Angry Customers Mob Front Page Micro Finance

The situation remained tense until police reinforced and drove away Mr Henry Watira, FrontPage’s public relations officer to the Central Police Station (CPS) for safety.

“We want our money back, these people keep on tossing us by shifting the dates when we are to get our money, but even Bank of Uganda passed a statement saying the unlicensed institutions were not recognised by them, so it means we can’t get our money back,” said Mr Julius Matovu one of the enraged clients…..

According to the November 19 statement by BoU, any one who loses money to any of the MFIs that are outside the Bank’s supervision and regulatory reach, has no recourse for compensation because it can’t intervene on behalf of any such person….

This effectively implies that the hundreds of others that operate throughout the country can literary disappear with depositors’ money with little worry of punitive action from any one.

Soldier caned for knocking Museveni’s van

A PRESIDENTIAL guard has been given 100 lashes for allegedly knocking a caravan, which President Yoweri Museveni uses as his mobile office and a bedroom while on safari.

Chogm hotels owe govt Shs2b

Post-Chogm audits are underway in which hotels allegedly owe government close to Shs2 billion earmarked for guaranteeing the rooms for the delegates.

Citizen Uganda does a review of GayUgandan Blogger:

In the blogosphere though, Uganda’s government is not able to enforce its censorship policies. This leaves GayUganda free to tell his story to those who will listen. No doubt Information Minister Nsaba Buturo is unhappy, but unless he can get Google’s CEO on the phone, at least one gay Ugandan is not going to be denied his right to free speech.

New blog Kampala.ver discusses city planning and architecture in Kampala:

In order to accommodate this population growth, one of the issues to be addressed in the near future is public transport. The highly inefficient Matatu system has to be replaced by public buses running on defined routes and schedules. Fortunately, this seems to be under way with KCC claiming to bring 200 buses into the country ’soon’.

Chris Blattman blogs bout how Gulu has changed:

You know it’s no longer a war zone when…. …when the American high school students show up in busloads.

Busloads and busloads. Ever since the violence subsided there has been a huge influx of foreign youth coming ot “help the children of the north” in a two week stay. This plus the never-ending stream of white NGO Land Rovers. Property prices and rent are now higher than in the capital.

This week alone there was a group of Tennessee revivalists. My favorite, though, were the crochet kids. I understand they came to help former child soldiers knit beanies, tried to form an NGO by forging letters to the government, and were chased out of town. Not sure if it’s true, but it sounds about right. Gulu is truly a circus these days.

Africa Unchained blogs about greed in Africa:

In many ways, Africa’s economic situation seems hopeless. While $625 billion in foreign aid has poured in since 1960, there has been no rise in the region’s per capita gross domestic product, notes William R. Easterly, economics professor at New York University. What’s more, from 1976 to 2000, Africa’s share of global trade dropped to 1%, from an already negligible 3%. The U.N.’s scale of human development, which considers health, education, and economic well-being, ranks 34 African nations among the world’s 40 lowest. Thus far, foreign aid hasn’t made a dent.
Greed, however, might.

My latest Global Voices piece.

Though he’s a journalist and could have been preparing for Chogm – the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting recently held in Kampala – by readying his camera, audio recorder and notebook, here’s how Ernest Bazayne prepared for Chogm:

I’ve got:

·

o DVDs

o Batteries

o Safi

o Pringles

o Instant noodles

o Airtime

o Ammunition

I am ready for CHOGM.

Clearly, not everyone was excited about Chogm.

Chirs Mason, of Caked in Red Clay, has a good play by play of Chogm, but most interesting are the questions he asks:

When leaving Parliament, I gave thought to the piles of money invested in sprucing up the Parliament building for the Queen’s visit. The visit lasted about 20 minutes. A pattern was beginning to form. Mountains of money spent to prepare a site for a visit by a Royal figure or world leader during the meetings. Those visits would inevitably last a few fleeting minutes, perhaps an hour, and then the delegation would move on, leaving the refurbished site behind. I wonder how long the renovations will last before the paint again peels, the walls beings to crumble and the potholes make their inevitable return.

Uganda sunk mountains of money into hosting this conference—about $130 million. When you figure that the majority of Ugandans live below the poverty line; when 3 per cent of rural Ugandans have electricity; when its health care system is completely unable to serve a rapidly-growing population; and when millions of citizens are coming out of years spent living in camps because of rebel fighting in the north and millions more were displaced by flooding in September… when you figure all these things, you can’t help but wonder: will the new hotels, the for-now patched roads and the refurbished tourist sites help any of these people?

The new blog Citizen Uganda also questions some of the consequences of Chomg:

Uganda‘s leadership will congratulate themselves on hosting a successful summit, but they should not exaggerate its legacy for the nation. While Queen toured select venues in the country, much of the international media attention was elsewhere: the political crisis in Pakistan; the upcoming Israel-Palestine summit in Annapolis; and the woes of the falling U.S. dollar.

For Museveni though, this is a personal triumph. He managed to keep the protesters from upstaging him—they managed to make headline news on BBC—and raising some serious questions about his record on human rights. There was also very little mention of the stalled negotiations with the LRA in the north, or the country’s tensions with the DRC.

Scarlett Lion (full disclosure, that’s me) berates the Ugandan government for some of their choices as well:

They t
ore up the sidewalks and streets for Chogm to rebuild nicer ones. But since the repairs haven’t been finished, and the Queen and other diplomats and visitors have come and gone, they’ll stay half-finished forever. Chogm came and went without the world’s notice or most Ugandan’s participation. Most Ugandans didn’t see the Queen, air their grievances, or even learn to untangle the acronym.

Hannah, at the View from Kololo, put it very succinctly:

Before moving to Kampala in March I had never heard of CHOGM; in the past eight months, it’s all I’ve heard about.

New hotels have been built all over the city (and no one seems to be asking who will fill these hotels once CHOGM is over),

Everything seemed more orderly and in many ways less Ugandan.

Now that Chogm has come and gone, it will be interesting to see what kind of role Uganda will play on the international radar, as well as how Kampala will change without the big international conference looming in the future.

Rebekah interviews 27th Comrade at Global Voices.

Christian Science Monitor does a piece on banning plastic bags.

Gregg Zachary blogs about Sudanese Teddy Bears.

New York Times lists top travel books.

Economist writes about stateless people.

Both Dee and Ugandan Insomniac have highlights of BHH this month. We’ll be waiting for next month…..

Uganda: Sh276b Spent On CHOGM Summit

According to an M7 speech reported on my the New Vision.

According to this currency calculator,

276000000000 Uganda Shilling (UGS) = 159,445,407 US Dollar (USD)