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#Covid-19 threatens to push 72 million more children into Learning Poverty

Covid-19 testing kits

The newly released World Bank reports indicate that COVID-related school closures risk pushing an additional 72 million primary school aged children into learning poverty, meaning that they are unable to read and understand a simple text by age 10.

The reports outline a new vision for learning and the investments and policies, including on education technology, which countries can implement today to realize this vision.

The pandemic is amplifying the global learning crisis that already existed, it could increase the percentage of primary school-age children in low and middle income countries living in learning poverty to 63 percent from 53 percent, and it puts this generation of students at risk of losing about $10 trillion in future life-time earnings, an amount equivalent to almost 10 percent of global GDP.

The new report, Realizing the Future of Learning: From Learning Poverty to Learning for Everyone, Everywhere, lays out a vision for the future of learning that can guide countries today in their investments and policy reforms, so that they can build more equitable, effective, and resilient education systems and ensure that all children learn with joy, rigor, and purpose in school and beyond the school walls.

The accompanying report, Reimagining Human Connections, Technology and Innovation at the World Bank, presents the World Bank’s new approach to guide investments in education technology, so that technology can truly serve as a tool to make education systems more resilient to catastrophic shocks like COVID-19 and help in reimagining the way education is delivered.

“Without urgent action, this generation of students may never achieve their full capabilities and earnings potential, and countries will lose essential human capital to sustain long-term economic growth,” said Mamta Murthi, World Bank Vice President for Human Development, in today’s launch event.

“Having over half of children worldwide in learning poverty is unacceptable, and so we cannot continue with business as usual in education delivery. Through visionary and bold action, policymakers and stakeholders around the globe can turn this crisis into a boon to transform education systems so that all children can truly achieve learning with joy, rigor, and purpose, everywhere.”

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought two massive shocks. School closures have left most students on the planet out of school 1.6 billion students at the peak in April 2020, and still almost 700 million students today. The negative impact of the unprecedented global economic contraction on family incomes has increased the risk of school dropouts.

Marginalized groups are likely to fall further behind.  Girls are facing increased risk of adolescent pregnancy and early marriage during the pandemic. And children with disabilities, ethnic minorities, refugees, and displaced populations are less likely to access suitable remote learning materials and to return to school post-crisis.

In responding to the pandemic, education systems have been forced to rapidly implement innovations in remote learning at scale. To reach as many children and youth as possible, they have used multi-modal remote learning approaches that combine online resources with radio, TV, mobile, as well as printed materials for the most vulnerable. However, the huge digital divides – from connectivity to digital skills – and inequalities in the quality of parental support and home learning environments is amplifying learning inequality.

“Effective action today to mitigate large and mounting learning losses, recover, and rebuild stronger is needed more urgently than ever to accelerate the acquisition of foundational skills and, increasingly, 21st-century skills for every child,” said Jaime Saavedra, World Bank Global Director for Education.

“There is a window of opportunity to build on the lessons of the pandemic and to build back a system that is equitable, where all schools and homes have the conditions and support for learning; that is effective, where teachers and schools are equipped to support each student at the level she needs; and that is resilient, with education services that are well-managed and ensure continuity in the learning process between the school and the home and community.”

Countries can chart their own path with a political commitment to carry out investments and reforms to ensure that learners are prepared and motivated to learn, teachers are effective and valued, Schools are safe and inclusive spaces and Education systems are well-managed.

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FDC’s presidential candidate Amuriat arrested

fdc's amuriat

The Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) presidential candidate Patrick Oboi Amuriat has been arrested by police.

Amuriart was arrested along Rubirizi and Bushenyi districts border in Western Uganda.

He has been taken to Mbarara to answer an incident where they intentionally knocked the DPC of Mbarara John Rutagira on Wednesday using a bodaboda and obstructed officers on lawful duty.

Amuriat is today supposed to be in Rubirizi, Buhweju and Bushenyi hunting for votes.

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Rehabilitation of community road excites Kamwokya residents

Youth of Kamwokya Community Services packing soil in bags to work on the road in Kifumbira zone Kamwokya. Photo by Ronard Shabomwe.

Residents of Kamwokya are excited over the rehabilitation of the community road in Kifumbira zone Kamwokya 2 parish in Kampala central.

The rehabilitation of this road which runs from mawanda road through Kifumbira zone and connects to green valley and other surrounding areas started on 3rd December and it will take over a week to be completed.

