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni endorsing the budget

Kampala   11th June, 2015

H.E. the Vice President,

Rt. Hon. Speaker,

His Lordship, the Chief Justice,

Rt. Hon. Prime Minister,

The Hon. Alhaji Kigongo,

Ladies and gentlemen,

You have all heard the speech of the Minister of Finance. The NRM, over the last 29 years, has laid a basis for the metamorphosis of the economy and society of Uganda from a Third World one to a First World one in the coming years, the various obstacles notwithstanding. Some of the obstacles are conceptual ─ failure to prioritize, for instance. Other obstacles are moral ─ corruption of actors such as public servants or political leaders failing to supervise and discipline the civil servants. Other obstacles were historical ─ e.g. low levels of education, under-developed infrastructure, a narrow internal market occasioned by the colonial fragmentation of Africa. The NRM has, patiently, worked on all these bottlenecks.

Working with our brothers in Africa, we have revived the East African Community (EAC) and created the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA). This solves the problem of the market to some extent and enables us to negotiate more credibly for access to the foreign markets. Apart from the security challenges in the region that keep popping up (Eastern Congo, South Sudan, Somalia, CAR, etc.), the producers in Uganda and the region are now assured of the markets ─ regional and international.

The NRM has addressed the issue of the human resource development ─ education and health. The literacy rate was 43% in 1986. It has now gone up to 75% today. The mortality rate for infants in 1986 was 156 per 1,000 babies born alive. It is now 54 per 1,000 babies born alive. The average life expectancy was 43 years in 1986. It is now 58 years, today. The percentage of the people living below the poverty line was 56.4% in 1992/1993. This reduced to 19.7% in 2012/2013 (Statistics from the Uganda Bureau of Statistics). We could have achieved more if we were to fight corruption and my efforts in prioritizing expenditure were to get more support.

I want to salute the NRM Caucus and other positive leaders for supporting some of my prioritization measures since 2006 ─ the Conference we had in Statistics House. Since that time, as I pointed out in my State of the Nation Address, we have spent and we are planning to spend quite abit of our money on electricity generation, electricity transmission, the roads and scientific innovation in addition to all the other expenditures on the other sectors. This has had a marked impact on these sectors ─ electricity and roads ─ that form the base of the economy. When Ugandans are able to travel on a tarmac road from Oraba-Karuma-Kampala-Mbarara-Kabale to Kyanika/ Bunagana, a distance of 1,057 kms; then, from Oraba-Karuma-Kampala-Mbarara to Murongo bridge, a distance of 906 kms, respectively and from Malaba-Kampala-Fort-Portal-Lamia River a distance of 630 kms; Malaba-Kampala -Fort Portal to Mpondwe, a distance of 517kms respectively, I feel very pleased. Soon, Ugandans will be able to drive on a tarmac road from Nimule up to Kampala and from Moroto up to Kampala.

Concerning the electricity, as I pointed out in my State of the Nation Address the other day, with the completion of Karuma and Isimba, as well as the dozens of the mini-hydros, the geo-thermal, the planned thermal and co-generation efforts, our generation capacity will go from the present 840mgws to 1,974mgws by 2020. In the medium term, with the addition of Ayago, Kiba, Uhuru, etc. power stations, our generation will stand at 4,356mgws by 2035. That is still not enough for a modern economy but we will have moved a long way from our starting point of 60 mgws in 1986.

You all know of our plans with the railway. We have signed appropriate Memoranda of Understanding (MOUs) with the Chinese Company, CHEC, to design and build a Standard Gauge Railway from Malaba to Kampala, from Tororo to Nimule-Pakwach and from Kampala to Mpondwe and Mirama Hill on the Congo and Rwanda borders. Some of the roads are done with external support e.g. Arua-Oraba and Gulu-Atiak-Nimule. I salute the Partners who thus, assist us. These include the World Bank, the EU, the African Development Bank (ADB), the British Trade Mark, the Islamic Development Bank, etc., etc.

