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	<title>Comments on: Katikkiro Walusimbi Takes Museveni’s Money, Puts His Life At Risk</title>
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		<title>By: President Museveni Demands Refund From Katikkiro Walusimbi &#124; Buganda Post</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-335</link>
		<dc:creator>President Museveni Demands Refund From Katikkiro Walusimbi &#124; Buganda Post</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 24 Jun 2009 21:45:18 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-335</guid>
		<description>[...] not to accept the gift but he overruled them, causing some to make threats against his life (See Katikkiro Walusimbi Takes Museveni’s Money, Puts His Life At Risk.) On April 30, 2009, the secretary of Buganda rights group Abazzukulu, Mr. Njuki Mubiru warned [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] not to accept the gift but he overruled them, causing some to make threats against his life (See Katikkiro Walusimbi Takes Museveni’s Money, Puts His Life At Risk.) On April 30, 2009, the secretary of Buganda rights group Abazzukulu, Mr. Njuki Mubiru warned [...]</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Kigongo Ssentongo</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-324</link>
		<dc:creator>Kigongo Ssentongo</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 06 Jun 2009 13:08:32 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-324</guid>
		<description>Busagwa Kituufu okufa kukira okuswaala.  Naye kyeyatika lwaatu nti you are applying that saying selectively.  Otherwise wandibadde wano ewaffe e Uganda ng&#039;oofa noova mukuswaala kwolimu buli lukedde.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Busagwa Kituufu okufa kukira okuswaala.  Naye kyeyatika lwaatu nti you are applying that saying selectively.  Otherwise wandibadde wano ewaffe e Uganda ng&#8217;oofa noova mukuswaala kwolimu buli lukedde.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Busagwa Ali</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-302</link>
		<dc:creator>Busagwa Ali</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2009 11:28:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-302</guid>
		<description>Ladies and gentleman,

Here is the more reason why JB Walusimbi = JK Museveni! Just read on! 


Museveni commends Katikkiro on progress 
Thursday, 30th April, 2009  E-mail article    Print article 
 
  
Museveni hands over a heifer to Ali Kaddu and Yudaya at the launch of the Prosperity-for-All programme in Wakiso
 

By Cyprian Musoke 

PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni has praised the Buganda prime minister (Katikkiro) JB Walusimbi as a foresighted man who is bent on improving the welfare of all Baganda. 

Launching a Prosperity-for-All (Bonna baggagawale) drive in Wakiso at the district headquarters yesterday, Museveni criticised elements at Mengo whom he said use radios to confuse the masses instead of preaching prosperity. 

“I am glad this Katikkiro has some good spectacles. I saw him the other day planting coffee trees with the Kabaka. We in the Movement have no problem with Kabaka Mutebi because it is us who brought him and other traditional leaders back,” the President told the crowd. 

The Katikkiro has recently been criticised for accepting development funds from the Central Government. 

The Government donated sh1b to the kingdoms of Buganda, Bunyoro and Busoga for agricultural production, which some Baganda said was a “bribe” intended to compromise the Katikkiro. 

“The problem has been those self-seekers who purport to love Kabaka Mutebi more. What did they do for the 30 years he was in exile? But even those have not excited us,” Museveni said as the crowd chanted Nambooze. 

The President has in the past accused the DP spokesperson, Betty Nambooze, of abusing him on radio stations. 

“All those radios do is abuse me, ‘Museveni is very stupid’. Those people have wasted your time by not telling you the truth,” he said, advising them to use the airtime to promote development. He urged the people in Wakiso to produce and take advantage of the huge market in Kampala, noting that milk in Rwakitura goes for sh350 a litre while in Kampala it is sold at sh800. 

Museveni also pointed out that former President Idi Amin had abolished mailo land but the Movement had restored it, adding that the Government wanted a harmonious relationship between landlords and tenants. “We don’t want the landlord to rob the tenant, or the tenant to rob the land lord. They should co-exist.” 

Some people, he added, were on radio saying that by taking over Kampala, the Government wanted to grab Buganda land. “To steal it and take it where?” he asked. 

The President gave out 40 heifers to kick-start the project and opened two structures at the district headquarters. 

He urged officials of the National agricultural Advisory Services to support the selected farmers by providing other inputs like poultry and coffee seeds to supplement the heifers. 

He lauded the Wakiso leadership for being “sharp” and building headquarters out of nothing when other districts squander their revenue like the Kampala City Council, where he said some leaders had been arrested for graft. 

The opposition had dominated Wakiso district because he was busy fighting the LRA insurgents, Museveni further noted. 

