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Court dismisses Francis Onebe’s bail application

Onebe in Court

High Court has dismissed Francis Onebe’s bail application. Onebe is accused of killing his wife Immaculate Asio Onebe, the 64 year old whose body was retrieved from a septic tank at their residence in Munyonyo, after she went missing in January 2021.

Appearing before Justice Paul Gadenya, Onebe’s application was dismissed on grounds that he might interfere with the investigations.

Court ruled that Onebe is a flight risk, has a permanent place of residence in Nairobi and that he is a very influential person who owns an armed security company, where some of the witnesses are supposed to come from.

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, 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 Members 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 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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Education Ministry warns schools against forceful #Covid-19 testing of students

Covid-19 testing kits

The Ministry of Education and Sports, together with the Ministry of Health have warned schools against forceful testing of students for Covid-19 when the learners return to school starting Monday January 10th, 2022.

In his New Year address to the nation on 31st December 2021, President Museveni said all schools will open on January 10 and he tasked the responsible Ministries to come up with measures for safe reopening.

Ministry of Heath has received information that some schools are directing students to do Covid-19 tests before reporting to schools; and that other schools have actually pre-positioned private laboratories to test students on arrival at the cost of students.

“Ministry of health would like to advise that testing of pupils/students on admission or before arrival is not the official position of the Covid-19 National Task Force. The National Covid-19 guidelines for safe reopening of schools that were jointly developed by MOES and MOH provide specific guidance on how learners will safely return to schools,” part of the statement from the ministry reads.

“Testing learners on arrival was not one of the recommendations.”

The major recommendations in the guidelines were based on three pillars; Putting in place a system for strict compliance to Covid19 Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) in every school.

Secondly, establishing a system for monitoring and isolating symptomatic cases in every school and reporting to the nearest health facility. Following this, if possible found necessary to test all learners in school because of soaring numbers, MoH undertakes to do so; not the private laboratories.

Lastly, in all schools, the staff and parents shall work closely with the communities and nearby health facilities to address Covid-19 issues in the school.

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Kakwenza’s Case: Lawyers file a fresh Habeas Corpus order with High Court

Kakwenza Rukirabashaija

The detained Ugandan novelist Kakwenza Rukira-Bashaija’s lawyers led by Luyimbazi Nalukoola have filed a fresh Habeas Corpus order with the High Court registry.

The lawyers said the detainee deserves to have his day in court, having spent more than the stipulated 48 hours in custody.

Kakwenza was arrested last week at Kisasi after a three days twitter feud with supporters of UPDF Land forces commander Muhoozi Kainerugaba. Kakwenza averred that Muhoozi’s supporters were allegedly bullying him for criticizing President Museveni.

Mr Charles Twiine, the Criminal Investigations Directorate (CID) Spokesperson said the Kakwenza Rukirabashaija will be arraigned before Court for allegedly insulting President Kaguta Museveni and the first son Gen Muhoozi Kainerugaba.

On January 4, 2022 Makindye Grade One Magistrates Court ordered for the immediate release of Kakwenza from Police Custody but it was not obeyed.

Rukirabashaija is the author of the novel The Greedy Barbarian, which takes on themes of high-level corruption in a fictional country. He was arrested on 13 April 2020 in Uganda, and held for seven days, during which time he was interrogated about his fiction and subjected to torture and later released. Rukirabashaija details this treatment in his latest work Banana Republic: Where Writing is Treasonous.

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Vipers duo scoop December UPL awards

Head coach Robertinho and Manzoki receive accolades

Vipers Sports Club Head Coach Oliveira Robertinho and striker Caeser Manzoki have won the Pilsner Uganda Premier League monthly awards for the month of December 2021.

Oliviera Robertinho won the UPL Manager of December beating competition from Express’ Wasswa Bbosa Alex Isabirye of BUL FC.

Manzoki claimed the player of the month award. The Congolese striker emerger as the winner beating competitions from BUL FC’s Nsimbe Ibra and Juma Balinya of Police FC.

Coach Oliviera guided the team to 4 wins and one draw from the five games played claiming a total of 13 points from a possible 15.

Manzoki scored five goals in the five games against KCCA, Busoga United, Tooro and UPDF scooping two man of the match awards in the process.

They were rewarded one million Ugandan shillings each.

Pilsner Lager entered into a partnership with the Uganda Premier League to award the competition’s best players and coaches.

The awards are named ‘Pilsner man of the match award’ and the monthly awards named ‘Pilsner player of the month award’ and ‘Pilsner coach of the month award’.

