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UNEB to release UACE results on Friday

The Uganda National Examination Board (UNEB) has confirmed that the 2022 Uganda Advanced Certificate of Education (UACE) exam results will be released on Friday, March 3, 2023.

The State Minister for Higher Education, John Chrysostom Muyingo, yesterday assured that exams will be released on Friday at 11 am.

Just like other results, UACE will also be released at the State Lodge in Nakasero.

Officials from the examinations board are therefore expected to brief the Minister of Education today about how the 2022 senior six candidates performed.

A total of 97,890 candidates sat for the 2022 UACE examinations.

The examinations were conducted under the theme “Integrity and Security in the Management of Examinations: The Health and Safety of Learners is a Joint Responsibility.”

In the previous exam released, UNEB registered an improvement in performances. In the Primary Leaving Exams (PLE), for instance, a total of 114,617 (representing 12.1%) passed in the division in 2022 compared to 81,864 (representing 11%) in the same division in 2020.

However, it is also important to note that there was an increase in the number of candidates who registered for PLE exams.

UNEB reported a reduction in the failure rate after the candidates who sat for the 2022 Uganda Certificate of Education (UCE) posted better performance than their colleagues who sat for the same examinations in 2020.

The UNEB executive director, Daniel Odongo noted that there was an improvement in performance of candidates this year given an increase in the number of candidates who passed in division one and others consecutively.

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Mohammad Danish appointed new Liberty Life Assurance Uganda CEO

Mohammad Danish Eqbal has been appointed as the new Chief Executive Officer & Principal Officer for Liberty Life Assurance Uganda.

The new boss, who will be working closely with Joe Almeida the Managing Director, has also assumed the role of Chief Data & Innovation Officer for LLAU, the company said on Wednesday. 

“Liberty Life Assurance Uganda is pleased to announce the appointment of our new Chief Executive Officer & Principal Officer, Mohammad Danish Eqbal. We are excited to have Danish join our team and lead our organization into the future. He is also assuming the role of Chief Data & Innovation Officer for LLAU,” a statement reads.

The statement added, “Danish’s appointment comes at a time of great opportunity and growth for our Company, and we are excited about the future. We believe that his strategic vision and leadership will be instrumental in achieving our goals, taking us to newer heights and ensuring the long-term success of our company.”

Danish is a chartered management accountant (ACMA, CGMA), MBA Gold medalist (NIA), Insurance Fellow (FIII, FLMI), PMI certified (PMP), Gold certified Tata Business Excellence Assessor (TBEM), and holds advanced certifications in Data Science & Finance from IIT Madras & XLRI. He is also an 3AI Analytics & AI Thought Leader and Influencer.

Danish brings along a wealth of experience and expertise in the Insurance sector, having demonstrated exceptional leadership, strategic planning & execution, innovation, and business excellence in his previous roles at organizations of high repute – Tata, AIA, Aviva & Dai-ichi.

 “Welcome aboard, Danish! We are thrilled to have you as our new CEO and look forward to working together to drive our company forward and deliver sustained value to our customers and stakeholders.”

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“I didn’t ask for iron sheets”- Matia Kasaija

Finance Minister Matia Kasaija

The Minister of Finance, Planning, and Economic Development Matia Kasaija has revealed that he never applied for the iron sheets from the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM).

Appearing before the Presidential Affairs Committee of Parliament, Kasaija said he received 300 pieces of iron sheets but he didn’t know that they were meant for the impoverished people in Karamoja.

“I have never applied for iron sheets. I got them. Some called me and said that the office of the prime minister is donating iron sheets and we have some which I will bring you to sign and the next thing is iron sheets were delivered,” he said.

“Even now, I have a bundle of 300 iron sheets and I don’t know why they were delivered to my home in Kampala? They are in my compound.  The other ones I took, I was told that were meant to support my constituency and I gave 450 iron sheets to a school and the balance is still in my store in Kibaale and I am looking for who else to give,” he said.

He said please crucify me knowing that I am innocent. The iron sheets found themselves in my compound. I follow the Constitution. These questions should be focused on the Office of the Prime Minister. We are victims. I never asked for these iron sheets.

