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GEORGE MUBIRU: Gen. Museveni Is The Champion Of Women Emancipation

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President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni Tibuhaburwa

By George Mubiru

Before Uganda’s iconic president Yoweri Kaguta Museveni ascended to power in 1986, women were the most maginalised group of people. Flogging and all sorts of mistreatment to women was the order of the day in the Ugandan communities. Educating the girl child was seen as a waste of money by most parents. When president Museveni’s Era was ushered in, women emancipation was one of the priority targets on the agenda.

The NRM position right from the beginning was looking at the whole society with the aim to transform it. He broke the record when he appointed Dr specioza wandira Kazibwe as the first female vice president of Uganda and Africa in 1994, a position she served close to a decade until 2003. This was a practical example to show that the president practiced equality, one of the ideological representation of the NRM government. Still currently, the vice president of Uganda is a woman.

Since then, the president has kept on increasing the number of female ministers in his cabinet and other government agencies.

Uganda under Gen Museveni has been an advocate of women which has navigated the treacherous landscape of Ugandan politics and has made a significant impact. We have seen a great increment in female political representation at all levels and it’s in this regime that we saw Rt Hon Rebecca Alitwala Kadaga emerge as the first female deputy speaker of Parliament for ten years and later speaker for another 10 years. Even currently, the speaker of Parliament, Rt Hon Anita Among is a woman.

Today, women hold 46% of local government positions, 33% of parliamentary seats and 43% of the cabinet positions. President Museveni is indeed a hero of women inclusion. appointing a woman as Vice President or Prime Minister etc is an outward sign that women can manage. It doesn’t mean others will all go and sleep in their houses or that they will share the salary.

The introduction of UPE, USE and an additional point to girl children in admission to universities and other tertiary institutioms was an intended plan to increase on the intake of girls into school. Government schools are now full of children and because of that free education, the number of female intake has highly shot up. In 2001, the girls in schools were 24% but today, they are 49.9% of the enrollment. Literacy rate for women is 72% from 43% in 1986. If we could implement completely free education in government schools, we could move much faster.

The NRM government has also ensured endless efforts in economic empowerment of women to ensure that they are no longer vulnerable. Through different Government economic programs like Uganda Women Entrepreneurship program (UWEP), Parish Development Model and Emyooga, there is a big change in society. Once a woman has got her own money, she will no longer be as vulnerable as those who depend on men, a factor that has greatly caused domestic violence.

Similarly, women have been encouraged to join armed forces like the army, police and prisons something which rarely happened before the NRM government took charge of the country in 1986. We are yet to see a female commander taking over the helm of any of these armed forces.

The writer, George Mubiru, is a Jinja based researcher and NRM mobilizer.

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Kinzi Apartments Introduces Saturday Band Nights

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Say Good Bye To Boring Saturday nights, +256 705 533 833 is the Call and WhatsApp number for Kinzi Apartments which is Jinja’s perfect apartment for both long and short stays nestled in the hear of Jinja Uganda proudly presents the Kinzi Band night to happen every Saturday. The acoustic night would be full of fun, enjoyment ku enjoyment courtesy of the Kinzi Afro Jazz Band. Come enjoy, eat as the moon and stars flash bright with the thrilling camp fire.

The Saturday nights are step to introduce a blend of fun with a cocktail of sounds for the Live band music lovers in Jinja city.

One of the highlight of the Kinzi Saturday Band nights at Kinzi Apartments is the accommodation itself. The apartments are tastefully furnished, with attention paid to every detail to create a cozy and inviting atmosphere. Whether you opt for a spacious one-bedroom or a luxurious penthouse suit, you’ll find yourself surrounded by elegance and comfort at every turn.

For couples looking to unwind and indulge, Kinzi apartments offers a range of amenities designed to pamper and delight. Or perhaps you prefer to relax in the greenery gardens and melt away the stresses of everyday life. Whatever your preference, Kinzi apartments ensures that your Saturday night is nothing short of a magical one.

The beauty with it is that Entrance is strictly free.

Inside The Full Installed Kitchens At Kinzi Apartments

 

Inaugural PDM Expo Set For April In Mbale City

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The Ministry of Local government, PDM secretariat and Bubu Distributors Limited have organized the inaugural PDM Expo 2024 in Mbale City at the Mbale Cricket grounds from 16th to 18th April 2024.