The Pilsner man of the match walks away with one hundred thousand shillings (Ugx 100,000) after every match while monthly winners one million shillings each.

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Safety tips on how to keep your child safe from sexual abuse

Most parents worry about how to protect their children in a world that sometimes seems so dangerous. As with any other danger, protecting our kids from risk starts with understanding those risks. For instance, parents often think a discussion about “stranger danger” is sufficient to protect kids from sexual abuse, but 85 to 90 percent of sexual abuse is perpetuated by someone the child knows and trusts – a parent, step-parent, coach, teacher, older cousin or sibling, religious leader, or babysitter.

In most cases, we tend to assume children are safe as long as we don’t leave them unsupervised with adults we don’t know well, but several studies have found that the average age of most sex offenders is 14, so risk exists any time children. That may seem extreme, but in fact, sexual abuse is a risk for every child. Many researchers estimate that one out of four girls and one out of six boys will encounter unwanted sexual touching of some sort before age 18.

Parents often wonder when to begin talking with children about this issue. The answer is that prevention begins with how we talk with our children about their bodies from infancy on.

Uganda Police shares some basic tips to guide you in educating your child to prevent sexual abuse.

1. Teaching Children Body Safety

Use a story as a tool to begin a conversation with your child.

Add a couple of the books in the list below to your child’s bookshelf and read them periodically. Use them as a jumping off point to ask questions to reinforce the message.

2. Teach children the correct terms for their body parts.

Teach children the correct terms for their body parts as soon as they can talk. If a child is touched inappropriately, they need to be able to clearly communicate to you or anyone else in authority about what happened. The correct name also lessens shame around sexuality. Can you imagine if your knee was just referred to as “down there”?

3. Teach your child that the parts that go under a swimsuit — their penis, vulva, vagina, bottom, breasts and nipples — are called their ‘private parts.”

No one touches their private parts except their parents, or a doctor if the parent is present. They are not to touch anyone else’s private parts with any part of their body (hand, mouth, etc.)

4. Teach your child that if someone asks to see or touch their private parts

…or shows your child their private parts, they must tell you or another trusted adult straightaway. This is true no matter who the person is, including a relative, sitter, or even another child. Just say “Sometimes mom or dad helps you wipe when you poop, but no one else needs to touch you there. And you can wipe yourself when you pee, so no one, not even mom or dad, needs to touch you there. And now that you’re three, you can wash yourself in the bath, so no one needs to wash you there, either. So if anyone–anyone at all–asks to see or touch your private parts, you must tell me about it.”

5. Ask your child questions to help them mentally rehearse the possible scenarios:

“What would you do if someone touched you on your _______?”

“Why is it important to tell?

“Who would you tell?”

“What would you do if the person said it was ‘our secret’?”

“What if they made a threat, like they would hurt you or me?”

Encourage the child to say they would be brave and tell a parent or a teacher right away, because it’s their body.

6. Role-play scenarios.

Experts say that playing “what if” games with kids gives them a chance to rehearse not only their words but their behavior, because your presence and the “make believe” scenario gives them the courage to resist an advance. That programs their subconscious with a script to use if such an encounter should ever happen.

7. Discuss the importance of the rule “no secrets.”

Put this rule into practice : If someone, even a grandparent, says something to your child like, “I’ll get you an ice cream later, but it will be our secret,” firmly but politely say, “We don’t do secrets in our family.”

Then turn to your child and repeat, “Sometimes we have surprises, but never secrets. We tell each other everything.”

8. Raise your child with basic body-safety and consent house rules,

Like “We ask people before we touch their body” and “When someone says STOP!, we stop.”

9. Encourage your children to tell you about things that happen to them that make them feel scared, sad or uncomfortable.

Listen, reflect feelings, commiserate, hug. If children have an open line of communication, they will be more inclined to alert you to something inappropriate early on.

10. Explicitly discuss with your child that you would never be angry or hold them responsible if someone touches them inappropriately.

When predators groom kids, they tell the child that the parent will punish or stop loving them, if the parent is told about the sexual activity. The child will do anything to keep you from knowing about this, because it is better to suffer the abuse than to lose your love. When you read books to your child, discuss the story from the child and parent’s perspective. Ask how a child feels who has been inappropriately touched. Do they want to tell their parent? Will they? What are they afraid of? How will the parent react? Whose responsibility is it? Will the parent ever blame the child? This is an important discussion to have with kids more than once so they know that you would never blame them.