On universal primary and secondary education, he urged parents to provide packed lunch for their children as the Government pays for their education, adding that even he still carries packed lunch.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ladies and gentleman,</p>
<p>Here is the more reason why JB Walusimbi = JK Museveni! Just read on! </p>
<p>Museveni commends Katikkiro on progress<br />
Thursday, 30th April, 2009  E-mail article    Print article </p>
<p>Museveni hands over a heifer to Ali Kaddu and Yudaya at the launch of the Prosperity-for-All programme in Wakiso</p>
<p>By Cyprian Musoke </p>
<p>PRESIDENT Yoweri Museveni has praised the Buganda prime minister (Katikkiro) JB Walusimbi as a foresighted man who is bent on improving the welfare of all Baganda. </p>
<p>Launching a Prosperity-for-All (Bonna baggagawale) drive in Wakiso at the district headquarters yesterday, Museveni criticised elements at Mengo whom he said use radios to confuse the masses instead of preaching prosperity. </p>
<p>“I am glad this Katikkiro has some good spectacles. I saw him the other day planting coffee trees with the Kabaka. We in the Movement have no problem with Kabaka Mutebi because it is us who brought him and other traditional leaders back,” the President told the crowd. </p>
<p>The Katikkiro has recently been criticised for accepting development funds from the Central Government. </p>
<p>The Government donated sh1b to the kingdoms of Buganda, Bunyoro and Busoga for agricultural production, which some Baganda said was a “bribe” intended to compromise the Katikkiro. </p>
<p>“The problem has been those self-seekers who purport to love Kabaka Mutebi more. What did they do for the 30 years he was in exile? But even those have not excited us,” Museveni said as the crowd chanted Nambooze. </p>
<p>The President has in the past accused the DP spokesperson, Betty Nambooze, of abusing him on radio stations. </p>
<p>“All those radios do is abuse me, ‘Museveni is very stupid’. Those people have wasted your time by not telling you the truth,” he said, advising them to use the airtime to promote development. He urged the people in Wakiso to produce and take advantage of the huge market in Kampala, noting that milk in Rwakitura goes for sh350 a litre while in Kampala it is sold at sh800. </p>
<p>Museveni also pointed out that former President Idi Amin had abolished mailo land but the Movement had restored it, adding that the Government wanted a harmonious relationship between landlords and tenants. “We don’t want the landlord to rob the tenant, or the tenant to rob the land lord. They should co-exist.” </p>
<p>Some people, he added, were on radio saying that by taking over Kampala, the Government wanted to grab Buganda land. “To steal it and take it where?” he asked. </p>
<p>The President gave out 40 heifers to kick-start the project and opened two structures at the district headquarters. </p>
<p>He urged officials of the National agricultural Advisory Services to support the selected farmers by providing other inputs like poultry and coffee seeds to supplement the heifers. </p>
<p>He lauded the Wakiso leadership for being “sharp” and building headquarters out of nothing when other districts squander their revenue like the Kampala City Council, where he said some leaders had been arrested for graft. </p>
<p>The opposition had dominated Wakiso district because he was busy fighting the LRA insurgents, Museveni further noted. </p>
<p>On universal primary and secondary education, he urged parents to provide packed lunch for their children as the Government pays for their education, adding that even he still carries packed lunch.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Busagwa Ali</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-301</link>
		<dc:creator>Busagwa Ali</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2009 11:14:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-301</guid>
		<description>Tara,

The Baganda have a saying that &quot;Okufa kukira okuswala = To die is a better option than to be ashamed/embarassed&quot;. Mwami Walusimbi kyakola ekyokukiriza obutole bwemeele okuva ewa museveni kituswaziiza nnyo nga Abaganda. We as Baganda have really been put to great shame by Eng. Walusimbi. He is also commiting another sin of telling Baganda to keep quite about our problems/demand for federo, among other things, and let us be trampled upon by the M7 dark forces of tyranny. And like you said in your previous postings, this man has also insulted Baganda by equating Uganda Shilling 350 million to FEDERO!! Banange, does this man still have his head over his tow pair of shoulders?? Mbuuzabubuuza!!!!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tara,</p>
<p>The Baganda have a saying that &#8220;Okufa kukira okuswala = To die is a better option than to be ashamed/embarassed&#8221;. Mwami Walusimbi kyakola ekyokukiriza obutole bwemeele okuva ewa museveni kituswaziiza nnyo nga Abaganda. We as Baganda have really been put to great shame by Eng. Walusimbi. He is also commiting another sin of telling Baganda to keep quite about our problems/demand for federo, among other things, and let us be trampled upon by the M7 dark forces of tyranny. And like you said in your previous postings, this man has also insulted Baganda by equating Uganda Shilling 350 million to FEDERO!! Banange, does this man still have his head over his tow pair of shoulders?? Mbuuzabubuuza!!!!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Tara Nankindu</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-299</link>
		<dc:creator>Tara Nankindu</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2009 17:48:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-299</guid>
		<description>Busagwa,

I can fully appreciate our disappointments in the man called John Baptist Walusimbi who happens to be the current Katikiro. He has indeed sold Buganda for pieces of silver but he will certainly miserably fail in his endavours. The fire for Buganda nationalism is burning like crazy and it will take more than Owek. Walusimbi&#039;s threats to quench the frustrations and anger of the Nkobazambogo Baganda youth. Owek. Walusimbi, we can bet on this!!

