Dealer in Commodities/Forex Trading/Realtor & Businesses. International trade advisor, Oil and Gas Specialist & Chemical Engineer Student. Founder of JoFac
On 24th Feb, 2026, I lost my best friend whom & same time my beloved wife to be. It was a tiresome day of events I'll NEVER FORGET. I've gone through a tough grieving period. Mwishikyi(Dota); thanks for the 11 years I've known you. The kindest person I've ever met.โค
RIP๐
๐จJUST IN: Manchester United CEO on why Ruben Amorim failed at the club:
"Rigidity. Not tactics or talent, rigidity. He held onto his ideas too tightly at exactly the point when adapting mattered mostโ
Gulu University shortlists four for deputy vice chancellor post
The shortlisted candidates are Associate Professor Collins Okello at Gulu University; Associate Professor Daniel Komakech (Gulu University); Associate Professor Eric Awich Ochen (Makerere University); and Associate Professor Godfrey Akileng (Makerere University)
https://t.co/jfgCnrAoeJ
If you have power today, use it in such a way that when things change in future, you wonโt have to explain yourself. Where people will defend you themselves saying: โThat one was a good man/womanโ
All these labs' mean nothing as long as @BalaamBarugahar is involved somewhere.
Secondly the Government Analytical Laboratory has a reputation not for the good of it. Just a quick one; postmortem saga of former Butaleja District Woman MP, Cerinah Nebanda. While state tests (from GAL) linked her death to drugs, independent pathologists and Nebanda's family rejected these findings. I hope we all still remember that.
A second better example is of private John Atwine that was killed from Luzira prisons using lignocaine. Infact let me attach the video of Dr. Sylvester Onzivua's comment of that Government Analytical laboratory again.even when he concludes with "incompetence" we all can clearly see that it's a pattern of compromise.
More than two decades ago, when I bought my third HP laptop (a Pentium II or perhaps a Pentium III), I had a DVD copy of Nantabulilirwa by Kadongo Kamu legend Prince Paul Kafeero. I played that album endlessly, not because I fully understood Luganda at the time, but because local Ugandan music albums like his were among the most accessible recordings available on DVD.
Today, following the public release of DNA test results concerning some of Kafeero's children at Naguru Police Headquarters, I found myself revisiting those songs with entirely new ears. Having since gained a better understanding of Luganda, I am only now beginning to grasp the deeper meanings woven into his lyrics.
What once sounded like folklore, allegory, and artistic imagination increasingly appears intertwined with his own lived realities. Kafeero was more than a celebrated musician. He was a storyteller, philosopher, social commentator, and father whose music often blurred the line between observation and prophecy. In hindsight, some of the themes, warnings, and reflections embedded in his songs seem remarkably connected to the family questions that have resurfaced today, long after his passing.
Perhaps that is why his music continues to endure. What many dismissed as mere entertainment or mythology may also have been a deeply personal chronicle of experiences he understood far better than his audience did at the time.
๐จJUST IN: Josรฉ Mourinho was asked what heโs looking forward to most in the World Cup
"What am I looking forward to in the World Cup? I want Real Madrid players to lose because I want them back for pre-season."
As a player you are expected to give us a star and first by performance not just colouring your hair when the football you play is not resonating.
#TutegeereOmupiira