Tag: Uganda

  • Uganda begins porn users clampdown

    Uganda begins porn users clampdown

    Ugandan Ethics Minister, Simon Lokodo, said on Tuesday that a committee to eradicate pornography in the country has started work.

    Lokodo said that the government blamed sexually explicit materials for everything, from drug abuse to homosexuality.

    The minister said that the nation will invest roughly 500 million dollars yearly to stop “one of the deadliest moral diseases in the country”.

    Lokodo, a former Catholic priest, blamed porn for “escalating cases of drug abuse among youths, incest, teenage pregnancy and abortion, homosexuality and lesbianism and defilement.”

    “The nine-member investigate team will be outfitted with “top-end gadgets” to monitor or intercept the downloading, watching, sharing or transmission of pornographic material.

    “In addition, inspectors will be assigned to conduct on-the-spot checks for pornographic material.

    “The team will also be supported by 30 to 40 technical and administrative staff and anyone caught distributing or using pornographic material would be handed over to the police,’’ the minister said.

  • Uganda reinforces border security with South Sudan after clashes

    Uganda reinforces border security with South Sudan after clashes

    The Ugandan military had reinforce the security on the border with South Sudan after the weekend clashes that left 19 people dead, Brig. Richard Karemire, the Ugandan military spokesperson said on Tuesday.

    Karemire said that security has been enhanced at Kaya border to ensure the South Sudan warring parties do not cross into Uganda without being detected.

    “We have intensified our security and intelligence at the border with South Sudan as we continue to follow and monitor the latest clashes in the country.

    “We shall continue to screen all the people fleeing from South Sudan into Uganda.

    “We are interested in knowing the government and oppositions fighters who might want to cross,” he said.

    According to the South Sudan government, the clashes on Saturday between government troops and the rebels left 19 people dead, including an American journalist.

    Thousands of South Sudan refugees continue to cross into Uganda after fighting erupted in December 2013.

    Karemire said the military will continue to allow in refugees.

    Over one million South Sudan refugees have crossed into Uganda, according to the new figures released by the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.

  • Serb Sredojevic quits as Uganda coach

    Serb Sredojevic quits as Uganda coach

     

    Milutin “Micho” Sredojevic resigned as Uganda coach on Saturday, six months after leading the team to the Africa Cup of Nations for the first time in 38 years.

    The 47-year-old Serbian confirmed he was terminating his contract with the Cranes in a row over unpaid salary allowances totalling 216 million shillings ($64,000).

    “I have been patient and working under very difficult conditions. Today I have resigned because I and FUFA (Federation of Uganda Football Association) have stretched limits,” Sredojevic told AFP on Saturday.

    FUFA president Moses Magogo confirmed the departure of the Serbian coach after four years in charge of the national team.

    Sredojevic joined the Cranes in May 2013 after being sacked as the head coach of Rwanda, and successfully qualified Uganda for their first Cup of Nations since 1978.

    Uganda were knocked out in the first round of the tournament held in Gabon after two losses and a draw in Group D. They are still in contention to qualify for next year’s World Cup in Russia, with a key game in Egypt to come next month.

  • Badminton: 11 countries for 3rd Lagos Badminton Classics – Chairman

    Badminton: 11 countries for 3rd Lagos Badminton Classics – Chairman

    The Lagos State Badminton Association (LSBA) has said that 11 countries would feature in the 3rd Lagos International Badminton classics from July 26 to July 29 at the Teslim Balogun Stadium, Surulere.

    The association’s chairman, Francis Orbih, told a news conference on Thursday that the Gov. Akinwunmi ambode has also increased the tournament’s prize money to 20,000 dollars.

    With the increase, the competition becomes biggest ever to be staged in Lagos and in Africa.

    “A total of 20,000 dollars have been set aside as the total prize money for the entire competition.

    “The competition will also have Nigeria’s best players compete among quality international ranked players and get a chance to be ranked as well,’’ Orbih said.

    According to Orbih, the international athletes will Israel’s Misha Zilberman who is ranked 68 in the world.

    Others will come from Sri Lanka, Portugal, Republic of Benin, Egypt, Italy, Cameroon, Uganda, India and Ghana.

    He said that Nigeria’s Habib Temitope ranked number 512 in the world will lead the challenge by the national players.

    Meanwhile, Deji Tinubu, the Chairman, Lagos State Sports Commission, has extolled the brilliance and the dedication of the LBSA as one of the best associations working hard.

    Tinubu said the association would always get the backing of the sports commission to carry out their objectives because over the years, it had shown commitment in developing youths through badminton.

    “It is good to know that the classics are back and I want to agree that it is indeed back for good.

    “We at the sports commission are happy about how the LSBA has carried itself and the sport’s fans,’’ he said adding that the governor remained an ardent fan of the game.