The PDM expo is part of the activities as the Parish Development Model celebrates its second anniversary since the Presidential launch on 26th February, 2022 by H.E Yoweri Kaguta Museveni in Kibuku District.

According to Hon. Dennis Galabuzi Ssozi, the National Coordinator of the Parish Development Model, implementation is supposed to happen in 3 phases over the 5 years from 2021-2026. In the past 2 years, one phase has been completed and the second is already in progress.

“We have completed the establishment phase where we setup governance structures, capitalized SACCOs and organized people in groups, among others. Currently, we are at the stabilization phase where people are using their PRF, planning for storage of their produce and creating market linkages” Hon Galabuzi said.

He also added that the Expo is not a celebration of the achievements so far but a testimony that PDM, as a government poverty alleviation initiative, is working.

“At the Expo, those who will attend will have a chance to see the success stories of different PDM Beneficiaries across the country. They will see that PDM is beyond just the money, and that poverty is being fought across all spheres like health, education and governance” he noted.

The Deputy National Coordinator Hon. Jovrine Kaliisa, states that the two years have been a learning experience in combating challenges to ensure that PDM is delivered to the last Ugandan as intended by the Government.

“The two years have taught us how to fight corruption, slow service delivery and fraud, which have always hindered the good intentions of government to the Ugandans who voted it” she said.

She added that at the Expo, the leadership of PDM hopes to share more with the stakeholders present, to learn more on how to implement PDM better.

Over 10,000 beneficiaries, government officials, banks and all stakeholders in the PDM will be meeting for the very first time under one roof at the Expo.

If you are a value addition solution provider, financial institution, agricultural input provider, a player in the PDM value chain or a PDM beneficiary, this is your time to sponsor, exhibit and showcase your products and services to the millions of Ugandans who will throng Mbale Cricket grounds for this free entry event which will be graced by H.E Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.

To be part of this event through sponsorship, showcasing or exhibiting at the three days PDM Expo 2024, call +256787452220 or send an email at info@bubudil.ug to know more about this inaugural event.

This message is brought to you by the PDM Secretariat under Ministry of Local Government, BUBU Distributors Limited and Partners.

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Why NUP should Prepare To Trek On The Same Tale, If Not The Worst

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By Odeke Bazel 

NUP that emerged as a victor opposition party in terms of numbers in parliament(61 MPs) took the country by somehow, surprise which saw them appoint the Leader Of Opposition (LOP), as per the guidelines. With such mandate, NUP later on decided to alter administration in positions that they have authority- in what they termed as giving space to the new leaders ( Hon. Mathias Mpuuga to Hon. Joel Ssenyonyi), beautiful isn’t?
Conversely, just like other prominent political parties that have and continue to be baffled and punctuated by the regime, NUP is/wasn’t an exception as it’s already making headlines, with social media pundits already squeezing water out of a rock and making conclusions- befitting to say, the higher the monkey climbs, the more naked it becomes(time to see NUP in totality)
It’s derogative to note that, within a short period of time, NUP finds itself in corridors of dismay and destruction, if not, the first stone-away to it’s downfall! Anyone can literally argue that, if the well structured and the old fell, what about the offspring? In anyway, being a ‘pressure’ group, as others chose to call it, pressure was indeed bound to breakthrough, right from inside
Whereas, the principal chair found the necessary grounds to have Hon. Mathias Mpuuga accountable- which he termed as a moral obligation. It should be noted that, it’s the same dirty money-saga that saw FDC fraternity go into two varing factions, each accusing the other of being unholy, unrighteous and not conforming to the desired approach
With the success story in FDC and others, the same poison has been directed to the child. One thing not certain for sure is; Who gives information to who? How is information given? How is information received? Who delivers the cheque to who? What is the motive? And if the cheque delivery was done in secrecy, why must it come to public? Your guess is as good as mine!
Arguably, it should be noted that, FDC’s failure to handle internal contradictions internally, destroyed a once-iconic party, they chose media over round table talks, that could had seen the accusations handled amicably. And surprisingly, in not even a year, we have reached out to France to copy the Bourbons who learned nothing and forgot nothing! The same issue of money continues the walk!
Does this therefore qualify and quantify to say, there’s no opposition in Uganda! And that, what we have is a group of people trying to align themselves to greatness and opulence that await a head? If verily, opposition existed, why are they not learning from their own mistakes?
To fix a notch, leaders should understand what fame and egocentrism offer; the ideals of justice, equality, equity and the best interest of a person should be weighed. Why is it that, when I do the same thing, it’s wrong and when the other does, it’s right? Leaders must as well interest themselves to know the difference between ontology and epistemology in regard to leadership.
There’s time to speak and there’s time to entomb certain things for the interest of peace over mayhem. Corruption in it’s strongest terms is very bad and unacceptable, not even to developed countries. However, it must be fought tactically otherwise, it’s a nuclear bomb, that won’t even know it’s procreator
The Author is a researcher/Political commentator/ Social worker – Pallisa district 
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Stanbic Bank’s Anne Juuko Appointed Head Global Market For East Africa

