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No more nursery or kindergarten schools until #Covid-19 is over

Minister of Education and Sports Janet Museveni

The Minister of Education Janet Museveni has revealed that there will be no more nursery or kindergarten schools until the #Covid-19 pandemic is over.

Yesterday President Yoweri Museveni okayed the reopening of schools to non-candidate students following his directive for closure in march last year. The closure according to Museveni peddled at curbing the spread of the deadly #Covid-19 pandemic.

“The schools will be allowed to reopen in a staggered manner that will ensure compliance with Covid-19 Standard operating procedure (SOP) of maintaining social distance, washing hands or sanitizing, and wearing of face masks,” Museveni said.

Mrs. Museveni said Children will now start school in Primary one at five years of age.

“Parents should instead take on the mantle and do play learning with their children at home before sending them to P1,” she said adding that Learners in this category cannot observe SOPs and are prone to respiratory infections and because many of the pre-primary institutions are day-based, there is a lot of interaction between learners, and parents, teachers which would increase the risk of contracting the virus.

In order to finish up the academic year and ensure progression, all semi candidate classes, which include primary six, senior three and senior five should report back to school in the short term and study with the candidate classes.

She said that apart from candidates who will sit for Uganda national examinations board (UNEB), Primary Leaving Examinations (PLE) and there will be no exams for the rest of the classes. Progression for other classes will be evaluated on attendance and a cumulative assessment.

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UAF cancels another athletics competition

Ugandan Athletes

The Uganda Athletics Federation-UAF has once again cancelled the Track and Field Competition which was due this weekend in Kampala.

This marks the second competition in a row on the UAF 2021 calendar owing to lack of competition venue after the first one which was scheduled for January 23.

The cancelled 2nd UAF Trial competition was the second on UAF 2021 calendar season since the resumption of sports activities that were hampered last year by the outbreak of the global Covid-19 pandemic.

The unfortunate cancellation of the two track and field competition comes in the wake of looming Tokyo 2020 Olympics just at the corner, World Junior Championships, World Indoor Championships, Africa Senior Championships among others.

Efforts by UAF last week to secure tartan Mandela National Stadium, Namboole and Kyambogo  University grass track has been futile owing to both facilities being used by government while the other alternatives, Makerere University is unsuitable and ISU tartan track inaccessible.

“UAF has no option but to cancel the competition and now focus on the upcoming National Cross Country Championships due in Tororo on February 13, 2021,” Namayo Mawerere, the Publicity Secretary of UAF said.

“The federation is aware the cancellation of the two track and field competitions is a very big blow to athletes preparations for the Olympics and build up to the other international competitions.”

“UAF is however engaging the responsible government authorities over the matter.”

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At least 44 people have been kidnapped before and after general elections – Gov’t

Minister for Internal Affairs Jeje Odongo

The Minister for Internal Affairs, Gen. Jeje Odongo has revealed that at least 44 people have been reported kidnapped and 31 of these are yet to be traced.

Since the launch of presidential campaigns in November last year, the country has witnessed a number of kidnappings by both armed plain clothe men and security personnel traveling in Toyota Hiace commonly known as drones. Most of the victims have since not been arraigned before courts of law nor released on police bond.

Speaking in Kampala, the Minister said that seven of the 44 people who were reported kidnapped had been arrested, charged and released on bail while the other four including Lumu Ronald, Kabaale Benard, Mugarura Ronald and Shafik were arrested for aiding and abetting terrorism.

“These suspects have since been interviewed, recorded statements and released on police bond,” he said adding that Galiwango Rogers allegedly kidnapped from Kyebando with 10 others resurfaced after three days.

Minister Odongo said that in Mukono, four people are reported to have been kidnapped identifying them as Male Musa, Kamata Muhammad, Kagimu Musa and Kiberu Julius.

He also revealed that 11 other people allegedly kidnapped in Masaka.

“I have tried to give an update on the continuous incidents of alleged kidnap. Investigations are ongoing and I undertake to give progress of these investigations with time. I would like to appeal to the public at large, please report these alleged incidents of kidnap to police. We undertake to investigate each and every one of the reported incidents,” Gen. Odongo added.

The Minister also said that Buganda region is not in any way targeted.