11. Never force children to hug anyone, even relatives.

Children need to know they’re in charge of their own bodies, and they are the only ones who decide how someone touches them. When your child sees someone they haven’t seen in awhile and may not be ready for a hug, ask them “Hug, hearty handshake, or high-five?” Your child gets to decide.

What if Grandma is hurt when her grandchild chooses the handshake or high five? She’s an adult. She can handle it, as long as you make a point of speaking with her about this later. I know that might feel hard. But as one mother wrote on my Facebook page: “We need to allow our kids the right to refuse hugging or kissing anyone they don’t want to, including family. I think many of us were raised to comply with requested affection as kids. When sexual abuse happens, those ingrained behaviors will only serve to paralyze them instead of thwarting the event. (Sadly, I speak from experience on this.)”

12. Don’t leave your child with anyone, even your boyfriend, unless you completely trust him.

The good and bad news about abuse is that most of it, statistically, is not perpetrated by strangers. It happens at the hands of family members or the mother’s boyfriend. Almost all the rest is perpetrated by trusted intimates such as coaches, religious leaders or teachers. Bad news? Yes, these are people your child trusts. But it’s good news because it’s a risk you can usually avoid, if you trust your instincts and pay attention to your child. This is just one of the many reasons that stepparents should never have the responsibility of disciplining their partner’s children.

13. Encourage your children to trust their feelings

If something doesn’t feel right, the child should get away as soon as possible and tell you about it. She needs to be told explicitly that it is more important to stay safe and to trust herself than to be polite. It is okay for her to question, disobey, and even run away from someone whose behavior is making her acutely uncomfortable. Predators give signals; your child just needs your support to trust herself in reading them.

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MPs to elect President in 2026 under proposed reforms

Parliament of Uganda

The Uganda government is proposing a change in the Constitution to abolish the popular presidential elections by the public, so that the president is being elected by the Members of Parliament.

The move is being spearheaded by the Deputy Attorney General Jackson Kafuuzi under the Constitutional Review Commission.

In an audio from CBS radio station, Kafuuzi is quoted saying the government is already mobilizing money to fund the Constitution Review Commission’s nationwide tours.

The members of the commission are expected to traverse the entire country in pursuit of the thoughts of Ugandans on the looming amendment.

Kafuuzi says if it is what Ugandans want, then as government they need to make it happen. He made strong reference to the age-limit and term-limits removal that were changed among other previous amendments.

In Uganda, the President is elected by people through elections after every five years, with the winner needing to receive over 50% of the votes.

Since 1996 when the first presidential elections were held, the ruling party NRM has had the majority of the legislators in Parliament.

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National Basketball League to start March 11

National Basketball League-NBL

The Federation of Uganda Basketball Association (FUBA) has released the calendar for this year’s activities.

With the full reopening of the sports sector as announced by President Museveni, the 2022 calendar has focused on restoration of the sport to its previous position of steady growth.

The main National Basketball League (NBL) season, the top division for both Men and Women, is scheduled to start on March 11.

The season was last played to competition in 2019, with the past two seasons in 2020 and 2021 halted midway due to Covid-19 pandemic.

The fixtures for NBL and the lower Division as well will be released on February 20.

The first round will be completed on June 5 and the second round will start on June 17/18 and end on August 28. The Playoff will tip off on September 2/3.

Special attention has been paid to 3×3 basketball for this year, with five separate events in the format lined up over the season.

Starting with the KIU 3×3 Tournament scheduled for January 15 and 16, FUBA’s 3×3 schedule intends to feature a high school championship and a University tour, with the FUBA 3×3 Cup and the National 3×3 tour.

The FUBA 3×3 Tournament is scheduled for Jan and Feb, 3X3 High School Championship in August, the University 3×3 tour in September and the National 3×3 tour in October.

The transfer window for players opens January 10th and will end on February 10th.

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NSSF (Amendment) Act shall come into force upon publication in the Uganda Gazette

Betty Amongi

The Minister of Labour, Gender and Social Development Betty Amongi has revealed that the National Social Security Fund (NSSF) (Amendment) Act will come into force upon publication in the Uganda Gazette.

On 2nd January, 2022 President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni assented to the NSSF (Amendment) Bill 2021 and the same accordingly became the NSSF (Amendment) Act, 2021. The Act allows members aged 45 and above who have saved for at least 10 years to access 20% of their savings.  