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The Standard Bank Group has appointed Stanbic Bank Uganda Chief Executive Anne Juuko to a new leadership role as Global Markets Regional Head-East Africa. The appointment is effective 1 April 2024. A successor will be announced in due course.

Kayode Solola, the Standard Bank Group Executive Head for Global Markets—Africa Regions said, “I congratulate Anne on this skyward deployment within the Group Africa Regions Global Markets leadership where she will oversee seven markets including Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, DR Congo, South Sudan, Malawi, and Zambia.”

Damoni Kitabire, the Board Chairman for Stanbic Bank Uganda said, “We thank Anne and her colleagues in senior management for the collaboration and leading their respective teams to considerable success and delivering for both our customers and shareholders.”

Patrick Mweheire, the Standard Bank Group Regional Chief Executive for East Africa said, “I congratulate and welcome Anne to the East Africa region—an important growth vector in the Group’s business strategy. I am confident that she will succeed in her new mandate—steering the respective country teams to deliver satisfactorily on the set revenue, profitability, and sustainability goals, given her expertise, market networks, and leadership experience.”

Anne is not new to Global Markets banking having joined the Standard Bank Group twelve years ago as Head of Global Markets for Stanbic Bank Uganda, before moving on to serve as Head of Corporate and Investment Banking Namibia, until 2020 when she was appointed Chief Executive.

Management Record

She succeeded Patrick Mweheire to become the first female Chief Executive of Uganda’s largest commercial lender in 2020 and is lauded for sustaining the bank’s profitability through some of the most challenging operating environments including two years of the global covid-19 pandemic.

Under her, the bank posted strong prosperity announcing a profit after tax of UGX 365 in 2022, up from UGX 242bn in her first year 2020. Performance results for 2023 are set to be released later this month.

The Bank also registered considerable success in enabling access to affordable credit for smallholder farmer groups with the launch in 2021 of the SACCO financing and capacity building programme which has since enrolled over 6000 groups with a combined membership of 1.8 million people and deposits of over UGX 200 billion.

Collectively, the bank has lent over UGX 80 billion at 10% annual interest to SACCO groups which has indirectly benefited nearly 10 million Ugandans, with support from partners such as Abi Trust,

Operation Wealth Creation. It also played a critical part in enabling the implementation of the government of Uganda’s led Parish Development Model.

In 2022, Stanbic Bank in partnership with the International Finance Corporation (IFC) launched Stanbic4Her, a special interest vehicle for capacity building and markets development designed to support access to affordable credit by women led local enterprises in Uganda.

Through Stanbic4Her, Stanbic has enrolled 19 000 women entrepreneurs of which 14 000 were new to bank and had disbursed over UGX 60 billion in deposits to women led businesses at an annual interest rate of 15.5% as well as extending financial literacy training to over 54,000 women.

Beyond banking, Anne will, among others, be remembered for championing maternal and neonatal health having launched the Corporate Society for Safe Motherhood alongside other private sector actors, in partnership with the Ministry of Health. Nearly 100, 000 women have benefited from the effort since 2021.

During her time, the bank also invested in FlexiPay, a digital wallet that enables access to financial services without necessarily having a bank account. The digital channel has seen tremendous growth moving from 390, 000 wallets in 2022 to over 850, 000—nearly a million as of last year.

Anne Juuko holds a Bachelor of Commerce degree from Makerere University and a master’s degree in strategic planning from the Herriot Watt Business School in Edinburgh, Scotland. 