Awangaale nnyo ayi Ssabasajja Kabaka</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Busagwa,</p>
<p>I can fully appreciate our disappointments in the man called John Baptist Walusimbi who happens to be the current Katikiro. He has indeed sold Buganda for pieces of silver but he will certainly miserably fail in his endavours. The fire for Buganda nationalism is burning like crazy and it will take more than Owek. Walusimbi&#8217;s threats to quench the frustrations and anger of the Nkobazambogo Baganda youth. Owek. Walusimbi, we can bet on this!!</p>
<p>Awangaale nnyo ayi Ssabasajja Kabaka</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Busagwa Ali</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-298</link>
		<dc:creator>Busagwa Ali</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2009 07:09:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-298</guid>
		<description>Attn: Eng. JB Walusimbi

&quot;Kingdoms must avoid temptation of grace and favour payments&quot; - by KAROLI SSEMOGERERE

President Yoweri Museveni has accomplished a hat trick scampering his mortally wounded enemies by launching an “anti-poverty” fund directed at areas where his political star is dimming after 25 years in power. For different reasons, Busoga, Bunyoro and Buganda have accepted “grace and favour” payments to support anti-poverty efforts in their areas. 

The Chieftaincy of Busoga is Uganda’s political bellwether. With the exception of 1980, Busoga has voted for the eventual winner in the country’s presidential elections. Busoga is also ground zero on the harshest effects of fatalistic government policies like privatisation. Uganda’s former industrial hub, Jinja, is a recovering ghost town bereft of jobs. 

In fact, the only limping industries today remain in Njeru, home to South African Breweries Limited and Nytil-Picfare. Jinja is a sleepy backwater whose main thoroughfares “busy” up during major events like visits of political leaders. Native speakers of one of Uganda’s richest languages know how to stroke political egos and run a political rally. 

Theatrics aside, some of the highest concentrations of community poverty and hardship are in Busoga almost oblivious of the fact that Busoga stands on the precipice of a major commercial artery. In the county of Butembe, the coverage of pit-latrines according to social workers in the field, is less than 40 per cent.

The collapse of social wealth has had other significant effects: most civil servants come from outside the region. Busoga’s flagships, once major players in the academic arena, continue in a race to the bottom. 

In Busoga’s embrace with the Movement, it is difficult to point how it will be before the bottom is attained. The institutional integrity of Busoga’s customs and the important institution of the Kyabazinga depend on direction and guidance of the President.

In Bunyoro, the picture is slightly more mixed. All cabinet ministers from Bunyoro lost in the 2006 elections - hardly a picture of political conformism.

The opposition FDC should reap some strategic investments in the 2011 elections if it figures out a way to work with “politically” and “economically” independent MPs like Sam Amooti Otada whose pocketbook ruined the political future of Public Service Minister Henry Kajura.

For a few days this week, Hoima Mayor Sam Atugonza was in the news after being “tortured” by state operatives who dumped him at Old Kampala Police Station, recently “renovated” by Pastor Robert Kayanja. It is difficult to emphasise the extent of Bunyoro’s economic neglect because it was a deliberate policy perpetuated from colonial times by the British. 

Bunyoro and Buganda have been at loggerheads for a long time over minor and inconsequential issues like the elevation of certain chieftaincies in Nakasongola and Kayunga districts. Every time the President gets into a fit with Buganda, Bunyoro has been at the ready switch to provide a headline intended to embarrass Buganda.

Both, however, are starting to show the negative effects of petty palace politics. Accepting token payments of about $175,000 each up to a projected $500,000 to “fight” poverty is the equivalent of throwing dust over a charcoal oven in the hope that the ash will extinguish the last embers of the fire, forgetting the capacity of charcoal to burn overnight providing villagers and urban dwellers a simple comfort to keep their dinner and breakfast warm.

In typical fashion, the government has not enacted any legislation to describe this legislative emergency. Government observers can only guess it is coming out of the Shs100 billion in “unallocated” funds-- a war chest to fight the election. In Bunyoro, pressure to push for a bigger share than the 2 per cent royalties currently promised from oil revenue is unresolved. 

Major independent players in Bunyoro like the Bunyoro Kitara Cooperative Union are in tatters. Bunyoro’s economic dilemma is significant because it has a concentration of the last major high value high yield unallocated chunks of arable land in Uganda.