The minister said the provision regarding midterm access to benefits by qualifying members of the Fund shall come into effect after she has issued a statutory instrument that will guide on the terms and conditions and procedures for accessing benefits.

“I have also received assurances that the Fund is ready to implement the NSSF Amendment Act once the requisite procedures have been undertaken. My Ministry, as the supervising body of the Fund, will ensure that the Act is implemented to the letter,” she said.

She said every worker, Employer as defined in the Act, is now obliged to contribute to the NSSF for their workers, irrespective of the number employed and every worker can voluntarily save with the Fund, over and above the mandatory 15% contributions.

According to the Act, a Member who is a person with disability, is forty years of age and above and has made contributions to the fund for at least 10 years is eligible to mid-term access, of a sum of 50% of his or her accrued benefits.

Every month, institutions deduct 5 percent of employees’ salaries as contribution to NSSF, the employers tops it up with 10 per cent while NSSF earns them 12 per cent. The fund collects Shs 125 billion a month, Shs 1.5 trillion per year and pays up to Shs 900 billion for members qualifying in other benefits.

The law provides for mandatory contributions of all workers regardless of the size of the enterprise or number of employees; and to provide for voluntary contributions to the Fund; proposes a tax on members’ retirement benefits.

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Court adjourns hearing of murder and terrorism case against MPs Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana

MPs Ssegirinya and Ssewanyana

The matter in which Kawempe North MP Muhammad Ssegirinya and Makindye West’s Allan Ssewanyana are accused of masterminding the killing of one Joseph Bwanika has been adjourned until January 19th, 2022.

The Grade One magistrate Christine Nantege adjourned the matter after the Resident State Attorney Richard Birivumbuka told court that the matter is still under investigation.

The MPs and four others suspects who include; Mike Sserwadda, Wamala Bulo, Mugerwa John and Kanyike Jackson were arrested over Masaka gruesome killings. At least 26 people had been killed by Panga wielding assailants in the Masaka greater region. The assailants target people above the age of 50 and leaving alone or with children.

The group is accused of terrorism contrary to section 7 (1) and (2) (d) and (d) of the Anti-Terrorism Act 2002 in count one, aiding and abetting terrorism contrary to section 8 of the Anti-Terrorism Act 2002 in count two, murder contrary to sections 188 and 189 of the Penal code Act in Counts three, four, five and attempted murder contrary to section 204 (a) of the Penal code Act.

In September Masaka High Court Judge Nakintu Victoria released Ssegirinya and his counterpart Ssewanyana on Shs 20 million cash bail each and bonded each of their sureties with Shs 100 million non-cash.

The two were re-arrested moments after being released from Kigo government Prison. Appearing before Masaka Chief Magistrate Charles Yeitesi, they were slapped with new charges of murder allegedly committed at Kissekka village in Lwengo district.

Prosecution avers that that Ssewanyana, Ssegirinya and others still at large 2nd August 2021 at Kisekka B Village, Kankamba Parish, Kisekka Sub- County in Lwengo district with malice aforethought killed Bwanika Joseph.

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Gov’t warns of buying #Covid-19 Certificates

Works and Transport Minister, Gen. Katumba Wamala.

The Minister of Works and Transport Gen Katumba Wamala has warned Ugandans against buying fake Covid-19 certificates.

The Minister urged Ugandans to desist from buying Covid-19 certificates noting that they are cheap but they cost life. “It would also be good for the passengers to be vaccinated. Do not go to Nasser Road to buy a certificate. You may buy it cheaply but it will cost you your life,” he said.

The Minister’s warning came barely a week after the president Yoweri Museveni fully reopened schools for learners in secondary and primary levels.

During the address, the president said schools will fully reopen starting from 10 January 2022 and urged stakeholders to observe Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) peddle at curbing the spread of Covid-19 pandemic and going for vaccination.

Gen Katumba also warned transporters against hiking transport fares as students moot to return to schools.

Since the president ordered that the buses and taxis return to their normal services of carrying passengers to full capacity, the operators have since maintained double transport fares. Speaking earlier today, the minister said although fuel prices are so high, the travelers should not be over charged.

“We have met the taxi and bus operators. We have agreed on the transport fares that they will communicate on the respective routes. Although the President allowed public transport to work fully, I would like to emphasize the SOPs. The people working on the buses must be fully vaccinated and able to present the vaccination cards anytime,” he said.

“There will be no curfew when children are going back to school to enable the children and parents to travel. All luggage on public transport must be checked. Don’t say these are children. You never know what could be there,” he added.

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