Tag: Uganda

  • 83 Year old virgin woman gets married to 90 year old

    83 Year old virgin woman gets married to 90 year old

    A 90 year old Ugandan man and his newly wed 83 year old bride finally said their vows in Rwakaikara. The wedding ceremony was held at St. James Cathedral, Kigorobya, Hoima District and presided over by the retired bishop of Bunyoro Kitara Diocese.

    According to UgandaBlizzBishop Kyamanywa told the congregation that it was not too late to take God’s way, thanking the couple for patiently waiting for their special day.

    He said the couple has challenged the young generation to also follow the way of God. He said in his pastoral work, he had never wedded a couple of this age and this has been a blessing to him.

    “Its my first time since I started work as Bishop to wed an old virgin woman as Naom. This is amazing and the world will read and learn a lot about you”, he said.

    Although Mr Rwakaikara has 10 children, (40 grand children ) from his first (late) wife, his new wife Naom has never married before and doctors have confirmed she was still a first class virgin at 83.

    Until her marriage, Naom was world’s oldest female virgin and has been receiving a lot of money from well wishers to support her principles.

  • Detained journalists charged with libel, computer misuse

    Detained journalists charged with libel, computer misuse

    Uganda has charged eight managers and editors of a daily newspaper with several offences including libel and computer misuse and a court ordered them detained until Dec. 5.

    The journalists have been in detention for nearly a week after police raided the premises of “Red Pepper” accusing them of publishing a false story.

    Police had said on Nov. 23 that they had preferred several charges including treason against the journalists.

    Their lawyer, Maxma Mutabingwa, said that when they appeared in court for the first time on Monday, treason was not among the offences read out to them.

    Instead they were charged with several counts of libel, offensive communication and publication of information prejudicial to security.

    “I think police backed off the treason charge because it was ridiculous, it was not sustainable at all,” he told Reuters.

    The journalists applied for bail but the state prosecutor said he needed time to respond and court adjourned the proceedings to Dec. 5.

    The raid on the paper followed publication of a story that, citing unnamed sources, said that Rwanda believed Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni was plotting to oust its leader, Paul Kagame.

    The paper has a wide readership and often regales its audience with a surfeit of salacious content about private lives of political and business officials and celebrities.

    In recent years it has moved to include more political coverage and has some times irked authorities with audacious headlines on security, diplomacy and power manoeuvres in the government of President Yoweri Museveni.

    Police has kept the media outlet’s premises cordoned off.

    Mutabingwa said it has not published the daily since the raid. Computers, phones and other equipment confiscated during the search have also not been returned.

    Rights groups and journalists have complained of escalating harassment and intimidation of independent media by security personnel in the East African country especially as Museveni faces growing opposition pressure to end his rule.

    Local media, including Red Pepper, have reported this month on tensions between Uganda and neighbouring Rwanda over a range of economic and security disputes but Uganda’s foreign affairs ministry has dismissed the reports as rumours.

    Read Also: Journalists urged to embrace immersive storytelling with multimedia devices

     

  • Rift Valley fever outbreak kills two in Uganda

    Rift Valley fever outbreak kills two in Uganda

    Ugandan Government on Friday said an outbreak of Rift Valley Fever (RVF) in Central Districts of Mityana and Kiboga killed two people.

    Charles Olaro, acting Director General, Health Services at the Ministry of Health, said in a statement that blood samples taken from two dead patients in Mityana and Kiboga tested positive of RVF.

    The two persons who died were 26-year-old male forest ranger, who died on Nov. 16, and a 69-year-old male farmer and fisherman, who died on Nov. 21.

    Olaro said the National Rapid Response Team had been sent to support the district response structures to contain the outbreak.

    RVF is a viral zoonosis that can also infect humans.

    Most human infections result from contact with blood or organs of infected animals.

    The disease could result in significant economic losses due to death and abortion among RVF-infected livestock.

  • Chad rejects U.S. bribery allegations against President Deby

    Chad rejects U.S. bribery allegations against President Deby

    Chad on Thursday rejected allegations made in the U.S. that President Idriss Deby was paid a two million dollars bribe in exchange for providing a Chinese energy company with oil rights without international competition.

    The U.S. announced charges on Monday against former Hong Kong Home Secretary Chi Ping Patrick Ho and former Senegalese Foreign Minister Cheikh Gadio for allegedly funnelling bribes to high-level officials in Chad and Uganda.

    “The government is indignant and questions this fierce attack against our head of state,” Chad’s government said in a statement late on Wednesday, adding that Deby had always sought transparency in the country’s natural resources sectors.