The economy of Uganda has, in the past 29 years grown at the rate of 6.6% per annum in spite of the electricity, road, rail, ICT backbone bottlenecks. After these bottlenecks are solved, the way we are solving them, the economy will grow at the rate of 7-10% per annum. This higher rate of growth will start in the year 2020. This takes into account efficiency improvements in infrastructure spending and coming on stream of oil production. However, even at the present rate of growth, Uganda will become a lower middle-income country by 2020 ─ i.e. in the next four years. That is when, Uganda will attain a GDP per capita of US$1,039. We are, at present, at US$788 per capita (2013/14) up from US$ 665 (2009/10) an increase of 18.5%. We could have achieved more if, for instance, we had spent less on wages and spent more on infrastructure. Out of our total Budget of Ug. Shs. 23,972 trillions, 2,894 (12%) trillions is spent on the Government Wage Bill. From our own Domestic Revenue of Ug. Shs. 11,333 trillion, wages would account for 26%. By even saving a quarter of this we would be able to build one and half tarmac roads of the Kampala-Masaka type per annum, where we spent Shs. 440 billion, in addition to whatever we are doing now.

Anyway, our Baganda people say: “Ekitatta Muhima, tekimumalako e’nte” ─ “As long as a Muhima has life, he will always have cattle even if some of those cattle died in big numbers; this is on account of his dedication”. Therefore, some disorientation, notwithstanding, the NRM is set to achieve its strategic goal of modernizing Uganda.

One area we are going to address, as I pointed out in my State of the Nation Address recently, is the area of value addition and manufacturing so that we earn more forex earnings.

As you heard the Minister of Finance saying, our GDP is now Ug. Shs. 75 trillions. If the exchange rate was at Shs. 2000, our GDP size in dollars would be USD38 billion. However, on account of a weakening shilling, the size of GDP in dollars, as you heard the Minister reading, is US$ 25 billion. By adding value to our raw-materials, our GDP in dollars will rapidly grow. If we use the other method of calculating GDP, the Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) method, the GDP of Uganda today is US$ 54 billion. Industrialization and value addition are, therefore, a must. Some people misunderstand the chain of production. When we say that we are spending about Shs. 500 billion on agriculture, some people think that this is not enough. However, when we spend Ug. Shs. 3,000 billion on the roads, that money assists agriculture first and foremost. How about Defence and Security? Can you have agriculture without peace? Therefore, please, take a wholistic view of the budget and not a fragmented view.

I thank the Minister and I thank all of you.

11th June, 2015

UICC

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Roads top budget priority list again

Matia Kasaijja
Matia Kasaijja
 Matia Kasaijja
Matia Kasaijja

The roads sector has for the fourth year running topped the priority areas of government spending which will amount to Shs 23,972 billion in the next financial year, half of which will go to ministries, Departments and Government Agencies.

Reading the budgetary estimates for the year 2015/16 under the theme ‘Maintaining Infrastructure Investment and Promoting Excellence in Public Service Delivery’, finance Minister Matia Kasaijja said roads had been apportioned 3.328.79 billion, representing a budgetary allocation of 18.2 per cent, for construction and rehabilitation.

The Minister disclosed that over the last five years, paved roads in the country had increased by 889 kilometres, while the kilometer coverage of reconstructed paved roads stood at 882.

He also said that out of the annual target of 250 km, a total of 167 kilometres of roads had been upgraded from gravel to tarmac, and announced the creation of a Road Reserve Protection Unit comprised of officers from the Uganda National Roads Authority (UNRA) and the police.

Following the Public Finance Management Act 2015, this is the first time the budget has been approved by Parliament before the financial year begins, and Kasaijja said this move will enhance financial discipline, ensure accountability and enhance reporting for public resources.

He announced that the Ugandan economy is currently valued at 75.183 trillion, about 25 billion dollars, 17 per cent bigger than it was previously estimated, and that the economy was expected to grow by 5.3% in the financial year 2015/16.

“The budget seeks to attain a better future for Uganda and is anchored on the Second National Development Plan (NDPII), launched earlier today. Allocations have been made to fund strategic choices that will drive the socio-economic transformation of the country into a middle income country” the 53-page budget release indicates in part.

Kasaijja, who was made finance minister in this year, also has good news for the men and women in uniform and other security agencies, apportioning a defence budget of over one trillion shillings (shs1.632.89bn) to cater for recruitment and training; acquisition of modern equipment; peacekeeping, defence diplomacy and conflict resolution; and improvement of welfare including accommodation, medical facilities and access to credit.

In order to achieve the fiscal goals, Kasaijja also announced that domestic revenues are expected to increase to Shs. 11,333 billion up from Shs. 9,799 billion, through interventions like increased passport fees and levies.

According to the Minister, passport fees have increased from 120.000 to Shs150.000, and increase of Shs30.000, while any person who wants to get a passport within 24 hours will part with Shs300.000.