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Amnesty International: Conviction of Dominic Ongwen provides overdue justice for victims of decades-long campaign of abuses

Dominic Ongwen

The Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for East Africa, the Horn and Great Lakes has said that the conviction of conviction of Dominic Ongwen, a former commander of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebel group provides a measure of redress for the 4,000 victims who participated in the case.

Dominic Ongwen was convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity including attacks against a civilian population; murder and attempted murder; rape; sexual slavery; forced marriage; torture; enslavement; outrage upon personal dignity; conscription and use of children under the age of 15 to participate actively in hostilities; pillaging; destruction of property and persecution.

“We hope this decision provides a measure of redress for the 4,000 victims who participated in the case and who can now receive reparations for their suffering.

“While this case is important, redress must extend to the thousands of victims of the LRA’s abductions, killlings and mutilations, who still have not seen justice for the harms they have suffered.”

In delivering its decision, the Chamber took the unprecedented step of reading out the names of a number of individual victims of the LRA’s attacks and Dominic Ongwen’s crimes, providing a powerful statement of the individual harms suffered by thousands of victims, and recognising the importance of victim participation in trials at the ICC.

Dominic Ongwen has an automatic right to appeal today’s decision.

Dominic Ongwen was the former commander of the Sinia Brigade, one of several LRA brigades. As one of the highest commanders of the LRA, Dominic Ongwen was responsible for devising and implementing the LRA’s military strategy.

An arrest warrant for war crimes and crimes against humanity was issued against him in 2005. Dominic Ongwen was transferred to the custody of the ICC on 21 January 2015, after being taken into custody in the Central African Republic by the United States working with the African Union (AU) Regional Taskforce on 5 January 2015.

The ICC opened its investigation into the situation in Uganda in July 2004. Arrest warrants for LRA commanders Joseph Kony and Vincent Otti are outstanding, as the two suspects remain at large. No ICC cases have commenced into allegations of crimes under international law committed by the Ugandan People’s Defence Force.

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Court issues arrest warrant for Pastor Mondo

Pastor Mondo Mugisha

The Buganda Road Court magistrate Gladys Kamasanyu has issued an arrest warrant against Pastor Mondo Mugisha, the proprietor of Empowerment Christian Church International.

Pastor Mondo who is currently on the run is battling 53 counts related to obtaining money by false pretense and conspiracy to commit a felony. The accused allegedly conned pastors and private school directors over Shs 4 billion promising to avail the bursaries.

The matter came up when a group of pastors under their umbrella body, Hands Across the World petitioned the head of the State House Anti-Corruption Unit, Lt Col Edith Nakalema, accusing Pastor Mondo of using the group fleece people.

Prosecution avers that oscillating in the areas of Bombo-Luwero, Tororo, Iganga, Kaliro and Kampala Districts between 2014 and 2020, the man of God obtained over one billion shillings from parents with a motive of helping them.

He is charged along Pastor Siraje Ssemanda, Margaret Kayima also known as Nabbi Omukazi and Jimmy Arinaitwe, the Director of Hands Across the World Initiative Uganda Limited.

Mondo’s lawyer Erias Asiimwe has since told the court that his client fled the country amidst security threats and sickness. He said that by the time of his departure, Mondo’s life was in danger because he was being trailed by armed persons, and asked the court to halt the trial until Mondo’s condition stabilizes.

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#Covid-19 crisis is fueling food price rises for world’s poorest

World Bank President David Malpass

By David Malpass

President of the World Bank Group

Over the last year, #Covid-19 has undone the economic, health and food security of millions, pushing as many as 150 million people into extreme poverty. While the health and economic impacts of the pandemic have been devastating, the rise in hunger has been one of its most tangible symptoms.

Income losses have translated into less money in people’s pockets to buy food while market and supply disruptions due to movement restrictions have created local shortages and higher prices, especially for perishable food.  This reduced access to nutritious food will have negative impacts on the health and cognitive development of Covid-era children for years to come.

Global food prices, as measured by a World Bank food price index, rose 14% last year. Phone surveys conducted periodically by the World Bank in 45 countries show significant percentages of people running out of food or reducing their consumption. With the situation increasingly dire, the international community can take three key actions in 2021 to increase food security and help prevent a larger toll on human capital.