    “This is why we have once again partnered this edition and also gone ahead to raise the prize money.

    “We hope at the end of the tournament that Nigerian youths can gain from the international players in the areas of mentoring and maintaining a good relationship,’’ Tinubu said.

    The winner of the Men and Women’s Singles will earn 2,000 dollars each, while the second place winners get 1,500 dollars and the second runners-up 650 dollars each.

    The doubles and mixed doubles winners will get 725 dollars each, while the runners-up and the second runners-up take 400 dollars and 175 dollars respectively.

    He noted that the prize monies would be given as directed by the International BVadminton Federation.

  • Tunisia, Senegal to co-host 2017 AfroBasket for Men

    Tunisia, Senegal to co-host 2017 AfroBasket for Men

    FIBA Africa, basketball’s governing board on the continent, has confirmed that Tunisia and Senegal will jointly host this year’s FIBA AfroBasket from Sept. 8 to Sept. 16.

    According to a statement by the sports body, the 16 participating teams will be divided into four groups of four teams in the Group Phase of the competition.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the Group Phase will hold from Sept. 8 to Sept. 10.

    Senegal’s capital city of Dakar will host two groups, while Tunisia’s capital city of Tunis will host the other two.

    The top two teams from each group will advance to Tunis, which will also host the Final Phase which consists of the Quarter-Finals, Semi-Finals and Finals.

    NAN reports that the Final Phase is billed for Sept. 14 to Sept. 16.

    The bottom two teams from each group in the Group Phase will be knocked out of the competition.

    The participating teams include Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic (CAR), Cote d’Ivoire, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Egypt and Guinea.

    The rest are Mali, Morocco, Mozambique, defending champions Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Tunisia and Uganda.

    Angola was earlier proposed by FIBA Africa to host the tournament, but it later turned out that the country would hold its general elections around the same period.

  • Impact Water: providing safe drinking water solutions at scale

    Impact Water: providing safe drinking water solutions at scale

    When non-profit Impact Carbon was first introduced in Uganda, it sought ways of advancing the production and quality of improved, clean-burning cook stoves as a way to mitigate carbon emissions and reduce indoor air pollution.

    As operations at Impact Carbon progressed, there was a realisation of the need to simultaneously introduce water purification systems.

    “We found that we could also look into introducing water purification systems as a channel to reduce consumption of wood based fuel so instead of having to boil water and use lots of wood which has a negative impact on the environment, households and institutions could use purification systems,” Mark Turgesen, Director of Impact Carbon and Impact Water in Uganda explains.

    In 2012, Impact Carbon carried out a pilot study to identify how it could help schools in particular, primarily because it would allow the organisation to deal with a large population that needs safe drinking water and more so because children are part of the most vulnerable people in society.

    Statistics from Water.org, an organisation that provides water solutions on a large scale and operates in fourteen countries around the world, indicate that about 8 million Ugandans cannot access clean water. According to Turgesen, children have a right to survival and part of survival is adequate food, adequate water and proper shelter.

    “It should be accessible not for children to just meet their basic rights but to also enjoy the health implications which can affect attendance rates at school and attention in class,” he says.

    The Water and Sanitation Program Africa Region (WSP-AF) reported that 440 children die every week in Uganda because of waterborne diseases. Impact Carbon estimates that 40 per cent of diarrheal cases are attributed to water consumption at schools.

    However, amidst all this, one thought lingered on the minds of the team at Impact Carbon.

    “Do we offer free water purification systems to schools? Is that sustainable? What could we do that would have a profound impact to ensure that when we have introduced these systems, we are able to maintain them,” they wondered.

    The solution lay in operating the project as a business. More so, buying the systems would encourage schools to own the responsibility of carefully utilising and maintaining them. The idea birthed Impact Water which was registered in 2015, a social business that provides reliable safe drinking water to Uganda’s institutions.

    The process

    The water goes through a three stage process. For the first part of purification, Impact Water connects its Ultraviolet purification system to existing water sources such as national water taps, wells, boreholes and rain water harvest. The water is then filtered to remove dirt and large pathogens. To make it taste fresh, activated carbon purification removes dissolved substances and improves the odor. The water is then treated in the ultraviolet chamber to kill all bacteria and viruses that pass through the filters. The filtered water is finally kept in stainless steel tanks designed for schools.

    Response

    Mr Turgesen says the response from schools is the same as when Impact Water opened shop in 2015. “The response is, ‘when can I get started’? It is because schools are looking for solutions because they know it is a problem,” he notes.

    This was the case for Mr Adam Kakembo, a teacher and sanitary master at Kawempe Muslim Secondary School in Kampala. Kawempe now has three Impact Water systems and consumes about 4500 litres of water a day.

