The 53rd class of law at MUK just graduated. After four years studying law, I am more than convinced that legal literacy matters for all Ugandans. I share this and more in this piece in Daily monitor. Find it via https://t.co/efC6v4BLpJ
WARNING: Be careful with “group investment” schemes like maize farming or goat rearing that ask for public money.
If they cannot show approval from the Capital Markets Authority, a registered investment prospectus, audited financial statements, and a valid license to raise funds from the public then it’s likely a scam.
No documents, no investment. Protect your money.
Can the Media Centre also serve as a central hub for advertising government job opportunities? For example, vacancies across various ministries, government departments, and agencies could be posted in one place.
Where can a graduate currently go to find all available government openings? It would be beneficial to first centralize government job advertisements so that citizens can easily access and track opportunities from a single platform.
Look at Iran: IAEA said they weren’t building weapons but they still got struck on claims that they were developing nuclear warheads. I think that this wholesomely risks pushing more countries to build their own nukes for survival just like North Korea did.
Every day, children consume content online. Few are taught how to question them.
We use Debate to teach students to ask, seek clarity, weigh benefits & identify what's missing
The future belongs to minds that can think before they share.
#14thNSDC#6thNJSDC
CC: @Bbossa@UCC_ED
Only a lawyer would understand the weight of 61 pages of Mubiru J's ruling.
All RDCs, Police officers ought to read this.
Kiranda Timothy &Anor V Hajjat Fatuma Nabitaka Ndisaba & 7 Ors.
MC 61 of 2025
@Uganda_LII@Lex_Amica
“You cannot say that you have Shs158 billion to purchase cars for MPs and then claim that you do not have Shs 28 billion to pay medical interns’ allowances, with the excuse that it would crush the economy. By the way, doctors are rarely in the hospitals. It is the medical interns who are everywhere doing the donkey work,” Archbishop Stephen Kaziimba Mugalu
READ:👉https://t.co/D8WKodSg45
#MonitorUpdates
Some Court of Appeal Justices have poked holes in the credibility of the electoral process and challenged Electoral Commission officials to explain the glaring gaps.
This was during the opening of a two-day training for Justices of the Court of Appeal on management of election appeals.
So far 118 electoral petitions have been filed at the High Court with 107 of these parliamentary, and 11 from Local Government.
#NTVNews
📹@jnalwooga