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Obsessions reunite at the launch of Gordon’s Pink Gin

The two most prominent members of the legendary all singing girl group, the ‘Obsessions’, Natasha Sinayobye and Cleopatra Koheirwe  reminisced during the launch of Gordon’s Premium Pink Gin.

Gordon’s Premium Pink Gin is the latest offering from Uganda Breweries Limited’s Innovations department. The berry-flavoured gin is derived from the original Gordon’s London Dry Gin.

The brand has, for almost 250 years, set a high standard for quality by winning coveted awards the world over and becoming the world’s best-selling gin.

The drink was launched this week in an occasion that saw Natasha Sinayobye get crowned as the brand ambassador of the premium gin.

Various influencers were hosted to a high-end brunch at the Sheraton Kampala Hotel, which saw them sample different cocktails cooked up by professional Gordon’s Pink mixologists.

At the launch, Wankyo Marando, the UBL Innovations Lead said, “Gordon’s Pink is based on the original Gordon’s London Dry Gin recipe but infused with the natural fruit flavours of strawberries, raspberries and redcurrant to excite the customer’s taste buds and add some vibrance to their drinking experience.”

She added that the drink is available in all the major supermarkets, distributors and e-commerce platforms at the affordable price of Shs 40,000.

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Gen. Tumukunde: Use your vote to negotiate for dev’t of Busoga region

Tumukunde Henry

Presidential candidate Rtd Gen. Henry Tumukunde has promised to avail alternative sources of income and resolve the fluctuating prices of sugar cane.

Sugar cane growing is the main source of income for many households in the Busoga sub-region. The farmers have however over time been hit hard by the fluctuating prices for sugar cane at the available sugar processing plants.

“Sugarcane growing is laborious yet it pays less to the farmers in terms of return on investment save for the sugar factory owners. sugarcane growing alone has failed to get the people of Busoga out of poverty and there is a need for an alternative to foster speed household income generation on top of food growing for feeding families.” Tumukunde said

The farmers in the region are cutting down their plantations to grow coffee after Kenyan government closed its borders for all Ugandan sugar cane and sugar. The farmers have resorted to transporting their sugar cane to Atiak Sugar factory in northern Uganda for processing.

“Busoga has got the seven rare minerals in the world. I have never understood why government has not found it useful to explore these minerals to empower and elevate people in poverty stricken areas in the region,” he said

“Busoga has influential people Like the speaker of parliament Rebecca Kadaga, Secretary General of National Resistance Movement (NRM) I don’t see them benefiting from the leadership. The regions has over 2Million voters, use that vote to negotiate by voting for me for thriving of the region,” he said

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2021 Elections: EC dispatches polling materials ahead of January 14

EC-Voting-ballot-box

The Electoral Commission (EC) has today started dispatching polling materials including ballot papers to various districts across the country ahead of the presidential and general parliamentary elections scheduled for Thursday, January 14, 2021.

In a press statement from the EC Chairman Justice Simon Byabakama, he said the dispatch of the materials will continue until all districts are dispatched and that the Commission assures all stakeholders that all districts/cities across the country will have received their polling kits in time for the elections.

The areas whose polling materials were dispatched today are; Busia (Elgon Region), Butambala (Central Region), Mukono (Kampala Region), Iganga (Kira Region), Karenga (Karamoja Region), Kasese (Rwenxori Region), Agago (Northern Region), Sironko (Elgon Region), and Terego (West Nile Region).

Also dispatched were materials for; Elections of councilors for Special Interest Groups (SIGs), namely, Older Persons, Persons with Disabilities (PWDs), Youth, to Sub county/ Town Council/ Municipal Division to be held on 11th January, and Elections of councilors for Special Interest Groups (SIGs), namely, Older Persons, Persons with Disabilities (PWDs), Youth, to the municipality/City Division to be held on 12th January 2021.

“We wish to emphasize that this dispatch is designed to facilitate timely delivery of polling materials to all districts and eventually enable timely conduct of the elections across the country. At the various districts, the Returning Officers and District Police Commanders (DPCs) will take charge of the security of these polling materials,” Byabakama said.