Similarly, in respect to increasing the tax base, Mr Kasaijja announced a temporary increase of the ‘environmental levy’ on used motor vehicles from 20 to 35 per cent for vehicles of between 5-10 years (as at date of manufacture), while those vehicles above 10 years will attract a levy of 50 per cent. This levy excludes commercial vehicles.

On energy the minister said that electricity production had risen from 595MW in to 851MW in 2014, and that the government would address the pitfalls including high costs and unreliable power (outages), to enhance production.

Click here for the full details of the budget Speech

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Sarah Amin dead

Idi Amin (right)
Idi Amin (right)
Idi Amin (right)
Idi Amin (right)

Kampala-Sarah Kyolaba Amin, a wife to former president Idi Amin has passed away in London. She died today at Royal Free Hospital after battling with breast cancer for a long time. Kyolaba who went to exile has been running a restaurant.

Her husband Idi Amin also died in exile in Saudi Arabia in 2003 and was buried there.

More details later….
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Museveni makes changes in security

President Yoweri Museveni
President Yoweri Museveni
 President Yoweri Museveni
President Yoweri Museveni

Kampala-President Yoweri Museveni has made changes in security, dropping the long serving Director General of External Security Organisation (ESO) Robert Masolo.

Masolo has been seconded to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs where he will be deployed in the Foreign Service. Replacing Masolo is an Ambassador based in United Kingdom whom Eagle Online couldn’t readily establish. Masolo replaced Maku-Igga as DG-ESO.

Security Minister Mary Karooro Okurut confirmed the changes but she remained tight lipped on who else is affected. However, Eagle Online has reliably learnt that more changes are to be effected at the sister spy agency, the Internal Security Organisation (ISO).

“I am waiting for the letter (official communication) from the President. But he has performed his duties well and we wish well,” Minister Karooro said on phone.

An elusive and cagey spy, Masolo who has worked at the ESO for 8 years as Director General, joined the intelligence services in 1987, just fresh from Makerere University and interestingly, despite serving in top intelligence positions for over 25 years, no media house has his photo.

While appointing Masolo ESO DG in 2007, Museveni also confirmed Dr. Amos Mukumbi as the Director General of the sister spy agency, the Internal Security Organisation (ISO), deputized by the current Director General Brig Ronnie Balya. Mukumbi has since been appointed Senior Presidential Advisor on Security.

What role does ESO play?

ESO is charged with gathering foreign intelligence and monitoring Uganda citizens abroad who pose a security threat to the country. The agency is also mandated to monitor all foreigners coming to Uganda and foreign investments and advise government accordingly.

rwanambwa@eagle.co.ug

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Rapper Keko loses Sony music deal

keko
keko
keko
keko

Rapper Keko has lost her lucrative deal with leading global music promoters Sony.  Sony Music Entertainment Africa in South Africa had signed Keko in 2012 to the first local music industry’s biggest contracts, guaranteeing her an undisclosed amount of dollars.

But after disappointing sales of her first album, Sony Music Entertainment Africa decided to review the contract with rapper Keko in order to cut its losses.

“I don’t want another Sony Album. Save that for those that deserve it,” Keko posted on her tweet.

Other young female African artistes signed up by Sony Music Entertainment Africa recently include South Africa’s Toya Delazy and Kenyan Xtatic.

The cancellation is the latest setback for Keko, the 20-plus award winning rapper who has battled highly publicized emotional and career problems in the past years, with claims that many of her competitors wanted to bring her down.

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Kamuntu to grace Climate Day commemoration

Kamuntu to grace Climate Day commemoration
Kamuntu to grace Climate Day commemoration
Kamuntu to grace Climate Day commemoration
Kamuntu to grace Climate Day commemoration

As climate change continues to pose a big threat to industrialised countries, there are several on-going interventions to ensure that the challenge is overcome.

So, as part of the remedial action, in 2014 Germany, France, the United Kingdom and the European Union initiated the Climate Diplomacy Day, to draw attention to the negative impacts of global warming on food security, the availability of drinking water, public health and geopolitical insecurity.

Not to be left out, on Wednesday, June 17 Uganda will join the commemoration by holding a ‘discussion’ featuring prominent personalities including the Minister of Water and Environment Professor Ephraim Kamuntu,.

Other panellists at the function at Protea Hotel in Kampala’s leafy Kololo suburb include the Director of Budget in the Ministry of Finance Patrick Ocailap, Jennifer Musisi, the Executive Director Kampala Capital City Authority (KCCA); Martin Owor, the Commissioner Disaster Preparedness in the Office of the Prime Minister; David Duli, the Country Director World Wide Fund (WWF) and Kenneth Katungisa from the Uganda National Farmers Federation (UNFF).