Buganda has a New York New Jersey syndrome. Over 80 per cent of government’s revenue is collected in Buganda and 85 percent of this comes from the Kampala metro region. 

This pattern is duplicated in the consumption of electricity, piped water, amenities etc. Yet Buganda ranks very close to the bottom in terms of real dollars spent per capita in Uganda. 

Buganda’s weak and politically inept leadership has been unable to resolve this yet the principal argument fostered in countries like the former West Germany is that the health of the country’s economic heartland is vital to the health of the rest of the country.
Buganda’s coffee wealth has yielded nought.

So in every major economic catastrophe, Buganda has taken significant hits. The obsession with measuring Ugandans surviving on less than a dollar a day: a statistic that envelopes many rural counties in Buganda, Teso, Lango and Acholi - the Karamojong who drink milk cannot be counted in this statistic has missed this point.

This grinding poverty has been followed by despair and economic malaise. This small money, the cost of a mid-sized home in upscale Kampala, will continue to foster unhealthy economic policies and earn the recipients in Busoga, Buganda and Bunyoro more political scorn. 

kssemoge@gmail.com</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Attn: Eng. JB Walusimbi</p>
<p>&#8220;Kingdoms must avoid temptation of grace and favour payments&#8221; &#8211; by KAROLI SSEMOGERERE</p>
<p>President Yoweri Museveni has accomplished a hat trick scampering his mortally wounded enemies by launching an “anti-poverty” fund directed at areas where his political star is dimming after 25 years in power. For different reasons, Busoga, Bunyoro and Buganda have accepted “grace and favour” payments to support anti-poverty efforts in their areas. </p>
<p>The Chieftaincy of Busoga is Uganda’s political bellwether. With the exception of 1980, Busoga has voted for the eventual winner in the country’s presidential elections. Busoga is also ground zero on the harshest effects of fatalistic government policies like privatisation. Uganda’s former industrial hub, Jinja, is a recovering ghost town bereft of jobs. </p>
<p>In fact, the only limping industries today remain in Njeru, home to South African Breweries Limited and Nytil-Picfare. Jinja is a sleepy backwater whose main thoroughfares “busy” up during major events like visits of political leaders. Native speakers of one of Uganda’s richest languages know how to stroke political egos and run a political rally. </p>
<p>Theatrics aside, some of the highest concentrations of community poverty and hardship are in Busoga almost oblivious of the fact that Busoga stands on the precipice of a major commercial artery. In the county of Butembe, the coverage of pit-latrines according to social workers in the field, is less than 40 per cent.</p>
<p>The collapse of social wealth has had other significant effects: most civil servants come from outside the region. Busoga’s flagships, once major players in the academic arena, continue in a race to the bottom. </p>
<p>In Busoga’s embrace with the Movement, it is difficult to point how it will be before the bottom is attained. The institutional integrity of Busoga’s customs and the important institution of the Kyabazinga depend on direction and guidance of the President.</p>
<p>In Bunyoro, the picture is slightly more mixed. All cabinet ministers from Bunyoro lost in the 2006 elections &#8211; hardly a picture of political conformism.</p>
<p>The opposition FDC should reap some strategic investments in the 2011 elections if it figures out a way to work with “politically” and “economically” independent MPs like Sam Amooti Otada whose pocketbook ruined the political future of Public Service Minister Henry Kajura.</p>
<p>For a few days this week, Hoima Mayor Sam Atugonza was in the news after being “tortured” by state operatives who dumped him at Old Kampala Police Station, recently “renovated” by Pastor Robert Kayanja. It is difficult to emphasise the extent of Bunyoro’s economic neglect because it was a deliberate policy perpetuated from colonial times by the British. </p>
<p>Bunyoro and Buganda have been at loggerheads for a long time over minor and inconsequential issues like the elevation of certain chieftaincies in Nakasongola and Kayunga districts. Every time the President gets into a fit with Buganda, Bunyoro has been at the ready switch to provide a headline intended to embarrass Buganda.</p>
<p>Both, however, are starting to show the negative effects of petty palace politics. Accepting token payments of about $175,000 each up to a projected $500,000 to “fight” poverty is the equivalent of throwing dust over a charcoal oven in the hope that the ash will extinguish the last embers of the fire, forgetting the capacity of charcoal to burn overnight providing villagers and urban dwellers a simple comfort to keep their dinner and breakfast warm.</p>
<p>In typical fashion, the government has not enacted any legislation to describe this legislative emergency. Government observers can only guess it is coming out of the Shs100 billion in “unallocated” funds&#8211; a war chest to fight the election. In Bunyoro, pressure to push for a bigger share than the 2 per cent royalties currently promised from oil revenue is unresolved. </p>
<p>Major independent players in Bunyoro like the Bunyoro Kitara Cooperative Union are in tatters. Bunyoro’s economic dilemma is significant because it has a concentration of the last major high value high yield unallocated chunks of arable land in Uganda.</p>
<p>Buganda has a New York New Jersey syndrome. Over 80 per cent of government’s revenue is collected in Buganda and 85 percent of this comes from the Kampala metro region. </p>
<p>This pattern is duplicated in the consumption of electricity, piped water, amenities etc. Yet Buganda ranks very close to the bottom in terms of real dollars spent per capita in Uganda. </p>
<p>Buganda’s weak and politically inept leadership has been unable to resolve this yet the principal argument fostered in countries like the former West Germany is that the health of the country’s economic heartland is vital to the health of the rest of the country.<br />
Buganda’s coffee wealth has yielded nought.</p>
<p>So in every major economic catastrophe, Buganda has taken significant hits. The obsession with measuring Ugandans surviving on less than a dollar a day: a statistic that envelopes many rural counties in Buganda, Teso, Lango and Acholi &#8211; the Karamojong who drink milk cannot be counted in this statistic has missed this point.</p>
<p>This grinding poverty has been followed by despair and economic malaise. This small money, the cost of a mid-sized home in upscale Kampala, will continue to foster unhealthy economic policies and earn the recipients in Busoga, Buganda and Bunyoro more political scorn. </p>
<p><a href="mailto:kssemoge@gmail.com">kssemoge@gmail.com</a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
	</item>
	<item>
		<title>By: Busagwa Ali</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-297</link>
		<dc:creator>Busagwa Ali</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2009 06:36:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-297</guid>
		<description>Attn: Eng. JB Walusimbi