The road is being worked on by over 25 youths from Kamwokya community services, a community development organization-CBO in Kamwokya, in conjunction with Kampala capital city authority-KCCA.

The residents say, this road has been impassable when it comes to rainy seasons due to floods and muddy nature of the road.

The road in question is used by vehicles which are delivering goods to shops, boda boda riders and many other people moving up and down from Kamwokya slum areas.

Annet Nambasa, a resident in Green Valley says that they hope to operate their business smoothly and use the road well since floods won’t affect them anymore. Nambasa who is also a candidate standing as a woman councilor in Kamwokya 2 parish asks the Kampala authority to work more on the road since it benefits a lot in the society.

Justine Tushemereirwe, a resident of Kifumbira zone told this reporter that she has several times fallen down and sustained injuries when she is on a boda boda from work.

Tushemereirwe has two scars on her left knee which she says came as a result of several accidents she has had on boda.

Michael Tumusiime who operates mobile money in the area says this development has come at a right time when heavy rains have disrupted the business and movements in the area. Therefore hopes for positive results.

This road will take over 8 million (eight million shillings), which will be spent on murram packing bags, purchasing trucks of murram and to help in facilitating the workers.

Rogers Mukama Pokino, a founder of Kamwokya community services told this reporter that this community road is important to many people, however due to its poor state, many people have been affected. He says they had to contact KCCA to ask for permission to work on the road and give back to the community.

Mukama hopes that when it is done, people will use it and this will bring more developments in the areas especially to business people since it will ease the accessibility.

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Church of Uganda to hold first ever Archbishop’s Leadership Summit

Archbishop stephen-Kaziimba

The Archbishop of Church of Uganda, The Most Rev. Dr. Stephen Samuel Kazimba, has revealed that Uganda will host the first-ever Archbishop’s Leadership Summit.

The one-day event will bring together 50 leaders from each of our 37 dioceses and provincial leaders, to reflect on the leadership challenges from ministry during the season of the #Covid-19 pandemic. A total of 2000 leaders are expected to participate in the event.

Speaking earlier today, the Archbishop said that due to #Covid-19 pandemic, the Leadership Summit will be held on 7th December 2020 via Zoom and video conferencing set-ups in every diocese. The Summit will also be live-streamed on the Church of Uganda’s Facebook page and the Words of Hope Ministries Facebook page for anyone who would like to follow.

Under the theme ‘Business Unusual: Accelerating the Conversion of the Head, the Heart, and the Hands’, the Keynote speaker is Bishop Nathan Gasatura from Rwanda.

Other speakers will be Professor Augustus Nuwagaba, Bishop Alfred Olwa, Mr James Abola, Rev. Lydia Kitayimbwa, Canon Dr. Ruth Senyonyi, and the Managing Director of Equity Bank, our good friend and partner in development.

Church of Uganda has partnered with Airtel to upgrade the internet connections in all 37 Dioceses and for their support in advancing the Church of Uganda’s internet infrastructure and capacity.

“I have said many times that we are in a season of ‘Business Unusual’ and this season requires us to understand that we are also called to ‘Leadership Unusual’. The purpose of the Archbishop’s Leadership Summit is specifically for our key church leaders to be renewed, encouraged, and challenged with the leadership tasks before us as a church,” he said.

He said the summit is primarily focused on leadership within the church. “It will not specifically address our current political climate or electoral issues. We believe that as we become more responsive leaders in the church that we will also become more responsive leaders in our communities and in our country Uganda,” he said.

He added that by the end of the summit, they hope the Church of Uganda will fully embrace the new tools available to them and realize the need for a changed mindset in order to achieve our mission and vision, and have a unified strategic direction.

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Uganda’s economy to shrink by 1% in 2020

Business in Uganda

The latest World Bank economic analysis for Uganda projects the economy to contract by up to one per cent in 2020 due to #Covid-19 disruptions to trade activities and production, down from 7.5 per cent growth in 2019.

According to the Uganda Economic Update, Investing in Uganda’s Youth, real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) grew at only 2.9 per cent in fiscal year 2019/20, less than half the 6.8 per cent recorded in fiscal year 2018/19, while real GDP in per capita terms is likely to contract for the first time in a decade by about 4.5 per cent in 2020.