The other activity is an exhibition to be held at the National Theatre Gardens, featuring musical performances by Bebe Cool and Navio.

According to a release, this year’s activities specially focus on informed debates, ‘in view of securing a fair, ambitious and legally binding international agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCC) at the 2015 Conference of Parties in Paris (COP21)’.

Meanwhile, as Uganda joins in the commemoration, some efforts have been geared up to stem the ravaging climate change effects, with the National Environment Authority, (NEMA) recently banning the use of polythene bags (kaveera) of less than 30 microns.

However, the destruction of wetlands in and around Kampala has remained a huge challenge, with real estate developers devastating the ecosystem through erratic environment-degrading activities.

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Increased agricultural financing is the way out of rural poverty in Africa

Globalization, market and poverty in South Africa
Globalization, market and poverty in South Africa
Globalization, market and poverty in South Africa
Globalization, market and poverty in South Africa

Many countries in Africa depend on agriculture as the main economic activity, with over 80 per cent of the rural populations tilling the land for a living.

However, the sector is poorly financed across several countries, rendering most of the rural masses incapable of having even two meals a day. Twelve years ago, at the second Ordinary Assembly of the African Union in Maputo, Mozambique, the session of Heads of State and Government in 2003 adopted the ‘Maputo Declaration on Agriculture’, with a commitment to allocate 10 per cent of the individual states ‘national budgetary resources to agriculture development and rural development policy implementation’.

But unfortunately, to date there is no indicator the sector has received or benefitted from the necessary boost, because the continent is still the biggest recipient of food aid, even as it has the most virgin soils that are capable of producing adequate quantities of food.

There are several challenges the people in the rural areas encounter, including having little or no food, making forays into the agriculture production sector non-conducive for the rural folk and this has led some youthful and energetic people to resort to rural-to-urban migration, to fend for an ‘easier living’. However, since we are a developing continent, this is a development governments in Africa must find a way of reversing before the situation determines otherwise.

In Uganda in particular, there are reports that young men are selling off land in the rural areas to come to Kampala and engage in the commercial motorcycle business, commonly referred to as boda boda riding. This is unacceptable, as in most cases such ventures have proven less sustainable in comparison to agriculture. Further afield in agriculture, there is also need for scrutiny and increased financing of the fish and livestock industries, to pave the way for production for individual countries’ export potentiality and improved household dietary conditions of the citizenry. It is the energy derived from these interventions that will in turn lead to increased agricultural production and individual household and national incomes.

‘A healthy nation is a wealthy nation’, so the adage goes.

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Massa ready for leadership role

Massa (in Red) will lead out Cranes against Botswana
Massa (in Red) will lead out Cranes against Botswana
Massa (in Red) will lead out Cranes against Botswana (courtesy photo)

AFCON 2017 QUALIFIER – Saturday

Uganda v Botswana

Venue: Namboole Stadium

Charges: 20,000/-, 50,000/- and 120,000/-

Geoffrey Massa has heard nothing to make him nervous wearing the captain’s armband for Uganda Cranes.

Cranes kick start their 2017AFCON qualifying campaign this Saturday against Bostwana with Massa as skipper deputizing in the suspended Andy Mwesigwa absence.

“Being captain of my nation is something is a massive honour, but nothing will change about my attitude with the armband or not.” Massa said.

“It’s just one of those things you have to deal with,” he added.

Last year, Massa captained Uganda against Togo (away), recently in a friendly game against Nigeria and Tuesday’s build-up game with Gambia at Namboole stadium.

Coach Milutin ‘Micho’ Sredojevic has stated how impressed and hailed the striker’s leadership qualities.

“He talks, he’s loved by teammates and he will give the team 100 percent” Micho noted.

Recently the Cranes striker joined Premier Soccer League Bloemfontein Celtic from the University of Pretoria on a three-year contract.

Meanwhile Botswana (The Zebras) team is expected to arrive on today (Wednesday) evening at 7:05pm for the AFCON 2017 qualifier against Uganda this coming Saturday.

Uganda Cranes warmed up for the upcoming AFCON 2017 qualifier against Botswana Zebras with a one all draw against Gambia in international friendlyon Tuesday.

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Does Uganda need a ‘bloated’ Parliament?

The Parliament of Uganda has over three hundred elected representatives of the people.