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JUST IN: Netizens Left Confused As Facebook, Instagram Face Outage Globally

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Netizens are left confused after social media platforms they enjoy went down on Tuesday 5th March from around 17:30EAT. The social media platforms were down for hundreds of thousands across the global according to the outage tracking website Downdetector.com.
Even users in Uganda were the two platforms are banned by government of Uganda since 2021 and only accessed through Virtual Private Networks (VPN), users were logged out and not able to access their accounts.
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Even those who tried to reset their passwords all faced backlash and could not do so, the two platforms continue being down and inaccessible to their billions of users world wide.
Meta Spokesperson Andy Stone however via X formerly Twitter said the company was doing all efforts to restore the service to it’s users.

Even Youtube was by the time of filing this story also having troubles and not working well for it’s users in particulars parts of the world. This is the second time in three years the global social media giants are facing outages world wide.
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SG Rubongoya Reveals The Truth About Bobi Wine’s Monthly Salary From NUP

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L-R: Bobi Wine, Patrick Kanyomozi and David Lewis Rubongoya

The National Unity Platform SG David Lewis Rubongoya has debunked what he said is fake news in a document that has been making rounds o social media since the Mpuuga issue reached the boiling point last week.

The document had earlier indicated that Bobi Wine’s wife is a signatory to the party’s bank accounts yet she’s not in the headachy of the NUP top leadership, the same document had also indicated that NUP pay Bobi Wine Shs100m per month.

The same document had also alleged that NUP paid rent in millions to use his Kamwokya building as party headquarters before shifting to Makerere-Kavule, it further alleged that land where the new party headquarters sit is in the names of Bobi Wine’s brother Chairman Nyanzi not the party’s and many other allegations.

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Now, the Secretary General has refuted such claims and indicated his true version of the story and also addressed matters of transparency and accountability which Mpuuga accused the party and Bobi Wine of doing.

We publish his statement verbatim as seen below.

This fake message has been making rounds on social media. It contains material falsehoods. For the benefit of those who may be misled by it, let me respond as follows:

1. No. Mrs. Barbie Kyagulanyi is not and has never been a signatory to any NUP account. The signatories to the single Party account we have are the President, Secretary General and the National Treasurer as is standard practice, and in accordance with the NEC Resolution.

2. No. Hon. Kyagulanyi doesn’t earn 100m per month. In fact, what he gets as facilitation allowance for his work is lower than what he earned as Member of Parliament.

3. Chairman Nyanzi as Secretary for Mobilisation is facilitated to do the work of that office. No other ‘relative’ draws a salary or allowances from NUP.

4. We have regularly stated that NUP has never paid any money as rent to use the Kamwokya premises. We started using those premises as People Power in 2018 even before NUP came up, and we remain grateful that our President availed these premises to the work of the struggle without asking for anything in return.

5. NUP regularly files its accountability reports in accordance with the law. In addition, we have constantly accounted to Party members and the public by detailing the items we spend on, but most importantly through our activities and acquisitions as a Party.

6. We have so far bought six pieces of land where our offices are located at Kavule. Five of the six titles have already been transferred into the National Unity Platform, and anyone can do a search and verify. Only one title is yet to be transferred because there was a caveat placed on it as a result of a family conflict amongst the sellers. No single title is in the names of Chairman Nyanzi or any other individual.

The hullabaloo surrounding the Mpuuga issue continues taking twists and might not leave the party the same. Keep it here we shall bring it as it unfolds.

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LOMWA SHOOTING: How Angry Residents Thumped Armed Assailants Who Killed Buganda Clan Leader

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Buganda kingdom and Mengo establishment are still in shock after assailants opened fire at Lomwa Eng Daniel Bbosa who was the head of the Ndiga Clan in the kingdom and also the proprietor of Transa Electrical yesterday evening.

Details so far available indicate that Bbosa was killed as he was branching to his gate at home from some weekend functions which he attended with Katikiro Charles Peter Mayiga earlier in the day.

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The two assailants according to eye witnesses first opened fire from behind then in front shooting several times in his face, Lomwa’s wife managed to escape the shooting as she opened the door of the car and ran off for her dear life.

The assailants are said to have rode off on the motor cycle registration number UEX 754E but unusually, some brave locals also pursued the killers who were finally also arrested and mob justice ensued on them. One assailant died on spot while the other was saved by police which reached the crime scene a bit early.