&quot;HANDOUTS NO SOLUTION TO POVERTY&quot;

Written by Ssemujju Ibrahim Nganda     
Wednesday, 29 April 2009 16:18  
Because of the total loyalty to the institution of Kabaka, many incompetent and inefficient people working at Mengo have used it to shield themselves from public scrutiny.

Such officials will remind you of how they are the Kabaka’s choice for the job and therefore criticising them indirectly means being disrespectful to the king.
I don’t know how many complaints I have received as a journalist against the Buganda Land Board. The latest from Kiboga is that the District Council which occupies Buganda’s county headquarters passed a resolution to begin paying rent but the board has refused to pick it.
This Buganda Land Board is in charge of 350sq miles of land that belong to the institution of Kabakaship. For you to appreciate how big 350sq miles are, just know that from Kampala to Masaka is 80 miles.

The Buganda Land Board is supposed to issue leases to people occupying this land and collect rent from them. I am sure if this was done the institution of Kabaka would be collecting not less than Shs50 billion a year. At the moment I am told the Buganda Land Board contributes just about Shs2 billion to the kingdom’s annual budget. It is still the biggest contributor.

Of course some of the stories are untrue but the fact that they keep coming means there is a big, big problem in the Buganda Land Board. People occupying a certain piece of land won’t be considered, as the law stipulates, when their land is being allocated to someone else.
For me who believes in federalism, I get hurt when I hear that such things are happening at Mengo. I will deal with those complaints another day.
 
Because of the dependence syndrome, we have been made to believe that someone else must help us overcome poverty. Don’t mistake me for a critic of the aid and grants; it sometimes can act as a stimulus, especially if well utilised. I only have a problem with people who are resigned to fate and are looking for solutions from the neighbourhood. They have not utilized 5% of their potential yet they plead with neighbours for help.

Every person in Buganda Kingdom has the potential to overcome abject poverty. The reason it hasn’t happened is because we don’t have focused leadership. Those we have are victims of globalization who believe in IMF and World Bank solutions. They prefer begging for their people to mobilising them to work. Someone would be happy to return with Shs350 million after 20 State House meetings rather than spending a week in Masaka or Kiboga mobilising people like the Kabaka is doing to plant coffee.
I am very pleased with the approach the Kabaka has taken, of visiting rural people and encouraging them to produce more.
Apart from agriculture, Buganda needs to develop its tourism potential. 

I think the youthful tourism minister, Nakiwala Kiyingi, has good ideas and needs help. Alongside tourism, Buganda needs to venture into the leisure industry with all determination.
Can you imagine the whole of Buganda has no entertainment park or beach around Kampala? If I were the Katikkiro, J.B. Walusimbi, I would convince the Mengo establishment to allow me turn part of the land housing the Kasubi Tombs into a recreation park. 

I know Baganda and others are sensitive about death and wouldn’t allow weddings at Kasubi, but I see no difference between charging visitors to visit the tombs and planting good grass where people can host their receptions.
Why should CBS pay over Shs10 million to host its festivities at Nakivubo Stadium, yet Buganda has a chunk of land in Lubiri? I know Lubiri is such an important cultural site but part of it can be developed into a recreation centre.

