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Showing posts from May, 2018

REPLY TO COMMENT ON FAKES AND KIDNAPS ARTICLE.

Dear Editor, Eagleonline. Just when Angelo was penning his response to my article on fakes and kidnaps where he tried to discount the menace of counterfeits, the Government of Uganda was declaring 3 days of mourning due to a nasty road carnage caused by fake brakes that left 22 dead in Kiryandongo District. I say fake brakes because I watched with dismay on TV when one of the lucky survivors lying in pain on a hospital bed narrated that the driver of the bus had tried to stop the bus but the brakes failed. A 2016 report by the Ministry of Transport indicated that 95% of road accidents are caused by human error and mechanical condition of the vehicles. This is where counterfeits in the form of fake driving permits and fake vehicle parts lurk. This is the savage image of counterfeits that most people choose not to see. Angelo’s views may appeal to many people who pay scarce attention to the immense devastation that counterfeits are causing to whole communities and economies i...

FIGHT FAKES TO FIGHT KIDNAPS

FIGHT FAKES TO FIGHT KIDNAPS   According to the Global Kidnap index of 2014, Uganda averaged 0.6 kidnaps per 100,000 people. This is just lower than Burundi but is far lower that the kidnap rates in Belgium, Canada, UK and France which stand at between 3.5-10.0 per 100,000 people. Each Country has unique factors that account for the incidence of kidnaps. There is a lot of talk of poverty and unemployment being the cause of the recent spate of kidnaps in Uganda. I have noticed that the media is reporting many cases of kidnap the same way as it is reporting many cases of fake and substandard products. I dont think this is a mere coincidence, there must be some relationship between the kidnaps and fakes. The fact of the matter is that there is no difference between a person who takes a ransom from a kidnapped woman or her family and a person who takes your money and dupes you with a fake product or service. Both set of actors are perpetrators of a crime, both take your mon...

Abid Alam petitions court over Bamugemereire’s land probe

Abid Alam petitions court over Bamugemereire’s land probe Abid Alam, a prominent businessman, has petitioned the Constitutional court, questioning the conduct and some of the orders issued by the Commission of inquiry investigating land disputes which is headed by Jutsice Catherine Bamugemereire. Through his lawyers Muwema and Company Advocates, the businessman claims the commission had overstepped its mandate when it issued some of the orders against him. In particular, Alam questions the powers of the commission to order his arrest like it did on November 8 on allegation that he was obstructing its work. Between September 11 and 14, the commission of Inquiry conducted public hearings during a visit to Mityana Farm Group enterprises, which is owned by Alam. Allegations were made that in 2008, Alam working with the police evicted 600 families from a 12 square mile piece of land in Mubende. Thereafter without listening to his side, Bamugemereire ordered police to arrest ...

Why other tertiary institutions should emulate Victoria University

Why other tertiary institutions should emulate Victoria University A man that needs scant introduction,Counsel Fred Muwema recently authored an article titled, ‘Uganda’s education paradox’ on The Nile Post where he made revealing observations about our education system and unemployment. Counsel Muwema agrees that there is need to skill Ugandans and the need for the powers that be to viciously invest in sectors such as;Agriculture,manufacturing and socio-economic services. I must also observe that for us to have people that can significantly add value even when employed in those sectors and more,access to quality tertiary education is key. Uganda’s tertiary education especially university ,is incessantly under steamy attack for Channing out graduates that are bereft of the right attitude,skills and competencies such as problem solving skills. The “tawdry” education devoid of the above is vilified as a being catalyst for the ever swelling unemployment levels in Uganda. I...

TO JAIL OR NOT TO JAIL A CIVIL DEBTOR

                                TO JAIL OR NOT TO JAIL A CIVIL DEBTOR In criminal justice punishment theory, people are sentenced to serve time in confinement or prison to achieve the deterrence of a repetition of a crime, rehabilitation of the offender or retribution by way paying for the crime committed against society through jail time. These are certainly beneficial tenets to the well-being of society and the reclamation of convicted criminals.  I am not sure if our civil justice redress system is designed to achieve the same objective for a civil offender who is committed to civil prison for failure to pay a civil debt. Uganda prisons sources indicate that by the end of last month, there were 340 civil prisoners in the 257 prison units across the country and this statistic is rising every year probably because of the growing poverty levels in the country. The recent jailing of NBS Simon...