    The U.S. Justice Department alleged that Gadio received 400,000 dollars from Ho via wire transfers through New York to act as a go-between for bribes to Deby on behalf of an unnamed energy firm headquartered in Shanghai.

    Neither Ho nor Gadio, who were both arrested on Nov. 16, have commented publicly on the allegations against them.

    Landlocked Chad pumps about 130,000 barrels of oil per day.

    It ranks third-from-bottom on the UN Human Development Index and 159th out of 176 countries on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index.

    NAN

  • Ghana held by Uganda as World Cup hopes fade

    Ghana held by Uganda as World Cup hopes fade

     

    Ghana and Uganda played out a dour goalless draw in Kampala on Saturday which dents the pair’s hopes of World Cup qualification and leaves Egypt within one win of a place in Russia next year.

    The stalemate took Uganda to eight points, one behind Egypt who play their game in hand against already eliminated Congo-Brazzaville in Alexandria on Sunday knowing that a victory would end their 27-year wait for a place at the World Cup.

    Ghana, in third on six points, need Egypt to lose against Congo, Uganda to fail to beat the Red Devils next month, and to beat the Pharaohs in their final qualifier to reach a fourth consecutive World Cup.

    Both Ghana and Uganda had opportunities to claim all three points, particularly during a second half that grew more frantic as the duo saw their prospects of qualification fade.

    Derrick Nsibambi missed the best opening at the start of the second half when he headed wide from four yards after meeting a brilliant cross.

    It was a lucky escape for Ghana, but the Black Stars had their own hard luck story too, as Daniel Bennett ruled out Daniel Amartey’s first-half header for offside, before denying Ghana twice in the second half

    He booked Frank Acheampong for diving when replays showed that he had indeed been fouled in the box, and with the last kick off the game, Ghana thought they had scored the winner when Dennis Onyango failed to hold unto Ebenezer Ofori’s long-range shot, allowing Raphael Dwamena to tap in from close range.

    Bennett and his assistants ruled that Dwamena had been offside, denying Ghana an equaliser, although replays appeared to show that he was level with the last defender.

    While there were no winners in Kampala, Egypt were the major beneficiaries from these two cancelling each other out, as they find themselves on the brink of a first World Cup qualification since 1990.

  • Elumelu to host 1,300 African Entrepreneurs from 54 countries

    Elumelu to host 1,300 African Entrepreneurs from 54 countries

    The Tony Elumelu Foundation ( TEF ), Africa’s leading philanthropy, on Friday announced plan to host 1,300 African Entrepreneurs, Business leaders and Policymakers from 54 countries in Lagos.

    Mrs Parminder Obe, the TEF’s Chief Executive Officer, who made this known at a briefing in Lagos, said the 3rd Annual TEF Entrepreneurship Forum was slated for Oct. 13.

    She said the 2017 invitation had been extended beyond the usual 1,000 Tony Elumelu Entrepreneurs to include selected SMEs, media, hubs, incubators, academia and investors from across Africa.

    “Assembled SMEs will build networks, share knowledge, connect with investors and link with corporate supply chains.

    “Since launching the TEF Entrepreneurship Programme and committing $100 million to empowering 10,000 African entrepreneurs in a decade, we have unleashed our continent’s most potent development force, its entrepreneurs.

    “In just three years, our first 3,000 entrepreneurs have created tens of thousands of jobs and generated considerable wealth.

    “On Oct. 13 and 14, the global entrepreneurship community will gather in Lagos to build a New Africa, a thriving, self-reliant continent capable of replicating the results of our ground-breaking programme.

    “The two-day forum will feature plenary panels, master classes, sector specific networking opportunities and policy-led forums focused on enabling African business growth.

    “This is the first year we have opened the forum up to include the full pan-African entrepreneurship ecosystem.

    “In doing so, we are enabling African SME communities to come together and expand the possibilities for intra-African partnerships.

    “I am looking forward to welcoming our invited policy-makers and investors to join us at the forum, as we empower the next generation of African business leaders,’’ she said.

    Also speaking, Mrs Owen Omogiafo, the TEF’s Chief Operating Officer, said speakers at the forum would include Wale Ayeni of International Finance Corporation, Stephen Kauma, Afrexim Bank and Andre Hue, African Development Bank.

    “Others are Stephen M. Haykin, USAID Nigeria, Heikke Reugger, European Investment Bank and Abdoulaye Mar Dieye, United Nations Development Programme,’’ she said.