A friend of mine who recently visited Turkey told me that people who live near tourist centres make more money than the centres themselves. Naturally they are encouraged to set up shops selling crafts, T-shirts, internet cafes, specialised restaurants, etc. This is how leaders equip their people to fight poverty. 

Because of an institutional failure to help Ugandans out of poverty, we have individually been inconvenienced. Hundreds of our relatives wait for our monthly earnings as though they are party to it. In fact, majority of Ugandans have been educated by their relatives and not the state. Because our salaries are shared by poor relatives, we are more burdened than people who have been rich all their lives and cannot be bribed by a mere Shs2 billion.
It is an insult for someone to take advantage of our misery to mortgage us and the future of our children. To borrow the words President Museveni once used, that person is inviting a curse (kisirani) on himself.

The solution to poverty lies in mobilizing the population for production and taping the potential of each area. State House handouts can provide temporary relief; like buying fuel for the leaders, but it is no long term solution to our misery.
   
The author is Political Editor of The Observer
ssemujju@observer.ugThis e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Attn: Eng. JB Walusimbi</p>
<p>&#8220;HANDOUTS NO SOLUTION TO POVERTY&#8221;</p>
<p>Written by Ssemujju Ibrahim Nganda<br />
Wednesday, 29 April 2009 16:18<br />
Because of the total loyalty to the institution of Kabaka, many incompetent and inefficient people working at Mengo have used it to shield themselves from public scrutiny.</p>
<p>Such officials will remind you of how they are the Kabaka’s choice for the job and therefore criticising them indirectly means being disrespectful to the king.<br />
I don’t know how many complaints I have received as a journalist against the Buganda Land Board. The latest from Kiboga is that the District Council which occupies Buganda’s county headquarters passed a resolution to begin paying rent but the board has refused to pick it.<br />
This Buganda Land Board is in charge of 350sq miles of land that belong to the institution of Kabakaship. For you to appreciate how big 350sq miles are, just know that from Kampala to Masaka is 80 miles.</p>
<p>The Buganda Land Board is supposed to issue leases to people occupying this land and collect rent from them. I am sure if this was done the institution of Kabaka would be collecting not less than Shs50 billion a year. At the moment I am told the Buganda Land Board contributes just about Shs2 billion to the kingdom’s annual budget. It is still the biggest contributor.</p>
<p>Of course some of the stories are untrue but the fact that they keep coming means there is a big, big problem in the Buganda Land Board. People occupying a certain piece of land won’t be considered, as the law stipulates, when their land is being allocated to someone else.<br />
For me who believes in federalism, I get hurt when I hear that such things are happening at Mengo. I will deal with those complaints another day.</p>
<p>Because of the dependence syndrome, we have been made to believe that someone else must help us overcome poverty. Don’t mistake me for a critic of the aid and grants; it sometimes can act as a stimulus, especially if well utilised. I only have a problem with people who are resigned to fate and are looking for solutions from the neighbourhood. They have not utilized 5% of their potential yet they plead with neighbours for help.</p>
<p>Every person in Buganda Kingdom has the potential to overcome abject poverty. The reason it hasn’t happened is because we don’t have focused leadership. Those we have are victims of globalization who believe in IMF and World Bank solutions. They prefer begging for their people to mobilising them to work. Someone would be happy to return with Shs350 million after 20 State House meetings rather than spending a week in Masaka or Kiboga mobilising people like the Kabaka is doing to plant coffee.<br />
I am very pleased with the approach the Kabaka has taken, of visiting rural people and encouraging them to produce more.<br />
Apart from agriculture, Buganda needs to develop its tourism potential. </p>
<p>I think the youthful tourism minister, Nakiwala Kiyingi, has good ideas and needs help. Alongside tourism, Buganda needs to venture into the leisure industry with all determination.<br />
Can you imagine the whole of Buganda has no entertainment park or beach around Kampala? If I were the Katikkiro, J.B. Walusimbi, I would convince the Mengo establishment to allow me turn part of the land housing the Kasubi Tombs into a recreation park. </p>
<p>I know Baganda and others are sensitive about death and wouldn’t allow weddings at Kasubi, but I see no difference between charging visitors to visit the tombs and planting good grass where people can host their receptions.<br />
Why should CBS pay over Shs10 million to host its festivities at Nakivubo Stadium, yet Buganda has a chunk of land in Lubiri? I know Lubiri is such an important cultural site but part of it can be developed into a recreation centre.</p>
<p>A friend of mine who recently visited Turkey told me that people who live near tourist centres make more money than the centres themselves. Naturally they are encouraged to set up shops selling crafts, T-shirts, internet cafes, specialised restaurants, etc. This is how leaders equip their people to fight poverty. </p>
<p>Because of an institutional failure to help Ugandans out of poverty, we have individually been inconvenienced. Hundreds of our relatives wait for our monthly earnings as though they are party to it. In fact, majority of Ugandans have been educated by their relatives and not the state. Because our salaries are shared by poor relatives, we are more burdened than people who have been rich all their lives and cannot be bribed by a mere Shs2 billion.<br />
It is an insult for someone to take advantage of our misery to mortgage us and the future of our children. To borrow the words President Museveni once used, that person is inviting a curse (kisirani) on himself.</p>
<p>The solution to poverty lies in mobilizing the population for production and taping the potential of each area. State House handouts can provide temporary relief; like buying fuel for the leaders, but it is no long term solution to our misery.</p>
<p>The author is Political Editor of The Observer<br />
<a href="mailto:ssemujju@observer.ugThis">ssemujju@observer.ugThis</a> e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it</p>
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		<title>By: Busagwa Ali</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-296</link>
		<dc:creator>Busagwa Ali</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Apr 2009 05:48:45 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-296</guid>
		<description>Tara,