“Political Parties and all candidates for Presidential Elections have also been invited to observe the dispatch of the materials to the districts. The commission wishes to remind parties and candidates who may wish to accompany these polling materials to officially appoint (in writing) the agents who will follow the dispatch so that they are cleared, including particular vehicles they will use,” he added.

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Gen. Tumukunde visits Muhammad Kirumira’s father in Mpigi

Gen. Tumukunde visits Muhammad Kirumira's father in Mpigi

Independent Presidential Candidate Rtd Gen. Henry Tumukunde has visited Hajji Abubaker Kawooya, the father to the deceased and former Buyende District Police Commander (DPC) Muhammed Kirumira.

The out spoken Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Muhammed Kirumira was on September 8, 2018, gunned down along a one Resty Nalinya by unknown assailants travelling motorcycles. Kirumira was driving towards his home when gunmen waylaid him and opened fire at Bulenga trading centre.

Gen. Tumukunde was welcomed by Hajji Abubaker at his Mpambire based home in Mpigi district and later prayed for the deceased police officer.

Led by Sheikh Swadiq Kiwu, the group asked the almighty God to forgive the deceased for all the sins he committed and bless Gen Tumukunde in the journey and dream to lead this country.

Hajji Abubakar applauded Tumukunde for maintaining the relationship with his family and deceased who informed him that his life was in danger before he was gunned down.

“I have not come here for political issues but these are my people. Muhammed Kirumira was my friend. Before his deaths he told me that his life was in danger,” Tumukunde said. He consoled him for the loss of a patriotic, committed and serving police officer.

Tumukunde was in the area conversing for support ahead of the next week elections where he seeks to replace President Yoweri Museveni the Incumbent who has been in power for 35 years.

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UPL: Brian Aheebwa and Kefa Kisala are December’s best

updf's kefa kisala receives award

KCCA FC striker Brian Aheebwa and UPDF tactician Kefa Kisala are the Pilsner Player and Coach of the Month for December 2020 respectively.

Aheebwa beat off competition from Police striker Ben Ocen and UPDF’s Brian Kalumba while Kisala edged URA coach Sam Ssimbwa.

The awards ceremony took place at Kati Kati Restaurant in Kampala. The winners got a trophy and one million Uganda Shillings each.

The 2020/21 StarTimes Uganda Premier League (SUPL) is currently on a month’s break to enable Cranes compete in the African Nations Championship (Chan) in Cameroon.

But before the break, the start to the 2020/21 season had been breathtaking. One hundred and nineteen goals were scored in the five matchdays played. No wonder it is the forwards that dominated the Player of the Month accolade list.

Aheebwa, 22, has so far scored seven goals, including four against Onduparaka, to have KCCA in fourth place with nine points.

Police striker Ocen has netted six times to help his side ride high with league leaders UPDF. They are third on 10 points.

Talking UPDF, Kalumba has been superb in front of goal for coach Kisala’s side.

The striker has netted five goals, including four against Kitara to take UPDF into the break top of the table on 12 points.

In the coaching category, URA coach Sam Ssimbwa was up for a second consecutive coach of the month accolade but was upstaged by UPDF’s Kisala.

“This success is attributed to the management, technical staff and players,” the UPL website quoted Kisala .

“As a newly promoted club, this is a great motivation to us. Our initial target was to finish in the top five and the chase is still on.”

Ssimbwa’s URA are yet to lose in five games, and are second behind UPDF on 11 points, one fewer.

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World Food Programme reduces monthly relief cash and food for refugees in Uganda

WFP

The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has warned that it will further reduce monthly relief cash and food rations for 1.26 million refugees in Uganda due to a funding shortfall. With effect from February 2021, refugees will have to make do with only 60 percent of a full ration.

“COVID-19 must not be an excuse for the world to turn its back on refugees at this terrible time,” said WFP Country Director El-Khidir Daloum. “We appreciate that donors fully funded our refugee operation in Uganda in 2019 but right now we are unable to keep up even basic food assistance and the poorest will suffer the most as we have to cut still further” he said.

Last year was particularly hard for refugees as their rations were reduced by 30 percent in April, which coincided with the COVID-19 lockdown. And in February they face a further 10 percent cut.

WFP immediately needs US$95.8 million to provide full rations to refugees in Uganda over the next six months.