Kasaija is among the top ministers who benefited from the iron sheets which were allegedly meant for people in Karamoja. The ministers involved in the scandal include; Rebecca Kadaga, Jacob Oboth Oboth, Hamson Obua, Amos Lugolobi and sundry.

 In a February 22, 2023, tweet, Rebecca Kadaga, the first deputy prime minister of Uganda, confirmed she requested and received 250 iron sheets from the OPM.

Last month, security operatives nabbed Cotilda Kitutu, Michael Nabwaya, and Julius Wabule. The accused are the mother, brother, and nephew of Minister Kitutu, the Karamoja Affairs Minister.

The three were allegedly selling OPM-branded iron sheets to residents of Namisindwa district, in eastern Uganda.

According to the Observer, Kitutu had requested 12,200 iron sheets to aid her in community mobilization and peace-building missions in Karamoja. Her January 12, 2023, internal memo to the stores’ department at the OPM read in part, “During community mobilization and peace-building missions, I usually meet vulnerable groups and karuchunas (reformed warriors) who are willing to dissociate themselves from rustling. As part of my intervention, I will be distributing iron sheets to such special vulnerable groups.”

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Tayebwa urges developing countries to reject unfair trade orchestrated by the EU

The Deputy Speaker of the Ugandan Parliament Thomas Tayebwa has asked developing countries to jointly reject unfair trade and deceitful practices orchestrated by the European Union against others countries.

Speaking at the Organization of African, Caribbean, and Pacific (ACP) parliamentary conference happening in the Belgian capital, Brussels, which is the headquarters of the European Union and NATO, Tayebwa condemned the practice by EU Member States of exporting EU-banned pesticides and products to developing countries and asked OACP member states to strongly speak as a team against this double-standard arrangement citing the “vulnerability we all have”.

Tayebwa who led the Ugandan delegation to Brussels said that developing countries don’t have the capacity to take on the EU independently, noting that “speaking against this with one voice gives us an advantage”.

“We aren’t able to take on this giant (European Union) independently. Even the EU didn’t do it alone, they came as a group and we should also act as a group and reject this unfairness,” he said.

“We are telling the EU to be transparent, we are all human beings. We all have red blood. You don’t have blue blood and for us, we have red blood. The milk that kills a European, can kill an African. The pesticides that can cause cancer in European, can cause cancer in the Caribbean.  Why are you allowing dangerous products to be manufactured in your union and exported to other countries? Stop it,” Tayebwa said,

He added that some of these poisonous products such as milk are sent by the European Union to poor countries in form of donations to poor children and refugees.

“If you send them to a refugee, someone who has nothing to eat or drink, how will you tell them about sovereignty?” the Ugandan deputy speaker said, noting that some of these products come through the UN system and that they are cleared directly to beneficiaries.

Tayebwa said most countries where EU-made poisonous products and exported have no safety bodies to carry out their own tests. 

“Pesticides and products that are no longer allowed for use in countries where they are manufactured in the European Union due to their potentially harmful human health and environmental impacts are being pushed to our countries,” Tayebwa said. “It’s unfair for anyone to allow a cancer-causing product to be manufactured as long as it’s for export to other countries.”

He said the OACP would pass a regulation tasking the European Parliament to revise its own mechanisms on the matter.

The practice by manufacturers of continuing to export chemicals from the EU after they have been banned domestically is not new, but the key players have always been obscured by a veil of commercial confidentiality.

One of the few restrictions placed on these exporters is the Rotterdam Convention on international trade in hazardous pesticides and chemicals. This UN convention requires countries to share information about the dangers of their banned chemical exports with the importing countries.

The idea is to give poor countries that do not have the resources to do their own research the opportunity to make an informed decision on whether to accept the exports.

Under EU rules, any company that wants to export banned chemicals needs to produce an “export notification” detailing the reasons the product is banned, its intended uses, and the amount the company intends to ship. National and EU regulators check these documents and issue them to authorities in the destination countries.

Gladys Boss Shollei, the Deputy Speaker of the National Assembly of Kenya said trade agreement is about good faith and ensuring that it’s fair to everyone.