    Omogiafo said TEF’s long-term investment in empowering African entrepreneurs was emblematic of Tony Elumelu’s philosophy of Africa Capitalism, which positions Africa’s private sector, as catalysts for social and economic development.

    She said the foundation, which was founded in 2010 by Tony Elumelu, was aimed at empowering a generation of successful pro-profit entrepreneurs who drive Africa’s economic and social transformation.

    According to her, the foundation received 20,000 applications in 2015 from residents of 53 African countries out of which 1,000 applicants were selected, with Nigeria contributing 64 per cent.

    “In 2016, 45,000 applications were received with Nigeria contributing 30 per cent with 1000 selected applicants.

    “Agriculture leads the sectors represented with 26.67 per cent: a great number are into poultry and fish farming.

    “Fashion and ICT followed in second and third with 10 and 8.8 per cent respectively.

    “This year, we received 93,246 applications out of which 1,300 applicants had been selected in 52 African countries with 57.1 per cent from Nigeria for the forum.

    “Entrepreneurs are coming from Kenya. Uganda, Ghana, Tanzania, Cameroon, South Africa, Rwanda, Botswana and Cote d’Ivoire,’’ she said

    NAN

  • Ugandan legislators throw chairs in fight over presidential age limit

    Ugandan legislators throw chairs in fight over presidential age limit

    Ugandan legislators on Tuesday got into a major scuffle inside parliament, shortly before a controversial motion was introduced that could extend President Yoweri Museveni’s grip on power.

    Broadcaster NTV showed politicians throwing chairs and attacking each other in a fight over a plan to remove the presidential age limit of 75 years.

    Outside the building, police and military were deployed to discourage demonstrations against the planned bill.

    Police in riot gear also surrounded the offices of opposition parties in Kampala.

    Under the current law, a person of over 75 years cannot run for president.

    Museveni, 73, who has been in power since 1986, would not be eligible to compete for the highest office again at the end of his term in 2021, unless the law is changed.

    The bill is expected to pass easily when voted on, as the majority of the nearly 500 member parliaments belong to the ruling party.

    Tuesday’s fight inside parliament comes after almost 50 protesters, mostly students, were arrested in Kampala over the weekend, facing charges of inciting violence, assault and unlawful assembly.

    Six parliamentarians, Kampala Mayor, Erias Lukwago and opposition leader, Kizza Besigye, were also arrested and released on bond. (dpa/NAN)

  • Trump hosts Buhari, other African leaders, lauds Ebola defeat

    Trump hosts Buhari, other African leaders, lauds Ebola defeat

    U.S. President Donald Trump on Wednesday hosted President Muhammadu Buhari and other African leaders to a working lunch on the sidelines of the 72nd UN General Assembly in New York.

    Trump, who said he was greatly honoured to host the lunch, which took place at the New York Palace Hotel, described African leaders as “partners for promoting prosperity and peace.

    “I’m greatly honoured to be joined by leaders of Nigeria, Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Namibia, Senegal, Uganda and South Africa. In particular, I want to thank President Condé, who is representing the African Union,” he said.

    “In this room, I see partners for promoting prosperity and peace on a range of economic, humanitarian and security issues.

    “We hope to extend our economic partnerships with countries who are committed to self-reliance and to fostering opportunities for job creation in both Africa and the United States.

    “Africa has tremendous business potential. I have so many friends going to your countries, trying to get rich. I congratulate you.

    “They’re spending a lot of money. But it does – it has tremendous business potential and representing huge amounts of different markets. And for American firms it’s really become a place that they have to go – that they want to go.

    “Six of the world’s ten fastest-growing economies are in Africa. Increasing American trade and investment across diverse industries – including agriculture, energy, transportation, healthcare, travel, and tourism – will further transform lives throughout the continent.”

    He said “Africa, I have to say, is a continent of tremendous potential. The outlook is bright. I look forward to hearing from you and your advice during the meal.”

    The U.S. leader said  he was eager to closely know more African leaders! noting tha “I really want to congratulate you – growing very fast economically and in every other way. You’ve done a terrific job, you’ve had some tremendous obstacles placed in your path, but you have done really an absolutely incredible job.”

    Trump pledged that the U.S. would partner with African countries and organisations, like the African Union, leading successful efforts to end violence to prevent the spread of terrorism, and to respond to humanitarian crises.

    “I commend your troops currently serving in the field. Very brave. Very, very brave what they’re going through. But we cannot have prosperity if we’re not healthy.

    “We will continue our partnership on critical health initiatives. Uganda has made incredible strides in the battle against HIV/AIDS. In Guinea and Nigeria, you fought a horrifying Ebola outbreak.