Did really the Katikiro say that Ugx 350 million = Buganda federo???? I hope he didn&#039;t, because if he really did, then he must be REAALLY nuts!He is making himself very ludiculous and in that case,  he does not deserve to be Buganda&#039;s Katikiro. I have also heard that he is bragging about his own personal riches and he keeps on throwing tantrums in meetings? What a poorly staged drama from the gentleman? 

The Katikiro should be aware that in Buganda, the Katikiro does what the majority Baganda want and not what he and his friends in M7&#039;s government personally want for Buganda.I can really see trouble ahead for this man. 

Can I also humbly inform Katikiro Walusimbi that truth and justice (read GOOD POLITICS) build nations. Bad politics does not develop nations however much money you may be given by underhand methods. Luwero Triangle was one of the wealthiest areas in Buganda but because of the poor politics of the Obote days, Luwero Triangle and much of other areas of Buganda was laid to waste. This is the same story everywhere in the world. You build a poor foundation of politics for your country, rest assured that the quick sands on which the so-called vibrant economies are resting will have to crack like a pack of cards much sooner than later. So, Eng. Walusimbi&#039;s demonizations of the Baganda youth nationalists that they are allegedly talking too much without &quot;working&quot; is just shallow, thoughtless and careless. 350 million Shilling can&#039;t and will not develop Buganda. Even if his friend M7 gave him 10 billion shilling for Buganda, it cannot be enough to develop Buganda.What will develop Buganda is federalism Buganda and other areas of Uganda cherish so much. The 50s and early sixties of Buganda can give a clear testimony to Eng. Walusimbi. 

See, this gentleman is also a very interesting man! Someone reads in the dailies that the Ugandan president wants 10 billions for his so-called patriotism programs alone and you the administrative head of a whole Kingdom as the Katikiro begins to prematurely celebrate when you are dubiously given Ugx 350 million/3 billion to &quot;develop&quot; the region you head, does that make sense????? This Katikiro surely must be the most miserable and disappointing!!!