“Our argument is that, if the European Union and the UK are allowing cancer-causing pesticides to be manufactured in their own countries, exclusively to be exported to African countries, that’s not an act of good faith,” Ms. Shollei.

We are asking that they should stop the manufacture of those harmful chemicals that are being sent to Kenya and other parts of Africa to kill our people,” she added. 

She said the EU has a trade agreement that protects its people from harmful pesticides but “has laws that allow the banned chemicals to come into Africa.”

Cecilia Barbara Atim Ogwal, the Woman MP for Dokolo District accused the EU of double standards.

“Their law says you can continue making dangerous chemicals as long as you don’t sell them in Europe. You can make the chemicals also purposely for export.  We feel this is bad and an indirect way of eliminating Africa,” she said.

She says the European Union should make a commitment they stop exporting hazardous substances to developing countries.

Escipion Joaquin Oliveira Gomez, the Assistant Secretary General of the OACP said the conference seeks to ensure that the new laws and regulations that are drafted by the European Union should conform to acceptable standards including protecting the environment in other parts of the world.

Mr. Soobeersingh Dhunoo, the Deputy Chief Whip in Mauritius said most countries in the Global South don’t have mechanisms to test products that are entering their markets.

“People are dying in Mauritius because of these products,” he said, adding that “we raised these issues to them in Maputo when we had our joint parliamentary assembly and we had the support of some European parliamentarians who equally agreed that something banned in Europe is also not good for Africa. We are all humans”.

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Uganda to Host 14th East African Procurement Forum and Business Expo in March 2023


Under the theme “Open Contracting as a Vehicle for Sustainable Development,” the four-day event will take place between 23rd and 26th March 2023 at Kololo Grounds.The forum will be hosted by The Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Authority (PPDA) who will welcome partner procurement regulatory bodies including The Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (PPRA) of Kenya, The Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (PPRA) of Tanzania, the Rwanda Public Procurement Authority, Agence de Regulation des Marches Public (ARMP) of Burundi, Agence de Regulation des Marches Public (ARMP) of DRC, and the Procurement Regulatory Authority of Southern Sudan. Together, these regulatory bodies oversee over 200,000 suppliers with a combined procurement market size estimated at over $100 billion USD annually.


The EAPF draws over 300 delegates annually from the public sector, private sector, professional organizations, development partners, and civil society from the partner states of the EAC and other public procurement players from the African continent and across the globe. This gathering of senior procurement, purchasing, sourcing, and supply chain executives aims at sharing knowledge and consolidating efforts towards improving public procurement practice in the region.


For the first time ever, this gathering will include the East African Business Expo, whichis expected to attract over 500 business exhibitors seeking to do business with government institutions and international agencies in the EAC. The four-day business expo, running alongside the forum, will include exhibitions, panel sessions, networking events, and cultural exchanges, all aimed at helping businesses network, connect, and grow their market in the East African region.


Originally scheduled for November 2022, the 14th EAPF was moved to March 2023 due to Ministry of Health guidance on the Ebola virus situation, which has since been contained.


The breakfast meeting is part of a series of networking events leading up to the main event in March. It will be officiated by Hon. Rebecca Kadaga, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for East African Community Affairs, and will feature remarks from Hon. Matia Kasaija, Minister of Finance, Planning, and Economic Development. The invited heads of corporate and public institutions will also be briefed on available sponsorship opportunities.


Overall, the 14th Annual East African Procurement Forum and East African Business Expo promises to be an exceptional opportunity for businesses to connect, network, and grow their market in the East African region.

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Uganda unveils digital technology plan at Mobile World Congress in Barcelona

Dr. Chris Baryomunsi, the Minister of ICT and National Guidance, has assured that Uganda is fast-tracking the digitization of every sector of the economy, including education, health, and agriculture.

Speaking at the Mobile World Congress (MWC 2023) in Barcelona, Spain, on Monday, February 2023, Dr. Baryomunsi said the Ugandan government is also planning to implement cloud computing and establish a national data lab to enable seamless access to information on all government ministries, agencies, and programmes.

“These days we generate a lot of data as a country and we don’t want to be part of the countries that generate a lot of data but store it outside their countries,” Dr. Baryomunsi said, detailing Uganda’s digital journey in relation to accelerating public service delivery. 