The first priority is enabling the free flow of food. To avoid artificial shortages and price spikes, food and other essential goods must flow as freely as possible across borders.  Early in the pandemic, when perceived shortages and panic generated threats of export bans, the international community helped keep food trade flows open. Credible and transparent information about the state of global food inventories – which were at comfortable levels pre-Covid – along with unequivocal free-trade statements from the G20, World Trade Organization, and regional cooperation bodies helped reassure traders, and led to helpful policy responses. Special rules for agriculture, food workers and transport corridors restored supply chains that had been briefly disrupted within countries.

“To avoid artificial shortages and price spikes, food and other essential goods must flow as freely as possible across borders.”

We need to remain vigilant and avoid backsliding into export restrictions and hardened borders that make food and other essentials scarce or more costly.

The second priority is bolstering social safety nets. Short-term social safety nets offer a vital cushion for families hit by the health and economic crises. In Ethiopia, for example, households that experienced problems in satisfying their food needs initially increased by 11.7 percentage points during the pandemic, but participants in our long-running Productive Safety Net program were shielded from most of the negative effects.

The world has mounted an unprecedented social protection response to COVID-19. Cash transfers are now reaching 1.1 billion people, and innovative delivery mechanisms are rapidly identifying and reaching new groups, such as informal urban workers. But “large scale” is not synonymous with “adequate”. In a review of Covid-19 social response programs, cash transfer programs were found to be Short-term in their duration lasting just over three months on average, Small in value that is to say an average of $6 (£4.30) per capita in low-income countries and Limited in scope with many in need remaining uncovered.

The pandemic has reinforced the vital imperative of increasing the world’s investments in social protection systems. Additional measures to expedite cash transfers, particularly via digital means, would also play an important role in reducing malnutrition.

The third priority is enhancing prevention and preparedness. The world’s food systems endured numerous shocks in 2020, from economic impacts on producers and consumers to desert locust swarms and erratic weather.  All indicators suggest that this may be the new normal. The ecosystems we rely on for water, air and food supply are under threat. Zoonotic diseases are on the rise owing to growing demographic and economic pressures on land, animals and wildlife.

A warming planet is contributing to costlier and more frequent extreme weather events. And as people pack into low-quality housing in urban slums or vulnerable coastal areas, more are living in the path of disease and climate disaster.

Development gains can be wiped out in the blink of an eye. Our experience with hurricanes or seismic events shows that it is more effective to invest in prevention, before a catastrophe strikes. That’s why countries need adaptive social protection programs – programs that are connected to food security early warning systems and can be scaled up in anticipation of shocks.

The time is long overdue to shift to practices that safeguard and increase food and nutrition security in ways that will endure. The to-do list is long and urgent. We need sustained financing for approaches that prioritize human, animal and planetary health; restore landscapes and diversify crops to improve nutrition; reduce food loss and waste; strengthen agricultural value chains to create jobs and recover lost incomes; and deploy effective climate-smart agriculture techniques on a much greater scale.

“The world’s food systems endured numerous shocks in 2020, from economic impacts on producers and consumers to desert locust swarms and erratic weather.”

The World Bank Group and partners are ready to help countries reform their agriculture and food policies and redeploy public finance to foster a green, inclusive, and resilient recovery.

Focusing on food security would address a basic injustice: almost one in 10 people live in chronic hunger in an age of food waste and plenty.  This focus would also strengthen our collective ability to weather the next storm, flood, drought, or pandemic  with safe and nutritious food for all.

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Silverbacks off to Tunisia for FIBA Afrobasket qualifiers

Silverbacks flagged off. Photo via FUBA facebook

The Uganda Men’s National basketball team, the Silverbacks were flagged off to Monastir, Tunisia ahead of the second round of the 2021 FIBA Afrobasket Qualifiers.

The team was flagged off by the Chairman Dr.Donald Rukare and General secretary Dr. Bernard Patrick Ogwel of the National Council of Sports-NCS at their offices.

Also present was Mark Ssali, board member-NCS and the National team management committee.

The Silverbacks embark on Afrobasket qualification journey for the second qualifying window which will take place from 18-21 February in Montasir, Tunisia. They will be taking on Egypt, Morocco, and Cape Verde.

Uganda is second in Group E behind Egypt and need just one win to all but seal qualification to a third straight AfroBasket championship which will be held later this year in Kigali, Rwanda.

Government through NCS has funded this particular outing with Ugandan Shillings 334 million.

The Squad: Jimmy Enabu, Tony Drileba, Benjamin Komakech, Fayed Bbale, James Okello, Joseph Anyuru Ikong, Titus Lual Odeke, Ceasar Kizito, Ishmail Wainwright, Eric Rwahirwe, Robinson Opong, Deng Geu, Arthur Kaluma.

