By Mubatsi Asinja Habati Joan Katushabe, a Senior Four student at Ishaka Vocational Secondary School in Bushenyi district, is scared of the AH1N1 virus (swine flu) that attacked Kitabi Seminary which is about 20km from her school. She says the press reports and strict guidelines the school authorities have issued …
Read More »Museveni’s love-hate relationship with media
By P. Matsiko wa Mucoori Over the last twenty years, President Yoweri Museveni has baffled observers with his relations with the Ugandan media. He has simultaneously been the strongest promoter of press freedom and its biggest threat. He has jailed and prosecuted as many journalists as he has dined with. …
Read More »What Uganda’s protests tell us
By Andrew M. Mwenda On March 16, 1989, the ultra modern subway system of South Korea’s capital Seoul came to a standstill. Six thousand workers went on strike; 3,000 of them defiantly occupied the roundhouse from which the locomotives dispatch. The president, Gen. Roh Tae Woo, ordered a crackdown: 6,000 …
Read More »Museveni, Kabaka meeting
By Joseph Were & Odoobo C. Bichachi What was Buganda and NRM’s strategy, and where could it lead the country? President Yoweri Museveni might have waited four years but on September 30, one of his biggest wishes was granted ‘ a meeting with Kabaka of Buganda Ronald Muwenda Mutebi. The …
Read More »Uniform cross-network call rates
By Patrick Kagenda Will they lower the cost of phone calls? Starting November 1, Ugandans are to be charged uniform cross-network connection or call termination fees by all telephone networks, according to the Uganda Communications Commission. It is, however, unclear whether the stated objectives of the uniform tariff will be …
Read More »Are investors missing out on sub-Sahara Africa?
By Alonzo Fulgham Africa’s improvements have created thriving markets. US firms should enter this last great investment frontier. Normally, by the time an investment tip makes its way into a newspaper, conventional wisdom says the money is already off the table. Not so in the case of sub-Saharan Africa. American …
Read More »MTN pioneering brightens Uganda
By Independent Reporter MTN has demonstrated that innovative solutions can drive economic development even in the most under serviced areas. The company has pioneered many innovations in cellular and technological industries. Africa is the world’s fastest-growing mobile phone market with more than 40% of Africa’s population having access to a …
Read More »Life of a Ugandan in Iraq II
By Solomon Akugizibwe Richard Magezi spent a year in Iraq as a security Guard, he saw it all and did it all. This is the second part as told to Solomon Akugizibwe. The first part was published in our last post here. We did not get a chance of going …
Read More »Is Uganda’s press freedom a myth?
By Andrew M. Mwenda For a long time now, Ugandans and foreigners have praised the government of President Yoweri Museveni for being ‘tolerant’ of press freedom. I have been inconsistent on this issue. Sometimes I believe we enjoy a relatively good level of media freedom and freedom of expression generally …
Read More »Worst kept secret? Tullow Oil’s contract
By Taimour Lay The full release of Uganda’s Production Sharing Agreements (PSAs) with Tullow Oil and Heritage Oil & Gas is the fundamental first step towards forging a democratic and socially responsible extraction of oil in the Albertine rift. Instead, Ugandans are being subjected to a disinformation campaign coordinated by …
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The Independent Uganda: You get the Truth we Pay the Price