    Kakembo explains that before the installation of the purification systems, “We would boil 300 litres for the boys and about 200 litres of water for the girls in the students’ kitchens. We would consume about three to four lorries of firewood per week.”

    Kakembo notes that besides the cost implications, the water boiled in this way was inadequate, unreliable and laborious to supply.

    The students “would get water only during lunch time. Sometimes firewood would get wet and we would go three days without boiling water. Also, we would store the water in saucepans which exposed it to contamination,” he says.

    Today the school’s story is similar to that of Kibuli Secondary School, another beneficiary in Kampala. The deputy head teacher Hajjati Masitula says the system is convenient and provides easy access to safe water.

    Kakembo says safe drinking water is now always available, the system is energy efficient and affordable; the costs can be met within the confines of the school’s budget. Cases of typhoid have also been reduced.

    “Any school can afford it. The barriers between those who have the system and those who do not is the information gap,” Kakembo adds.

    This is possible because when business commenced, Impact Water sought a new way to make the water system affordable for schools. It put in place a credit facility that allows schools to pay over a two and five year long payment plan, each child paying an average of Shs800 per term.

    Since Impact Water’s inception, 650,000 students in 1300 schools have been able to access safe drinking water thanks to its systems.

    Impact Water is looking to expand further in institutions such as health facilities by specifically targeting bulk sales with non-governmental organisations and via partnerships with school associations.

    For now, the company hopes to extend safe drinking water to 1 million children daily by the end of 2017, reach 5000 schools in Uganda by the end of 2018 and 10,000 schools globally by the end of 2020.

    “Down the road five to ten years from now, I hope that with these meaningful engagements – with school associations for example – that safe drinking water will be expected in the school and that when a parent takes their child to school they know safe drinking water will be available just like food,” Turgesen says.

    http://www.impactwater.co

     

     

     

     

  • South Sudan: UN chief warns leaders to end civil war

    South Sudan: UN chief warns leaders to end civil war

    UN Secretary-General António Guterres says South Sudan’s leaders must end the civil war that has killed tens of thousands and displaced millions.

    Guterres, who made the remarks when he visited South Sudanese refugees in Uganda on the sidelines of the ‘Solidarity Summit’ to raise 2.2 billion dollars for the refugees emergency, urged the world to show solidarity.

    “It is time for the war to end. It is time for all the leaders of South Sudan to understand that they need to stop this war.

    “Peace in South Sudan is a must for these people to be able to have a future,” the Secretary-General said.

    The UN chief expressed gratitude for the efforts made by the Heads of State of the region, the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD), the African Union and by the UN to help create the conditions for peace to be re-established.

    “At the same time, I cannot forget that twelve years ago I was here, in June, in this same place.

    “I was marking World Refugee Day with South Sudanese refugees that were singing with joy because they were going back home soon,” Guterres, who was then UN High Commissioner for Refugees, regretted.

    He said he had later accompanied many of the refugees across the border with the hope that the their new country would live in peace.

    “Unfortunately, that had not been the case. South Sudan’s leaders ‘do not deserve the people of their country,” Guterres said, stressing that the South Sudanese people have been suffering enormously “in an endless war”.

    He lauded Uganda’s hosting almost one million South Sudanese refugees “as sisters and brothers and sharing with them their land and everything they have.”

    He urged the international community to show solidarity with those that had fled their homes, as well as with the Ugandan Government and people.

    “In a world where so many people are selfishly closing their doors, closing their borders, not allowing refugees to come, this example deserves praise and admiration from the whole international community,” Guterres said.

    The UN chief visited the Imvepi Refugee Reception Centre in the Arua district of northern Uganda, the first stop for many South Sudanese refugees once they crossed the border into Uganda.

    The camp, which opened in February this year, is already filling up, hosting some 120,000 refugees, mostly women and children, fleeing violence and instability in the neighbouring country.

    In just the past year, the overall refugee population in Uganda has more than doubled from 500,000 to more than 1.25 million, making the East African country host to the world’s fastest growing refugee emergency.

    The UN chief pointed out that at the ‘Solidarity Summit’ on Friday, the international community would have the opportunity to express its solidarity, “responding to our appeal for massive financial support, both for humanitarian aid for the refugees”.

    “But also for the investments necessary for the education system, the health system, the infrastructure, the [local] environment, to be able to cope with this enormous challenge”.

    The ‘Solidarity Summit,’ which opened on Thursday in the Ugandan capital, Kampala, and is expected to wrap up on Friday.

    It was co-hosted by Uganda and the UN to rally international support for refugees and host communities in the form of donations, investments and innovative programmes.

  • ECOWAS to set up solidarity fund to rebuild North East

    ECOWAS to set up solidarity fund to rebuild North East

     

    Mr. Edward Singhatey, the Vice President, Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Commission says that plans are on-going to establish a solidarity Fund for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of the North-East.

