By Silver Mugisha Paying affordable and fair water prices also helps to promote efficient allocation of homestead resources A multifaceted discourse has been raging on various platforms of the media regarding water tariffing and how it impacts the socio-economic life of citizens, especially the low income segment. I have observed …
Read More »Forget about military takeover
By Sam Akaki It is not a defeatist attitude but a realistic one amid changed national, international climate As someone who once emotively entertained the dream that Museveni could, and would indeed be toppled through an armed rebellion, I am writing to enumerate the reasons why those who are dreaming …
Read More »Ongwen’s trial, pain of victims
By Victor Ochen It was shocking and difficult to be seated in the same room with a killer and hear calls for amnesty While at the International Criminal Court (ICC) in The Hague, I received many phone calls from Uganda, coming from people whose family members and relatives were abducted …
Read More »Rethinking institutions in Africa
By Andrew M. Mwenda Why poor countries may need a more activist president, one willing to intervene to get them to work Let me do what the Germans call Gedanken (a thought experiment). Political power in most of post-colonial Africa has tended to be personalised. We feel that this is …
Read More »The pathologies of Uganda’s democracy
By Andrew M. Mwenda How it has facilitated a politics that has undermined the ability of public institutions to serve the common good To explain the dysfunctions in the public sector in Uganda, we need to understand how political power in our country is organised, how it is exercised and …
Read More »Rethink free market on services
By Peter Nyanzi Poor regulation hampering Uganda’s anti-poverty, corruption fight Recently, two friends on Facebook posted updates which provoked intense debate. One was a scanned copy of a school fees bank slip, which indicated that the parent had paid Shs1.7 million for a Primary Six pupil. The other related to …
Read More »Davos oligarchs right to fear
By Seumas Milne Escalating inequality is the work of a global elite that will resist every challenge to its vested interests The billionaires and corporate oligarchs meeting in Davos recently were getting worried about inequality. It might be hard to stomach that the overlords of a system that has delivered …
Read More »Falling oil prices a wake up call
By Enock Nyorekwa Twinoburyo If sustained, current prices have implications for Uganda as an importer and potential medium term producer To economists, oil prices follow a random walk (volatile and unpredictable). This is the very reason many economists are reluctant to forecast oil prices. As a matter of fact, prices …
Read More »A new intellectual discourse for 2015
By Andrew M. Mwenda African intellectual elites personalise their analysis even as they accuse African leaders of personalising the state On Jan.1, I went to Nsambya Hospital in Kampala where my cousin was hospitalised. The hospital is owned and run by the Catholic Church. The buildings many of which were …
Read More »Of Sejusa and other flip-floppers
By Joseph Bossa With opposition threatening a boycott, Museveni needs an opponent at the national presidential elections Some things require many words and rims of paper to explain. The consequences of Gen. David Sejusa’s and former Kampala Mayor, Nasser Ssebaggala’s recent political moves do not. ‘’It is elementary, my dear …
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