By Magnus Mazimpaka Disheartening local investigations have reinforced the need for a strong Ombudsman office One of the popular slogans about Rwanda is its zero tolerance for corruption. Last year, Transparency International published a report ranking Rwanda as the least corrupt country in the East African Community. In terms of …
Read More »Walk to Work is not about politics but people’s suffering- Besigye
By Achola Rosario A few hours after his release from Nakasongola Prison on April 27, The Independent’s Achola Rosario talked to him at his residence in the Kasangati outskirt about his tribulations in jail since he was incarcerated on April 21 and his strategy in the Walk to Work protests. …
Read More »Neither Museveni nor Besigye is innocent
By Moses Asasira Government is wrong for refusing to address the economic crisis but so is the opposition for exploiting the situation for political ends The chaos and uncertainty sparked opposition leader Kizza Besigye’s Walk to Work and fanned by government is hurting the economy. Government through various officials is …
Read More »Kayihura on the spot Government’s inspector of violence
By Mubatsi Asinja Habati I still can’t believe this is the same police force I almost joined a year ago! Thank God the recruitment wasn’t fair after all,” said Rose Amdoi after watching a video clip of a lean-looking man vandalising opposition Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) Kizza Besigye’s luxury …
Read More »We are taming the thieves in Health – Dr Atwine
By Mubatsi Asinja Habati In 2009 President Museveni set up the Medicines and Health Services Delivery Monitoring Unit to rid the health sector of corruption. The unit has caused arrests of many health officials for alleged corruption. The Independent’s Mubatsi Asinja Habati spoke to the unit Director Dr Diana Atwine …
Read More »True, demonstrations can bring rain
By Mwambustya Ndebesa The 1999 winner of the Nobel Prize for Economics, Amartya Sen asserts that there has never been food shortage in a functioning democracy. There is an argument currently that demonstrations cannot bring rain. It’s an argument to discount those who are demonstrating because of high food prices. …
Read More »Education that makes workers shine
By Mike Mahigigi Uganda lags while Kenya and Tanzania show simple ways to unlocking their potential There is worldwide consensus that youth aged 14 to 30 years are the most potentially economically dynamic segment of any population. Unfortunately in Uganda, 50 percent of youth, especially females, are not engaged in …
Read More »Who said govt can’t intervene in rising prices?
By Prof. Augustus Nuwagaba Obama has intervened in the US financial crisis. Is our government saying Uganda is more economically liberal than America? The protests over rising commodity prices in Uganda have posed a huge test to the government on how sensitive it is to the needs of the people. …
Read More »Makerere University tuition fees will not be increased
By Mubatsi Asinja Habati Makerere University students went on strike in April over reports that it was planning to raise tuition fees from the average of Shs 3 million to Shs 6 million per year per student. Before the strike the university’s Ag.Vice Chancellor, Prof. Venansius Baryamureeba told The Independent’s …
Read More »The poor and illiterates are so easy to rule
By Bright Arinaitwe I do not know many educated people who support President Museveni’s regime unless they enjoy personal benefits from it directly or indirectly. The level of education has a big role to play in a country’s democratisation process. Poor and uneducated people do not know how their vote, …
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