“We know as a country that we can’t transform unless ICT is put at the centre of key areas such as health, education, agriculture,” he said, noting that all the sectors of public life must embrace technology in order for the country to have accelerated transformation.

The Uganda Vision 2040 identifies ICT among the key fundamentals as well as an opportunity to spur Uganda’s transformation into a modern and prosperous country.

Dr Baryomunsi said ICT is now Uganda’s fastest-growing sector and is also a major driver to Uganda’s middle-income status.

He explained that in building robust ultra-high speed, intelligent, and trusted high-speed ICT infrastructure all over the country, the government has worked towards expanding the nation’s digitalization in a number of fields, in order to unleash the multiplier effect of ICT on associated secondary and tertiary industries for tremendous impact on the economy.

The Mobile World Congress (MWC 2023) is taking place at the Fira de Barcelona Convention Centre and ends on March 2.

But it has now resumed and this year’s edition is being attended by more than 80,000 industry experts, researchers, business leaders, and executives as well as over 2000 exhibitors and sponsors demonstrating their innovations.

The exhibition technology in smart homes, smart offices, cloud solutions, and safe and smart cities.

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Lt. Col Peter Okwi Omeja takes over Command of United Nations Guard Unit in Somalia

The Uganda Peoples’ Defence Forces serving under the United Nations Guard Unit in Somalia has witnessed a handover of command from Lt Col Peter Magungu the outgoing commander of UNGU VIII to Lt Col Peter Okwi Omeja the incoming commander of UNGU IX.

The ceremony was presided over by the Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General (DSRSG) Her Excellency Anita Kiki Gbeho and witnessed by the Deputy Commander Land Forces (DCLF) of the Uganda people’s Defence Forces (UPDF) Maj Gen Francis Takirwa.

H.E Anita commended the UNGU VIII for the level of professionalism, sacrifice, steadfastness, courage, and dedication that they exhibited in ensuring that the safety and security of the UN staff were guaranteed amidst the security challenges and extremists threats.

 The DSRSG was happy to note that out of the troops deployed, 93 of them are women which is a very big milestone in recognizing gender attributes.

 Maj Gen Takirwa commended the commanders and troops for the resilience, commitment, and discipline they exhibited which made command and control easy.

“I challenged the incoming UNGU IX troops to maintain discipline, patience, and commitment as the only way to attain great heights and good health,” Gen. Takirwa said.

The DCLF cautioned the incoming UNGU IX Commander to work closely with his subordinates and mentor them so that they become better leaders at the end of their tour of duty.

 Maj Gen Takirwa however advised the troops to plan wisely on how to invest their allowances profitably and save part of it with UPDF Wazalendo Sacco where they are assured of profits from their dividends every year with fewer risks.

 The UPDF Contingent Commander Serving under African Transition Mission In Somalia (ATMIS) Brig Gen Peter Gaetano Omola encouraged UNGU IX Commander to pay attention to the orientation he has been given and perfect the key areas crucial to the continuity of the mission and mandate of UNGU.

“Emulate the values of UNGU VIII and get good results at the end of your tour of duty,” said Brig Gen Omola.

The ceremony was attended by the UN Principal Security Advisor (PSA) UNSOS Mr. Joseph Katuramu, Commanders and Staff Officers of UPDF Contingent serving at ATMIS, UNGU VIII and UNGU IX among others.

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IMF welcomes Ruto’s step to increase taxes in order to rescue Kenya’s economy

President William Ruto

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) has pledged support for Kenyan President William Ruto’s proposal for revenue mobilization, which calls for hiking taxes, going after tax evaders, and broadening the tax base, despite its worries about the high cost of living in the nation.

Kenya aims to have tax collections over 17.8% of GDP in 2023 and above 18% of GDP throughout the medium term.

Tobias Rasmussen, the IMF’s resident representative in Kenya, remarked that rising prices for necessities hurt people worldwide and urged that Kenya should provide aid to those most in need while limiting the budget deficit.

“This calls for increased revenue mobilization and targeted interventions, such as cash transfers to the poor. The IMF-supported program in Kenya strongly emphasizes these areas,” he said.