The MPs represent counties and are elected for a five-year term to make laws. However, the have instead taken to attending burials, weddings, fundraisings, in the process almost negating their core responsibilities that also include playing an oversight role by holding the executive accountable.

The number of bills pending debate in the august house is alarming, yet these people continue to drain our coffers through untimely monetary increases with reckless abandon.

During their initial days in the House, members of the Ninth Parliament indicated they would be a different breed of leaders; a group determined to serve the electorate. It worked for some time.

But in a strange twist, their raw instincts were manifested; first, they got money for cars, a whopping 130 million. Then came the clamour for increased remuneration, a development that sent Ugandans up in arms to protest against the offensive greed. The MPs back-pedalled but did not drop the idea altogether.

Now in their last year, the MPs revived their interest and in what appeared as a well-calculated ruse when the Parliamentary Commission first announced increases in remuneration for the staff at Parliament.

Then the big ‘heist’; they also announced their other chance of raiding the treasury for a 40 per cent increase on their travel allowances, orchestrated through a supposed increase in fuel prices.

The Ministry of Finance should scrutinize this recent ploy and act responsibly because the move is plain annoying, and surely the country doesn’t need people who behave like leeches!

But what is more annoying is that their level of debate is also suspect; this revelation was made by none other than the Deputy Speaker Jacob Oulanyah, who sometime back decried the MPs poor debating standards in the House.

So, the question stands: Do we need a bloated Parliament?

Over to you Mr Taxpayer

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Mbabazi ‘joins’ opposition coalition

Amama Mbabazi
Amama Mbabazi
Amama Mbabazi

In what appears as the latest and clearest indicator of former Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi’s political roadmap, his diehard sister-in-law Hope Mwesigye Ruhindi today, June 10 attended a meeting convened by the opposition to hammer out modalities of selecting a joint flag bearer for the 2016 elections.

Sources that attended the meeting intimated to the eagleonline that Ms Mwesigye, the fiery former Minister of Agriculture, Animal Industry and Fisheries, represented Mr Mbabazi at the meeting.

Mr Mbabazi has until now not come out openly to discuss his future political plans after he was relieved of his powerful posts both in government and the ruling party, the National Resistance Movement.

Last September Mr Mbabazi was sacked from the post of Prime Minister, following accusations by some NRM supporters that he was nurturing presidential ambitions. Later in December Mr Mbabazi, a long-time ally of NRM chairman Yoweri Museveni was also relieved of his duties as the party Secretary General. This move prompted questions from Mr Mbabazi’s supporters and also created anxiety in the general public as to the former premier’s next political move.

The ‘Mbabazi Question’ first sprung to national attention last February at a party retreat in Kyankwanzi, when he belatedly endorsed the sole candidature of President Yoweri Museveni as the NRM flag bearer. Since then there has been talk of his ambition to become president, but the man from Kinkiizi has kept the cards close to his chest, leaving many Ugandans anxious.

And, now with election temperatures rising even before the Electoral Commission declares the beginning of campaigns, his ‘representative’ Ms Mwesigye and officials from seven opposition political parties, civil society organisations and political activists convened at Hotel Africana in upscale Kampala under a new loose coalition dubbed the ‘Democratic Alliance’, to deliberate on how to oust the National Resistance Movement (NRM) government from power in next year’s elections.

 The Democratic Alliance meeting drew officials from the Forum for Democratic Change (FDC), Democratic Party (DP), Uganda Peoples Congress (UPC) and the Conservative Party (CP), Justice, Education, Economic Revitalization, Morality and African Unity (JEEMA), the Peoples Progressive Party (PPP) of former NRM Minister Jaberi Bidandi Ssali and sources said the individuals would reconvene to concretise their political deliberations at a later date.

Others who attended the meeting included former Vice President Professor Gilbert Balibaseeka Bukenya, former NRM stalwart Joseph Mulwanyamuli Ssemwogerere, who represented pressure group Ssuubi, and political activists Godber Tumushabe and retired Anglican bishop Zac Niringiye.

This development comes in the wake of another meeting convened in Nairobi, Kenya early last week, where leading opposition figures met for the umpteenth time to chart ways of fielding a joint presidential candidate.

Efforts to get further details from Bishop Niringiye were futile, but a source that attended said the Hotel Africana meeting was a follow-up of the one in Nairobi where, the opposition stalwarts also reportedly deliberated on how to strengthen the push for political reforms ahead of the 2016 elections.

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