The #Covid-19-related demand shock, together with tax and spending measures to manage the crisis, reduced revenues, increased current spending, and led to a significant widening of the fiscal deficit. The collapse in consumption and investment reduced imports and incomes earned by foreign investors, which narrowed the current account deficit. Meanwhile, higher coffee, maize and gold exports helped offset some of the losses in export revenues caused by the halt in international tourism.

At the household level, incomes have fallen as a result of widespread firm closures, job losses within industry and services, particularly the urban informal sector. Up to three million more people could fall into poverty on top of the 8.7 million already in poverty in 2016, increasing high levels of vulnerability and reversing the poverty gains of the last 15 years. This threatens to reverse the gains Uganda has realized from a gradual structural transformation that shifted labor from rural to urban areas and subsistence agriculture to industrial and service activities and in the process supported the steady reduction in poverty over the past three decades.

The government has responded by deploying strong fiscal and monetary policies to support healthcare and vulnerable households, but social assistance has been limited with fewer than 2 per cent of Ugandans receiving direct cash transfers.

More worryingly, the pandemic may severely hamper human capital development and the country’s chances of benefiting from its growing young and working-age population. In addition to creating jobs for the rapidly growing population, a key challenge facing Uganda’s development agenda is the delivery of basic education and health services for all.

“Uganda has a great opportunity to build back better from the #Covid-19 crisis if investments in human capital and the youth are made a priority. Accelerating quality education and health service delivery quickly will ensure that its young people have access to the basic services they need to make the most of their potential,” said Tony Thompson, Country Manager, World Bank.

Uganda’s population is set to increase in the next 20 years to around 74 million, up from an estimated 46 million today, and more than double to around 104 million by 2060. But human capital development and opportunities for the youth are unequal.

On average, a child born in Uganda today will only be 38 percent as productive when she grows up as she could be if she enjoyed complete education and full health as the World Bank’s Human Capital Index (HCI) suggests.

To this end, the economic update makes several policy recommendations to enhance investments in the health and education sectors, including strengthening health promotion and disease prevention through multi-sectoral collaboration, and diversifying low-cost service delivery platforms through investments in remote learning, including distance education and online learning at the secondary level.

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UN agency removes cannabis from strictest drug category

Marijuana

The U.N. Commission on Narcotic Drugs voted Wednesday to remove cannabis and cannabis resin from a category of the world’s most dangerous drugs, which could impact the global medical marijuana industry.

The Vienna-based U.N. agency said in a statement that it had voted 27-25, with one abstention, to follow the World Health Organization’s recommendation to remove cannabis and cannabis resin from Schedule IV of the 1961 Convention on Narcotic Drugs, where it was listed with heroin and several other opioids.

The drugs that are on Schedule IV are a subset of those on Schedule I of the convention, which already requires the highest levels of international control. The agency voted to leave cannabis and cannabis resin on the list of Schedule I drugs, which also include cocaine, Fentanyl, morphine, Methadone, opium and oxycodone, the opiate painkiller sold as OxyContin,

Wednesday’s vote therefore does not clear U.N. member nations to legalize marijuana under the international drug control system. Canada and Uruguay have legalized the sale and use of cannabis for recreational purposes, but many countries around the world have decriminalized marijuana possession.

The schedules weigh a drug’s medical utility versus the possible harm that it might cause, and experts say that taking cannabis off the strictest schedule could lead, however, to the loosening of international controls on medical marijuana.

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Bobi Wine acquires bullet proof vest as his supporters shower teargas in Namutumba

bobi wine

The National Unity Platform (NUP) presidential candidate Kyagulanyi Ssentamu Robert aka Bobi Wine’s supporters have been showered with teargas in Namutumba as they trailed with him a head of today’s campaign rally.

Bobi Wine is scheduled to address his supporters in Budaka, Manafwa and Kubuku district, an area known for growing rice.

The Kyadondo East MP who has faced ruthless police and army officers since the kicking off of presidential campigns, kick-started his journey with prayers at his Magere based home following the suspension of his campaign trails.

Bobi halted his campaign trails after the head of his security only known as Kati accorded to him by the Electoral commission, Music producer Dan Magic were teargassed and hurt during campaign trails in Kayunga.

Following the Tuesday scuffle in Kayunga, the MP engaged the Electoral commission over continuous harassments and killing of his supporters. The singer, fellow musician Ali Bukeni acquired bullet proof vest following the gun down of a number his supporters.

The singer was welcomed by hundreds of his supporters who stood on the road sides to wave at him as he moves to converse for support in the Kubuku.