He also added to that noting that “the IMF has welcomed the new administration’s firm stance on reducing debt risks, backed by strong actions to preserve fiscal discipline in a difficult environment,” the representative is quoted as saying via a statement.

Nairobi has set its sights on Ksh3 trillion ($24 billion) in revenue collection by the Kenya Revenue Authority (KRA) in the 2023–2024 fiscal year and Ksh4 trillion over the medium term through tax administrative and policy changes. This is all part of Kenya’s goal to turn around its economy.

According to the Kenyan Government Budget Policy Statement of 2023, they include expanding the tax base by including the informal sector, which has an estimated potential of Ksh2.8 trillion ($22.4 billion) and taxing rental properties.

Following worries over potential under-declaration on transactions, the Kenyan National Treasury has also suggested integrating the KRA tax system with telecommunications firms to monitor mobile money transactions in real time.

Additional approaches include utilising technology and improved data analytics by Customs and Border Control. President William Ruto reintroduced a plan to tax Kenya’s super-rich and high incomes more heavily last year.

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URA to tax mobile money, bank agents in new tax regime

Mr. Musinguzi, URA Commissioner General.

The Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) has asked Bank of Uganda to compel commercial banks and mobile money companies to publish lists of their agents to enable the effective tax collection.

According to URA Commissioner General John Musinguzi, many banking and mobile money agents aren’t registered for taxes.

“In a bid to ensure tax compliance, we appeal to you to ensure that all commercial banks and mobile money financial service providers operating digital wallets register for taxes in accordance with the law and require them to regularly publish and update the lists of their banking and mobile money agents on their websites,” Mr Musinguzi letter dated February 23, 2023, reads in part.

 Musinguzi said their analysis of the banking and mobile money financial services has found out that many agents aren’t registered for taxes.

Mobile money agents are supposed to earn a commission per transaction they make. The URA takes six per cent on each commission transacted as withdrawing tax. Financial agencies collect the money and remit it to the tax collectors.

URA Assistant Commissioner for Public Corporate Affairs Ibrahim Bbosa said some tax agents don’t have TIN numbers.

He said they want to know the person the financial service provider is withdrawing tax from for proper accountability.

Mr Richard Yego, MTN Mobile Money Chief Executive Officer, promised to comply with the URA directive.

“We have been withdrawing. It is just we have not been attaching the TIN (Tax Identification Number)….,” Mr Yego said adding that before it was not a requirement.

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Court dismisses Francis Onebe’s bail application

High Court has for the second time dismissed City businessman Francis Onebe’s bail application. Onebe is accused of killing his wife Immaculate Asio Onebe.

The 62-year-old proprietor of a security firm, whose body was retrieved from a septic tank at their residence in Munyonyo, went missing in January 2021.

Appearing before Justice Michael Elubu, his application was dismissed on grounds that although Onebe is of old age with t hypertension it is not enough for the court to release him on bail.

“Justice can only be served when the suspect is brought to trial expeditiously,” Elubu ruled.

Onebe was arrested after police established his intentions to flee the country. But upon arrest, Onebe said he was traveling for treatment, and his earlier reasons to travel to Nairobi also indicated appointments with doctors.

The arrest also followed the nabbing of a former security guard of Onebe who sneaked into the home. It is averred that the guard identified as Okariot disappeared moments after Onebe’s wife went missing.

On November 19, 2021, through his lawyers led by Moses Ingura, Onebe applied for bail on grounds that he is suffering from chronic prostate cancer, and high blood pressure saying they are ailments associated with advanced age. He is 63 years old.

Onebe said he is a man with a number of responsibilities including being an executive director of companies such as Pentagon Security Limited which employs more than 2,000 Ugandan citizens and being a managing partner of Price and King, an audit firm employing more than 30 people.

Onebe who also said he is the non-Executive Director Board Member of Post Bank Uganda added that his services are highly required for the survival of the said companies and he cannot render them while in prison.

He also presented his sister Dr. Jennifer Rose Aduwo, the Dean of the School of Distance Learning and Information Technology at Uganda Management Institute, his Price and King Audit Managing Partner Robert Mukasa, village mates Pascal Achelu and John Francis Olume Igwoko as his sureties such that he can be granted bail.

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