Wangaala nnyo ayi Ssabasajja Kabaka Muwenda Mutebi II</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Tara,</p>
<p>Did really the Katikiro say that Ugx 350 million = Buganda federo???? I hope he didn&#8217;t, because if he really did, then he must be REAALLY nuts!He is making himself very ludiculous and in that case,  he does not deserve to be Buganda&#8217;s Katikiro. I have also heard that he is bragging about his own personal riches and he keeps on throwing tantrums in meetings? What a poorly staged drama from the gentleman? </p>
<p>The Katikiro should be aware that in Buganda, the Katikiro does what the majority Baganda want and not what he and his friends in M7&#8217;s government personally want for Buganda.I can really see trouble ahead for this man. </p>
<p>Can I also humbly inform Katikiro Walusimbi that truth and justice (read GOOD POLITICS) build nations. Bad politics does not develop nations however much money you may be given by underhand methods. Luwero Triangle was one of the wealthiest areas in Buganda but because of the poor politics of the Obote days, Luwero Triangle and much of other areas of Buganda was laid to waste. This is the same story everywhere in the world. You build a poor foundation of politics for your country, rest assured that the quick sands on which the so-called vibrant economies are resting will have to crack like a pack of cards much sooner than later. So, Eng. Walusimbi&#8217;s demonizations of the Baganda youth nationalists that they are allegedly talking too much without &#8220;working&#8221; is just shallow, thoughtless and careless. 350 million Shilling can&#8217;t and will not develop Buganda. Even if his friend M7 gave him 10 billion shilling for Buganda, it cannot be enough to develop Buganda.What will develop Buganda is federalism Buganda and other areas of Uganda cherish so much. The 50s and early sixties of Buganda can give a clear testimony to Eng. Walusimbi. </p>
<p>See, this gentleman is also a very interesting man! Someone reads in the dailies that the Ugandan president wants 10 billions for his so-called patriotism programs alone and you the administrative head of a whole Kingdom as the Katikiro begins to prematurely celebrate when you are dubiously given Ugx 350 million/3 billion to &#8220;develop&#8221; the region you head, does that make sense????? This Katikiro surely must be the most miserable and disappointing!!!</p>
<p>Wangaala nnyo ayi Ssabasajja Kabaka Muwenda Mutebi II</p>
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		<title>By: Katikkiro Walusimbi Convinces Kabaka And Archbishop Lwanga &#124; Buganda Post</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-295</link>
		<dc:creator>Katikkiro Walusimbi Convinces Kabaka And Archbishop Lwanga &#124; Buganda Post</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2009 22:58:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-295</guid>
		<description>[...] On April 20, Katikkiro Walusimbi announced to the Buganda Lukiiko that he had already accepted Shs 350 Million (US$162,790), as the first payment of what he claimed to be an unconditional grant of Shs 2 Billion (US$ 930,232) offer from President Museveni to fund the mumuli program. A large section of the Buganda population were angered by Katikkiro Walusimbi, with many in the Buganda youth movement accusing him of selling Buganda, at Shs 430 per person. Some have even threatened Mr. Walusimbi with death (see Katikkiro Walusimbi Takes Museveni’s Money, Puts His Life At Risk). [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] On April 20, Katikkiro Walusimbi announced to the Buganda Lukiiko that he had already accepted Shs 350 Million (US$162,790), as the first payment of what he claimed to be an unconditional grant of Shs 2 Billion (US$ 930,232) offer from President Museveni to fund the mumuli program. A large section of the Buganda population were angered by Katikkiro Walusimbi, with many in the Buganda youth movement accusing him of selling Buganda, at Shs 430 per person. Some have even threatened Mr. Walusimbi with death (see Katikkiro Walusimbi Takes Museveni’s Money, Puts His Life At Risk). [...]</p>
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		<title>By: steve dwight</title>
		<link>http://www.bugandapost.com/main/archives/383/comment-page-1#comment-293</link>
		<dc:creator>steve dwight</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 29 Apr 2009 17:35:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bugandapost.com/main/?p=383#comment-293</guid>
		<description>Yeah, Tara,

I couldn&#039;t agree more. The gentleman is a traitor 100%. He thinks that the &quot;noise&quot; the Baganda have been making and continue to make have all been in vain. I highly doubt if the situation would have been the case if the Baganda had just kept quiet and folded their hands from the 60s through the eights in the face of Obote&#039;s provocations and tyranny against Baganda. I even doubt whether the situation in Buganda now would have remained the same in Mr. Museveni&#039;s Uganda if the Baganda had not made &quot;noise&quot; against Mr. Museveni&#039;s intransigence regarding Buganda&#039;s properties, including land, among others. I can assure Mr. Walusimbi that had the Baganda not made the &quot;noise&quot; he is now castigating, Buganda and Baganda would not have been in a position to attain what they have now. Afterall, what can a mere 350 Million do in terms of development for Buganda? Why has Mr. Museveni&#039;s government up to now failed to pay its arrears to Buganda to an approximate tune of 10 Billion Uganda Shillings??? Why would Engineer Walusimbi think that 350 Million Uganda Shillings is more worth than 10 Billion Uganda Shilings which the Museveni government owes Buganda??? 

Hon. Walusimbi, the position you have taken is completely wrong!!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Yeah, Tara,</p>
<p>I couldn&#8217;t agree more. The gentleman is a traitor 100%. He thinks that the &#8220;noise&#8221; the Baganda have been making and continue to make have all been in vain. I highly doubt if the situation would have been the case if the Baganda had just kept quiet and folded their hands from the 60s through the eights in the face of Obote&#8217;s provocations and tyranny against Baganda. I even doubt whether the situation in Buganda now would have remained the same in Mr. Museveni&#8217;s Uganda if the Baganda had not made &#8220;noise&#8221; against Mr. Museveni&#8217;s intransigence regarding Buganda&#8217;s properties, including land, among others. I can assure Mr. Walusimbi that had the Baganda not made the &#8220;noise&#8221; he is now castigating, Buganda and Baganda would not have been in a position to attain what they have now. Afterall, what can a mere 350 Million do in terms of development for Buganda? Why has Mr. Museveni&#8217;s government up to now failed to pay its arrears to Buganda to an approximate tune of 10 Billion Uganda Shillings??? Why would Engineer Walusimbi think that 350 Million Uganda Shillings is more worth than 10 Billion Uganda Shilings which the Museveni government owes Buganda??? </p>
<p>Hon. Walusimbi, the position you have taken is completely wrong!!</p>
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