Along the way in Namutumba, Police fired teargas to disperse crowds that were trailing him.

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ChildFund donates washing facilitates, temperature guns to 114 UPE Schools and 36 communal markets

ChildFund donates washing facilitates, temperature guns to 114 UPE Schools and 36 communal markets

The ChildFund Uganda and its local implementing partner, Kampala Area Federation Communities (KAFOC) has flagged off items to support the prevention of Covid-19 in high risk areas.

A total of 114 Universal Primary schools and 36 Markets around Kampala and Wakiso districts will benefit from the consignment.

The items worth shs120 Million consists of 150  temperature guns, 450 jerricans of liquid shop, 150 sets of hand wash facilities with capacity of 60 litres each and an assortment of information education and communication materials, purchased from with funding from Standard Chartered Bank.

Prossie Maraka the program Manager of KAFOC said; “Each of the identified schools and markets will receive a temperature guns, three jerricans o liquid soap, a set of hand wash facility and an assortment of IEC material with messages on covid-19 prevention.”

Dr. Charles Lwanga the ChildFund Uganda programs director said that schools and markets were earmarked because of their tendency to have larger crowds and not enough protection measures to ensure everyone accessing places does not potentially contract Covid-19.

“Our hope is that Ugandans keep being vigilant and mindful of applying the covid-19 prevention measures as they interact with different people in markets and our children in school continue to be safe. We need to wash hands with soap frequently, always avoid crowded places as much as possible and wear masks in public places,” he said.

He noted that the information communication and education materials that have been made will serve as a reminder that today’s circumstances are not a matter of business as usual.

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Six Vipers players test positive for #Covid-19 ahead of CAF CL return leg against Al-Hilal

Covid-19 testing kits

Six Vipers SC players have tested positive for the deadly coronavirus from the tests that were carried out on Wednesday ahead of their return leg of the CAF Champions League tie against Sudan’s Al-Hilal Omdurman on Sunday, 6th December.

The players that tested positive are; captain Halid Lwaliwa, Abdul Karim Watambala, Abraham Ndugwa, Geoffrey Wasswa, Milton Kariisa and Livingstone Mulondo, according to Football256.

The affected players are expected to go into quarantine and self-isolation for at least 14 days.

Nevertheless, head coach Fred Kajoba still has a wide range of talented players in the squad to look at as replacements.

Vipers lost the first leg 1-0 at the St. Mary’s stadium and will need at least to win with two goals to progress to the next stage.

Their ultimate target this season was to make it to the group stage of Champions League group stages.

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Turkish Airlines, Quality Chemicals support acid victim

Turkish Airlines, Quality Chemicals support acid victim

Turkish Airlines and Cipla Quality Chemicals Industries Ltd have in response to Speaker Rebecca Kadaga’s call, made a donation towards the treatment of Rebecca Babirye, a resident of Kamuli district who was burnt with acid by her ex-lover in June 2019.

During a meeting with Kadaga on December 2, the Chief Executive Officer for Cipla Quality Chemicals, Nevin Bradford said that the company is committed to cover the cost of treatment in Turkey which according to Babirye, is US$25,000.

“We as Cipla are happy to contribute to the cost of treatment for this poor lady; we have confidence that the treatment will be successful in Turkey. We trust that she will come back much improved,” said Bradford.

The Managing Director of Turkish Airlines in Uganda, Burak Yildiz said that they have provided three return tickets for Babirye and her two care givers to travel to Turkey.

Kadaga said she was happy that Babirye will now access treatment that will see her return to Uganda able to seek justice. She revealed that the offender has not been reprimanded.

“Babirye is appealing for justice because the person who injured her was in custody for weeks, released and is now threatening her,” said Kadaga.

Babirye whose face and arms were severely burnt was grateful for the donation and hoped that her one remaining eye could be cured. She revealed the unbearable pain she is going through and pleaded that justice be served for her ex-lover.

“I have lost one eye and the one remaining pains me a lot. It even causes me headache and I feel fire in the breast. I beg for justice; my offender was arrested for just weeks and released; he is now threatening me not to go back to court,” said Babirye.

Uganda’s Ambassador to Turkey, Stephen Mubiru assured Babirye of the quality of health services in Turkey and called on Ugandans to consider seeking specialized health services in Turkey.

“I have all the confidence in the quality of the hospitals in Turkey. They have very good health services for very complicated cases and less costly,” Mubiru said.

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