According to other details which emerged, while being pursued, the assailant who was holding the gun tried to shoot at the locals who were chasing them and the slid off his hands and fell in the back wheel of the motorcycle and this defined their fate as the angry locals thumped them to pulp killing one on spot.

The Killer Gun

The motive of this senseless murder is not yet known. But the shooting comes at a time when police just released the crimes report for 2023 and it emerged that over 300 people were victims of gun violence from the 279 in 2022.

This particular shooting comes less that 40 days since pastor Aloysius Bugingo of House of prayer was also shot around the same area of Lungujja in Lubaga division in an attack that claimed the life of his bodguard Richard Muhumuza.

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Breaking News: Top Buganda Clan Leader Shot Dead

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In the news this evening, a top clan leader in the Buganda Kingdom known as Omutaka Lomwa Engineer Daniel Bbosa has been shot dead in areas of Lungujja. Lomwa was the head of the Ndiga Clan which is one of the 52 clans of Buganda recognized by the Mengo establishment.

He was driving his car registration number UAM 637X. The motive of the shooting has not yet been established yet.

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He has been shot few minutes ago near his home Lungujja in the vicinity of the same area where pastor Aloysius Bugingo was shot on 2nd January in an attack which claimed the life of his SFC body guard Richard Muhumuza.

Shootings have been on the rise in the last one year and in the police crime report for 2023 released by IGP Martins Okoth Ochola, over 300 people were victims of gun violence from the 279 in 2022.

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OWEYEGHA-AFUNADUULA: How I have Gained And Lost By Integrating Myself In The Digital Culture

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Prof Oweyegha-Afunaduula

By Oweyegha-Afunaduula
Digital culture is the antithesis of traditional culture. I was born way back in the 27 July 1949 in the traditional culture of the Basoga, and among the Mulawa Clan, one of the many clans of Busoga. Busoga is the most clanned group, with some 300 clans of the nearly of the total 6000 clans in the whole world. Traditional culture was the only culture then.

There were no computers, internet or social media which have taken the world by storm.
When I was growing up at Nawaka, the location of my ancestors, I was adequately exposed to the traditional culture (that is, the shared experience of my Clan – the Mulawa Clan, in Busoga – transferred from one generation to the other) until my date of birth.

I grew up to be quite conversant with the Norms, Language, Festivals, Rituals, Ceremonies, Holidays, Pastimes, Foods, Fashions, Architecture, Craft, Traditional economy, Lifestyle, Belief, Knowledge, Art, Music, Dances, Drama, Burials, Values, Ethics, Values, Sociality, Spirituality and Morality of the Mulawa Clan.

I was instructed in how to be a respectable member of the family, extended family and Clan, and to respect everyone – child, woman and man. I learn’t very early that I belonged to the community and that any older member in the village could constrain me from bad behaviour and/or punish me if I did anything wrong, and only report to my parents the reason why he or punished me. Usually, my parents would, together, listen attentively and then thank him or her. I would never be beaten again but would be told never to do wrong again.

I was never allowed to go to bed later than 6 pm. Attending burials was never allowed when I was young. In fact, I first saw a dead body when I was in Primary 4 at Ikumbya Primary School in present-day Ikumbya Subcounty of Luuka District.

In any case people were not dying as much as they die today. The white man’s health services were better than today and traditional medicines were adequate and efficient. Neither was I allowed to attend certain ceremonies, rituals or to acquaint myself with people taking local brew made from a certain type of banana, which has almost disappeared, or Waragi made from sugarcane.

I was taught very early to work in the garden and to look after cattle and goats. When I started grade school (called nursery school or kindergarten these days) in 1956, my mother and father played the balancing act between studying both at home and school and working in the garden and looking after goats and cattle, or walking long distances to collect milk from the Rwandese refugees, who were keeping some of our cows (but ended up stealing them) and fetching water and firewood.

In the process I learn’t that I had been taught to love work and balance my activity pattern on useful things only. Very early I developed love for music, dance and drama. I became a good singer, player of xylophones, the long drum (Omugaabe) and the short drum (Engoma) and actor in the village.

I carried my skills to Ikumbya Primary School, Mwiri Primary School and Busoga College, Mwiri, where I became a main player of the long drum, and got involved in singing as well. I came to love football both in the village and school.