Second Round Fixtures

Feb 18: Uganda vs. Egypt

Feb 20: Morocco vs. Uganda

Feb 21: Cape Verde vs. Uganda

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Premier Recruitment given contract to supply labour to Qatar

Premier Recruitment

Premier Recruitment Agency has been contracted by Alteqan Manpower Company to supply over 800 labourers to Qatar.

Premier Recruitment is a subsidiary of Ruparelia Group of companies that specializes in labour recruitment and export has been efficient and transparent in its process. The company supplies young men and women to Qatar and Middle East.

According to the manager of Alteqan, Sami Suleiman, workers will earn between Shs 1million and Shs 1.5 million. The qualified workers will be given a free air ticket, meals, medical bills medical and insurance facilities and leave of 21 days.

“Qualified employees will be given six months probation period and later given a two years contract and work for right hours a day,” he said.

The listed workers included 100 mechanical technicians, 100 electrical technicians, 50 carpenters, 100 labourers, 200 security guards, 200 plumbers.

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MTV Africa Music Awards Kampala 2021 postponed

MAMAs

Organisers of the 2021 MTV Africa Music Awards (MAMAs) have announced the postponement of the continental music awards show.

The much anticipated music awards were scheduled to happen virtually on February 20, 2021 in Kampala, Uganda but according to MTV Base Africa, new dates for the event shall be communicated soon.

“MTV Base is postponing the 2021 MTV Africa Music Awards. We will keep fans updated as we have more news,” MTV Base Africa tweeted.

Several Ugandan music stars bagged nominations for the planned pan-African music awards show. Sheebah (Best Ugandan Act and Best Female Artiste), John Blaq (Best Breakthrough and Best Ugandan Act), B2C (Song of the Year), Eddy Kenzo (Best Fans Group), Pallaso (Listeners Choice), Spice Diana, Daddy Andre and Vinka in the Best Ugandan Act category.

No particular reasons at the time have been given for the postponement.

The awards which were first held in 2008, were last held in Johannesburg, South Africa, in 2016. The other time the awards were held in East Africa was in 2009 in Nairobi, Kenya.

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Gen David Muhoozi commissions infrastructure in two UPDF brigades

Gen David Muhoozi commissions infrastructure in two UPDF brigades

The Chief of Defence Forces General David Muhoozi commissioned infrastructural developments for the 333 Mountain Brigade Headquarters in Kakyomya, Kabarole district and 303 Brigade in Kyangwali, Kikuube district.

The infrastructure that was constructed at a cost of 1.2 billion and 959 million Uganda shillings respectively include the Commandant’s residence, Office Blocks, Health Centre III and a water purification supply system.

Speaking at the commissioning, Gen Muhoozi expressed gratitude that the 333 mountain brigade now has a home of its own and they are no longer squatters.

“This is another milestone that we have finally witnessed and commissioned, the home of 333 mountain brigade,” Gen Muhoozi said.

He added that with teamwork of the UPDF leadership, there has been measured achievements of decent accommodation and working environment with limited resources.

Gen Muhoozi commended the Engineering Brigade and the National Enterprise Corporation for their efforts in executing UPDF works and added that in the going forward, they will partner with a private contractor with the aim of improving the housing structures of the UPDF barracks.

The CDF Gen David Muhoozi promised to provide solar power at the headquarters, a primary school, bridges and equipment to till the Land to the two Brigades.

During the commissioning, the Managing Director of the National Enterprise Corporation, Lt Gen James Mugira said the commissioning of the projects is happening at the right time during the Tarehe Sita week adding that the UPDF is now playing a huge role in the Socio-economic transformation of Uganda through engaging in different projects around the country.

Lt Gen Mugira said that aside from their engagements in UPDF projects, the National Enterprise Corporation is now involved in the construction of the Public Free Zone port in Entebbe, the car assembly plant of Kiira Motors, ICT innovations hub in Nakawa and maintenance of the metre guage railway.

The CDF was accompanied by the Commander Land Forces, Lt Gen Peter Elwelu, the Joint Chief of Staff, Lt Gen Joseph Musanyufu, Commander Engineering Brigade, Brig Gen Cyrus Benkunda, division commanders, brigade commandants and other senior UPDF officers.

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