By Joseph Bossa Trust in the government ability to deliver is needed if any plan, let alone Vision 2040, is to succeeed The recently launched Uganda Vision 2040, the master development plan for the next 27 years promises, among other things , to raise the GDP per capita ( the …
Read More »Obama’s gift to Africa
By Joseph Bossa It’s a reminder of what America’s policy aims to achieve by training young Africans like his father When Barack Obama was elected president the first time, romantic African hearts danced with expectation he would usher in a new period of American aid to Africa because his father …
Read More »Genesis, anatomy of our corruption
By Joseph Bossa Will Ugandans and donors wake up and fight corruption or tolerate it to the extent that it ceases to shock? A little more than forty years ago, an observation was made that foreign aid was aid from the poor people of the rich countries to the rich people …
Read More »Kampala city’s troubles (II)
By Joseph Bossa Moving forward: the uneasy days ahead A number of factors have been blamed for the unplanned state of Kampala city. The first one as we saw is the historical proximity of kibuga, the Buganda kingdom capital at Mengo, and the colonial Kampala Municipality capital and the dual …
Read More »Kampala city’s troubles
By Joseph Bossa A historical perspective shows need to build confidence and trust with firmness Kampala has not lived up the expectations of a capital city. There are people who argue that it is irredeemable and that Uganda should establish a new capital city somewhere else. Others assent that it …
Read More »From the 1995 constitutional cocktail
By Joseph Bossa State House invitations to NRM caucus show why Museveni should be prime minister and Mbabazi the president It has become common practice that whenever there is a crucial vote before Parliament, the most recent one being the passing of an amended budget and more lately the one …
Read More »Rationalising wages
By Joseph Bossa Equitably distributing the nation’s resources is a moral and political imperative for the government In an on Sept. 16 on the Sunday Monitor, Henry Ssekaalo, the first Ugandan professor of Chemistry at Makerere University was perplexed that professors take home a maximum of Shs 3 million which …
Read More »Reform vetting of appointees
By Joseph Bossa Does it serve the purpose if the nominees are not attached to a specific position? The constitution requires that certain personnel appointments made by the President must be approved by Parliament. The purpose of the provision is to ensure that a person seeking to serve in a …
Read More »The force of character in public office
By Joseph Bossa Former Bank of Uganda Governor Nyonyintono Kikonyogo exhibited exemplary depth of character worth being emulated Ugandans should be most interested in the character of the person who aspires to occupy any of the three, in my estimation, most important public offices in this land. In no particular …
Read More »Why leadership matters on corruption
By Joseph Bossa Abraham Lincoln and the goings on in Uganda and possibly, Russia Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the United States of America in November, 1860 and took office in March, 1861. Soon after, the American Civil War broke out over the question of slavery when some Southern …
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