At Ikumbya Primary School I was made the prefect responsible for Time Keeping when I reached Primary Six; something that became integral to my life. Primary Six those days marked the end of the primary school education, after which we would go junior school education level, which lasted two years.

At Busoga College Mwiri, during my A-Level education, I became a leader again: Head of Hannington House, Prefect in-charge of the School Cafeteria, President of Dramatic Society, President of Social and Cultural Society, and President Debating Society.

Before becoming a leader, however, I was involved quite a lot in social and cultural activities, playing the long drum, shot drum and xylophones, as well as in debating, dramatic activities, singing under the mentorship of Gwahaba and Wangoola-Wangoola.

Unless one was told by one who knew me very well, it would be difficult for anybody to know that at A-Level I was doing science subjects at Busoga College Mwiri: Biology and Chemistry (Geography and General Paper)with people like Balirwa, Kabita, Kawagga, and Nwokedi-Ikechuku). I believe by the time I left Busoga College Mwiri in 1971, I was adequately developed socially, academically and intellectually.

Unfortunately, school life separated me from my traditional community and its traditions, completely severing all ties with them when I was admitted to the University of Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania, in 1972, to study Zoology, Botany and Geography with Development Studies.

I did not interact with my community again until 1980, when President Idi Amin was overthrown by the combined forces of Yoweri Museveni (Now Yoweri Tibuhaburwa Museveni), Apollo Milton Obote and the Tanzania Peoples Defense Forces (UPDF).

I could feel that I had lost a lot because of the white man’s education and could not fit in well again. Many of the people I had grown up with had died and the young ones did not know.me.

I lost even more when I went back for further studies at the University of Nairobi, Kenya, and did not come back to the village until 1991; not to stay but to greet my parents, brothers, sisters and members of the extended family and then go. I was employed by Makerere University as a lecturer in the Faculty of Science. Although I used to frequent the village, I remained a stranger to most of the members who had been born when I was away.

I did not finally settle in my village until 2015, nearly 5 years after my retirement from academic life in 2009. I am now the oldest member of the community, but to many young people I still look as if I am a foreigner in the village. Few feel comfortable interacting with me. Many say I am antisocial. They don’t know that before the white man’s education took a toll on me, I was one of the most social young people in Nawaka village.

Matters have been made worse by my embracing the digital culture so belatedly in my life. I must be one of the few elderly people who are very active on internet and the social media reading, writing articles, debating or initiating debates with young people in the world. In fact, very recently, Daily Express, in its 31ST December 2023 article “LIST: HERE ARE THE BEST OPINIONISTS IN UGANDA IN 2023” wrote:

As 2023 comes to an end, we compile for you a list of the best 10 writers of articles in the country in the year in the year 2023. This list consists of noted Ugandan writers, born or raised in Uganda, whether living there ot overseas and writing the best opinions for readers”.

Daily Express put me as number 2 out of 10. Most of my articles are internet -based and are distributed globally across several social media and in diverse groups or internet-based communities (political, economic, social, academic, intellectual, et cetera).
In explaining why I deserved to be number two among the best 10 writers, of opinions in the country, Daily Express wrote:

“….A former Makerere University lecturer is one of the most social media users and consistent writers on political, social, economic and cultural issues. He exhibits a wide range of knowledge in his writeups which are well researched. His articles are very resourceful and rich in history. He takes the second spot of article writers in 2023”.

Since life is nothing but difference, influence, and experiencing or participating in bringing about change, I decided around 2012 that retirement from public life should not mark the beginning a life of exclusion from influencing minds and causing minds to meet or clash in order to bring about new thinking, rethinking truths, or bringing about change however long it takes.

Although I had been active in the print media and on electronic waves, influencing minds, I concluded that using internet and/or social media would enable me to put my ideas across to many age groups locally, nationally, regionally and globally on a diversity interconnected challenges problems and issues of significance to human living and survival in whatever dimension of human life.

I chose internet and social media because they are more democratic than other human-initiated systems, and convey ideas faster. I was also cognizant of the truism that many Ugandans across the social strata, even in universities, are poor readers and poor listeners.