The most vulnerable women, children and the elderly are increasingly at risk of becoming malnourished, which can in turn impact their immune systems and make them more likely to be infected by disease, amid a pandemic. The West Nile region, which hosts six refugee settlements, is one of the current COVID-19 hotspots.

The current 30 percent ration cut and the impact of COVID-19 lockdowns are major contributors to hunger in all 13 refugee settlements, according to a recent food assessment survey. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification analysis (for June- December 2020) found that refugees in all 13 settlements faced acute food insecurity.

WFP commends the Government of Uganda for continuing to host refugees and seeking to meet its obligations under the Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework (CRRF), opening up access to local services, providing land and allowing greater integration of refugees with local populations. Uganda hosts the largest number of refugees in Africa.

The CRRF outlines a commitment of the international community to meet the immediate humanitarian needs of the refugees to ease the burden on Uganda. Additional support is needed to support the host government and its goodwill and to not undermine developmental gains.

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UCU gets Shs8.4bn grant to start PhD in Communication and Media studies

UCU

Uganda Christian University (UCU) Faculty of Journalism, Media and Communication has won a Shs 8.4 billion grant to start a PhD programme in Communication and Media Studies in 2022.

The PhD programme that will be the first of its kind in Uganda, and one of the very few in East Africa, is intended to bridge the training gap at that level in the region.

The Faculty won the grant through the Norwegian Programme for Capacity Development in Higher Education and Research for Development ((NORHED). The programme aims to strengthen the capacity of higher education institutions in the Global South to produce higher-quality graduates, higher-quality research, and more inclusive education.

The grant will also be used to start a Masters’ degree programme in Media and Communication Studies at the University of Rwanda, also the first in the country.

The Faculty Dean, Prof. Monica Chibita, used staff WhatsApp account to announce the news. “Yes, friends, we got the NORHED II grant, Hallelujah,” she wrote.

She later told the New Vision newspaper that the Faculty was grateful to the Norwegian government for the generous grant. “This means a lot for us, for UCU and the East African Region. A quality PhD programme will ensure quality graduates and will contribute to a robust research culture. We expect that this will elevate the level of debate about the media and communication’s role in democracy and development. Ultimately, we are looking for impact and this grant does a lot to enable that,” Prof. Chibita said.

The UCU Vice Chancellor, Assoc. Prof. Aaron Mushengyezi, congratulated the Faculty of Journalism, Media and Communication for winning the NOHRED II project and said it will build staff capacity and media and democracy in Uganda.

“This should inspire other Faculties to pick interest in grants and research to enable UCU join the league of research led universities,” Prof. Mushengyezi said.

Assoc. Prof. Terje Skjerdal the project’s coordinator from NLA University College in Norway described the news of the grant as fantastic. “I am so grateful,” he wrote in a post on his Facebook wall. “I am looking forward to working together with Monica Chibita, Margaret Jjuko and Ruth Teer-Tomaselli for the next six years.”

The Faculty is partnering with NLA University College in Norway, University of KwaZulu-Natal in South Africa and University of Rwanda.

Through the study programmes, the grant also aims to promote gender and equity by providing interventions to ensure inclusivity. The interventions include the MA and PhD scholarships for women and persons with disability, maternity leave provisions and competitive post-doc opportunities available to men and women.

The project will further fund journalism and media research in the region and help equip partner Universities in East Africa with text books and media training equipment. Partner Universities have marked out three key areas for research under this grant including Media, Democracy and Development in Eastern Africa; Media, gender, identity and participation; and the changing roles of the media in crisis.

“The three themes are based on identified gaps in research in the East Africa region as well as the current research interests and expertise of staff of the partner institutions,” Prof. Chibita said, adding, “The areas will inform the organisation of teaching and research, and facilitate the formation of research teams and mentoring networks; bringing a level of predictability to enrollment and supervision.”

The official NORHED website, said 60 projects received funding under NORHED II.

“Norad received 199 applications to this call, of which 60 will be funded,” reads the statement published on the website on December 18, adding, “Total amount applied for is NOK 3.1 billion, while the total budget for this call is around NOK 1.1 billion.”