    “Namibia’s health system is increasingly self-sufficient. My Secretary of Health and Human Services will be traveling to Africa to promote our Global Health Security Agenda.”

    The U.S. leader, however, regretted that too many people were suffering from conflict in Africa, pointing out the Central African Republic, the Congo, Libya, Mali, Somalia and South Sudan, among others, “were going through dangerous times.”

    He noted that terrorist groups, such as ISIS, al-Shabaab, Boko Haram, and al Qaeda threaten African peace, adding that the U.S. was proud to work with African leaders toward eradicating terrorist safe havens, to cut off their finances, and to discredit their depraved ideology.

    “And a number of you have told me – actually, last night – that we’ve been doing a very good job over the last six or seven months in particular,” he said.

    Trump said the U.S. was closely monitoring and deeply disturbed by ongoing violence in South Sudan and in the Congo, adding that U.S. had continued to provide humanitarian assistance but real results in halting the conflicts would require an African-led peace process and sincere commitment of all parties involved.

    “And I know you’re working on that, and you’re working on that very hard to assist in these efforts, I’m sending Ambassador Nikki Haley to Africa to discuss avenues of conflict and resolution and most importantly, prevention”.

    Trump, at the dinner attended by Minister of Foreign Affairs Geoffrey Onyeama and the Permanent Representative to the UN, Prof. Tijjani Bande, also discussed Africa-U.S. partnership against the nuclear weapons threat from North Korea, describing it “a global challenge.

    “Today, the world faces enormous security threat from North Korea. We must all stand together and be accountable in implementing UN sanctions and resolutions in response to North Korea’s hostile and menacing actions.

    “We believe that a free, independent and democratic nation, in all cases, is the best vehicle for human happiness and success. Thank you for joining me for this critical discussion about challenges and opportunities in our nations”, Trump said.

  • Road, airline to link Nigeria, Uganda

    Road, airline to link Nigeria, Uganda

    President Yoweri Museveni of Uganda on Friday disclosed plans to establish air and rail links between his country and Nigeria.

    Speaking with State House correspondents at the end of closed door meeting with President Muhammadu Buhari at the Presidential Villa, Abuja, he said that the plans are to further consolidate the bilateral relations existing between the two countries.

    According to him, his country would soon revive its airline so as to immediately establish the air link between his country and Nigeria.

    He said “We will like to revive our airline so that we establish an air link because that one is also easier.

    “But, ultimately we would have to have physical linkages through the railways that will be done for the future,’’ he said.

    Stressing that he was in Nigeria with his wife to honour invitation by the National Defence College, Abuja, he said that his country would continue to patronise the training programmes of the college and that of the Armed Forces Command and Staff College (AFCSC), Jaji, Kaduna State.

    He said that some Ugandan universities had been providing various opportunities for many Nigerians wishing to acquire university education in Uganda.

    He said “On the issue of the bilateral relations, what is easier now is sharing institutions like this National Defence College.

    “Some Ugandans have already graduated from there – six of them. But, we can send more and we normally send officers to the Armed Forces Command and Staff College (AFCSC), Jaji, Kaduna State.

    “And I was informed by the ministers in Nigeria here that many Nigerians go to Uganda to study in the universities.

    “So, sharing institutions is easy because that one involves just movement of human beings,’’ he stated.

    He thanked President Buhari for the hospitality accorded him and his wife.

     

  • Uganda tops World Cup group after upsetting Egypt

    Uganda tops World Cup group after upsetting Egypt

    Emmanuel Okwi scored early in the second half to hand Uganda a
    surprise 1-0 World Cup win over Egypt in Kampala on Thursday and put themselves top of their group
    standings at the halfway stage of the qualifiers for Russia.

    Uganda moved to seven points after three matches in Africa’s Group E, ending Egypt’s 100 per cent record as
    they upset the odds in a dominant home performance that provided them their first win over Egypt in
    more than a half century.

    Okwi took advantage of the Egyptian defence, notably new West Bromwich Albion signing Ahmed Hegazi, backing off as he jinxed his
    way into the penalty area and hammered the ball home in the 51st minute.

    The goal came soon after Egypt’s 44-year-old goalkeeper Essam Al Hadary had made the second of two close-range stops to deny the home
    country, who have never previously played at the World Cup finals.

    Egypt’s closest moment came when Mohamed Salah’s header was parried away by Uganda goalkeeper Denis Onyango just after the hour
    mark.

    Egypt, second in the group with six points, can regain top place in the standings if they beat Uganda in the reverse fixture in Alexandria on
    Tuesday