So, I have used WhatsApp and Facebook mainly; rarely other internet-based media. The aim has been to propagate as much knowledge as possible and more efficiently than when

I was both a teacher and lecturer. I am now well-integrated in the digital culture.
Digital culture is defined as a new form of culture in which the culture of humanity will digitalize and turn into a new form.

Digital culture is the whole of the lifestyle and habits created by the innovations brought by the age in which human beings live, technology taking more place in daily life. However, Artificial Intelligence, a consequence of digital culture is a threat to humanity, since it can displace humanity from many tasks

One writer wrote, “A digital culture is a concept that describes how technology and the internet are shaping the way that we interact as humans. It’s the way that we behave, think and communicate within society…. A digital culture is the product of the endless persuasive technology around us and the result of disruptive technological innovation.

It’s applicable to multiple topics but it comes down to one overarching theme; the relationship between humans and technology…A broad term, digital technologies, include smartphones, social media, digital collaboration tools, enterprise content management, cloud infrastructure and software as a service as well as digital environments — such as the internet — that form the basis of the modern digital world.

Being integral to the digital culture at nearly 75 years of age has enabled me to be in touch with people of all ages and to keep abreast with how each age group values life and perceives and is perceived in the 21st century.

Because my WhatsApp and Facebook friends come from a diversity of stations of life, I have kept abreast with both the collective and individualistic thinking of people in and outside Uganda. I have been able to put my new ideas across to them on a diversity of issues and values of critical thinking, integration, reintegration and education in the 21st Century, among others.

Besides, I have been able to keep abreast with new thinkings and rethinking in The Biology of Conservation, environment and education. I have also learn’t a lot from a diversity of people. In the process I have come across people who are now central to current interests, such as Dr Anthony Isabirye and Dr Rebecaa Alowo in South Africa; Dr Shannon Tito in Canada and Prof. Robert Bakibinga in the USA.

I have also rediscovered long-time friends that had been disconnected from me distance-wise for decades such as Dr Charles Kawagga in Britain and Prof. Davies Bagambiire.in Canada.

Through such contacts one important paper on Water Governance for Inclusive Development and Environmental Sustainability has been accepted for publication in an International Journal, and a book on Uganda is in the press.

Above all my digital social network has grown to be extensive and covers all continents, and is a key in enabling me to combat loneliness. Just last week I connected with someone in I retired from public life in 2009.

I am still pushing on to a large extent because of this network, which keeps the synapses of my brain dynamically interconnected and working.

Being integrated in the digital culture, however, reduced my interaction with my clan people in the rural area, although it has not reduced my interaction with family members and the urban-based clan people.

I belong to one internet-based community for the family and two internet-based communities for the Mulawa Clan. Therefore, urbanism has not really disconnected me from my relatives even if I am largely in the land of my ancestors, from where I produce intellectually and otherwise.

I should not forget to mention that being integral to the digital culture has enabled mee to be constantly in touch with Researchgate.net and Academia.edu. These frequently notify me of the readership of my works worldwide.

As I write this article Academia.edu has just notified me that 3049 papers globally mention my name to-date, including a highly followed author with 2015 followers. That is a great feat in retirement.

I have one problem: the impact of the digital culture on interaction in my 44-year-old marriage institution. My wife and I have never interacted so minimally as we do today. She has a smartphone and I have one. She became 71 today and I am racing towards 75. The smartphone is a bad intruder in our home.

We talk far less than ever before, yet talking and laughing together have in the past has glued us together, sharing our ups and downs. We hardly watch tv together, because of the smartphone. The smart phone consumes a lot of time that would go to keep the old people talking to one another.

Worse still, when our children and their children visit us, each one has a smart phone. It is pathetic when people who should be interacting maximally are busy on the smart phones. I want to pass on some knowledge, wisdom, understanding and insights to the grandchildren like my parents and grandparents used to do, but alas. I can imagine what is happening in the homes of young people with smartphones in between.

Yes, digital culture has transformed my life but it is exacting a negative influence on marriage, family and traditional culture. What about over there? How do we control it and deploy it to less deleterious effect? For me the problem is exacerbated by my writing habits and prolific production of articles on my laptop.

However, someone told me that if I had not embraced the digital culture I would have died long ago. He said that many people who retire pass on in the first five years of their retirement. “You have effectively fought loneliness, the greatest killer of the oldies, with digital technology”, he said.
For God and My Country.