Jeanette da Silva the coordinator of the NORHED programme said that due to high competition and limited funding available, many relevant and high-quality projects were unfortunately rejected.  Running on the theme, Preparing Practitioners for a Resilient Media in Eastern Africa, the 6-year project will be a continuation of the 7-year collaboration UCU Faculty of Journalism, Media and Communication; NLA University College; and the University of KwaZulu-Natal have had under NORHED I.

The University of Rwanda will join as the latest partner. The project will engage CABI/SciDev.Net (a UK based NGO) to support on training, dissemination and community engagement.

UCU used NOHRED I to establish and run an MA Programme in Journalism and Media Studies and another one in Strategic Communication (supported by NLA University College and the University of KwaZulu-Natal). It also sponsored five PhD students and six MA students, provided four “post-docs” and six student exchange visits, hosted four international conferences in Africa and Europe and procured books and equipment. The five PhD candidates completed their studies on time at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and four of the six MA students have graduated.

The ultimate goal of the grant is to produce a better qualified workforce in the Ugandan and Rwandan media who can contribute to democratization and development in their respective countries.

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FDC’s Patrick Amuriat arrested

FDC Presidential flag-bearer Patrick Amuriat arrested

The Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) Presidential flag-bearer Patrick Oboi Amuriat has been arrested at Katuguru as he entered Kasese district to converse for votes.

Amuriat was scheduled to campaign in Ntoroko, Bundibugo, and Kasese district as per the Electoral Commission (EC) campaign program.

Details to follow….

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I will comfortably win 2021 Presidential Elections – Gen Tumukunde

Tumukunde Henry

Independent Presidential Candidate Rtd Gen. Henry Tumukunde has revealed that he will comfortably win the January 14th presidential elections.

The former spy master made the revelation at Maddu town council in Gomba district, where he conversed for support ahead of the general elections.

“We have been in the greater Mpigi area, we have had an impressive reception and these are areas which have largely been National Resistance Movement (NRM) and I can see a lot of shift and a shift in our favour,” he said.

He said based on what he has seen as he nears to the end of his campaigns, there is a general desire among the population for change which gives him an edge among other candidates to take over after President Yoweri Museveni the incumbent  due to his experience.

Tumukunde asked the voters to go and vote in large numbers on the voting day and protect their vote till it is counted.

The former minister of security continues with his campaigns in Mpigi district.

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A 26 year old NUP accident victim spends Shs60,000 daily on wounds

Mukwaya resting in at his home in Wakaliga after receiving his arm treatment.

Hussein Mukwaya, the National Unity Platform-NUP accident victim, spends shillings 60.000 a day on treating wounds that he sustained in Masaka accident.

Mukwaya who spent over a month in CoRSU Rehabilitation Hospital, a specialized surgical hospital in Entebbe where he spent over shillings 8 million, says CoRSU did its best and discharged him on 24th December. However, it has become a challenge raising shillings 60.000 that he requires every day to undress, clean, treat and dress his wounds.

Mukwaya got an accident in Masaka when he was on his motorcycle carrying three colleagues, following Robert Kyagulanyi, the NUP Presidential candidate who was heading to Mbarara for the launch of his manifesto on 7th November, when a police vehicle forcefully pushed him and his colleagues which made them end up in a terrible accident that almost took his life.

In CoRSU hospital, Mukwaya says, doctors did a wonderful job to see that he survived being amputated. His colleague that he did not disclose was amputated because the hospital found that his leg was already affected with tetanus.

Mukwaya a father of two who sleeps in a rental in Wakaliga, a city suburb which he pays shillings 200.000 every month has found life so difficult now that he can no longer work for his family. When asked how he managed to raise shillings 8 million that he spent in the hospital, he noted that NUP supporters mainly those in South Africa have been sending him money that helped him go through all that treatment.

Every day, a well-wisher rides Mukwaya to Kamwokya at NUP headquarters where he attracts good Samaritans who give him some money that he uses to feed himself and work on his wounds.

Mukwaya is nursing two serious wounds, one on his left arm which was injured and another one on his right thigh, where doctors cut the muscle that was added to his arm which was left with no muscles.

According to Muhammad Kiggundu, a 7th November Masaka accident survivor, people have contributed towards Mukwaya’s treatment generously and he prays that well-wishers continue supporting them to enable Mukwaya heal.

Kiggundu noted that Mukwaya at times misses treatment when he fails to get money for treating his wounds and his wounds get worse.

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