By Ronald Musoke The Uganda National Examinations Board has finally released the 2013 A-level results today, March 27, with female candidates beating their male counterparts in the humanities. A total of 116,190 candidates registered for the 2013 examination from 1,710 centres compared to 111,456 candidates from 1334 centres in 2012. …
Read More »NSSF in Carrier expo
By Patric Kagenda In a bid to create awareness on its activities, the NSSF has launched an expo that will see it traverse institutions of higher learning. The expo is targeting University students aspiring to work for corporate companies, government and non-government organisations have an opportunity to sharpen their employment …
Read More »Women get vaginal ring against HIV
By The Independent team Clinical trials are to begin soon on a new vaginal ring that promises to provide months of protection against pregnancy, HIV and herpes, US researchers have said. The device, which is similar to birth control rings already on the market, delivers both an antiretroviral drug and …
Read More »Assassination of a prince
By Patrick Kamara When priests carried guns to office and I met Princess Bagaya Prince Happy Kijjanangoma from the Royal household of Tooro was a physically disabled man and very bright and daring too. This was the time when Tooro Kingdom had broken into factions after the death of Omukama …
Read More »In praise of foxy scholars
By Dani Rodrik We need less attachment to a particular ideology and more contextually-driven thinking We live in a complicated world, so we are forced to simplify it. We categorise people around us as friends or foes, classify their motives as good or bad, and ascribe events with complex roots …
Read More »The innovation enigma
By Joseph E. Stiglitz Its profitability may not be a good measure of its net contribution to our standard of living Around the world, there is enormous enthusiasm for the type of technological innovation symbolised by Silicon Valley. In this view, America’s ingenuity represents its true comparative advantage, which others …
Read More »Frankly speaking with David Bahati, MP Ndorwa West.
By Joan Akello He lost his parents at age three and had to vend cigarettes and bananas on the street until he was rescued by an orphanage. As a politician, what challenge do you have to deal with every day? Speed of service delivery is the biggest challenge. Politics is …
Read More »Homophobia is the real problem
By Joan Akello and Ian Katusiime West Budama MP Fox Odoi who is one of the petitioners to challenge the Anti-Homosexuality law in the Constitutional Court, spoke to Joan Akello and Ian Katusiime about the gay issue What is the spirit of this petition? The spirit of this petition is …
Read More »Museveni and the fate of revolutionaries
By Andrew M. Mwenda History shows it was inevitable Mbabazi would fall on the sword of `sole’ candidate-culture In 1965, then opposition MPs introduced a motion on the floor of the National Assembly to repeal the Deportation Ordinance. This was a draconian colonial law that allowed the state to deport, …
Read More »The police you don’t know
By Jude Kagoro Re-interpreting the Uganda Police Force In the course of a six-month pre-field work preparation phase for research on the police practices in Uganda, I sat in my office at Bremen University in Germany reviewing articles on the force in the major Ugandan newspapers. In sum, the newspapers …
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