    Singhatey made this known on Tuesday in Abuja during the celebration of the 2017 World Refugee Day with the theme “We stand together with refugees and IDPs”.

    He said the Solidarity Fund was in compliance with the decision of the Mediation and Security Council to support the Federal Government’s Plan for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of North-East Nigeria.

    He said that the humanitarian crises in the insurgency affected states of the North-East was enormous, adding that it was constantly being assessed by the ECOWAS Commission.

    Singhatey said that the dire situation in the North-East deserved special attention, adding that it had necessitated the international community and ECOWAS Commission to engage in several interventions.

    He said that the ECOWAS Commission, working with partners had donated one million dollars’ worth of food items to support the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and 300,000 dollars for Nigerian refugees in Niger, Chad and Cameroon.

    The ECOWAS Commission vice president said that it also donated 400,000 dollars for the support of affected communities in the North-East.

    According to him, a recent statistics by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimates over 65 million out of the eight billion worldwide population are refugees, asylum seekers and IDPs.

    Singhatey said that the African region represents about 30 per cent of the total number of refugees worldwide with a record of 180 million refugees as at 2016.

    He said that in West Africa, displacement and sufferings were caused by conflicts and other natural and human made causes.

    Singhatey said that failing to address the situation of refugees and other persons of concern amount to inviting adverse consequences for the environment.

    He said that the Commission’s Department of Social Affairs and Gender leads the humanitarian works with the goal of a borderless, prosperous and cohesive region with the capacity to effectively prevent and mitigate conflicts.

    He said the goal was also to limit the impact of conflicts and disasters on citizens and residents with a view to achieving human centered development.

    Singhatey said that the commission would continue to support the efforts of the Nigerian Government in assisting refugees, IDPs and other persons of concern.

    Also speaking, Mr. Jose-Antonio Canhandula, UNHCR Representative to Nigeria and ECOWAS tasked Nigeria to join the new approach, which he said was the Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework.

    He said that the framework was already being piloted by other African countries, including development actors and private sector in Chad, Tanzania, Ethiopia and Uganda.

    Canhandula, however, said that UNHCR was working with various partners to foster the protection of refugees and IDPs, to collectively seek ways to increase support to the government in assisting people.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the occasion was attended by Acting President Prof. Yemi Osinbajo, who was represented by Mrs. Zainab Ahmed, the Minister of State, Budget and National Planning.

    Others present were Hajiya Sadiya Farouq, the Federal Commissioner, NCFRMI, humanitarian actors and the refugees and IDPs who displayed the wares they made from various skills acquisition programmes.

  • AFCON Qualifiers: Cape Verde vs. Uganda postponed for 24 hours

    AFCON Qualifiers: Cape Verde vs. Uganda postponed for 24 hours

    The‎ Group L Day One clash between Cape Verde and Uganda, originally scheduled for Saturday in Praia, has been postponed for 24 hours.

    The decision was taken by the Organising Committee for the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) due to the difficulties faced by the Ugandan team in arriving in Praia.

    The ‎flight of the Ugandan team did not take off as expected from Dakar in Senegal, where they held a training camp, due to a technical problem.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the situation constitutes a case of force majeure.

    The match will therefore take place on Sunday at the same‎ time and venue with the same officials.

  • Fashion meets insanity: Undergraduates in trouble for wearing revealing clothes for dinner

    Fashion meets insanity: Undergraduates in trouble for wearing revealing clothes for dinner

    Looking good is good business! Everyone likes to dress good and be admired by all and sundry, however, when an individual reduces himself or herself to states of bestial expressions all in the name of fashion, then, there is no other name for such acts other than – Madness!

    Two final year students of the Makerere University in Uganda have landed in serious trouble after wearing very revealing clothes to a university function which the school authority considered “indecent”.

     

    Their obviously tattered dresses have been making the rounds on social media since the weekend when the students garbed themselves for their Finalist Education Dinner.

    The two have been summoned to appear before the disciplinary committee.

    In a letter dated Tuesday May 30, 2017, the Makerere University authorities had expressed dismay over the students’ conduct.

    The letter, as published by Ugandan Mirror online reads:

    “If it is true that that person was you, your action, as a student of this university, would have contravened University Regulation 8 (2)(a) which states that, ‘Every student shall respect him/herself and behave in a manner that will not bring his/her name and that of the university into disrepute;’ and Regulation 8 (2) (d) which states that, ‘Every student shall dress in a neat and decent manner.”

    The letter was addressed to one of the students who is said to have appeared in the pictures, Ms Rebecca Naddamba.

    According to reports, the students have until Friday, June 2, 2017 to submit their replies to the university.

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