@SeeRacists@Boity What in the reclusive deranged psychopathic depraved disgusting hell- like being must you be in order to find any pleasure in any of this ! Omg - 😳
Crying at how hard the media tried to stop this from happening with their smear campaigns, paid reviews & bot accounts 😭 40 years of trying to take him down, only to fail every time. Sweet victory!
107 MP seats under threat, Banks decline to give loans to affected MPs
“A top city bank headquartered in the leafy Kololo suburb of Kampala, has blacklisted at least 100 MPs, including ministers, barring them from accessing loan facilities until election petitions challenging their victories are conclusively resolved by the courts,” a source said.
DETAILS 👉👉https://t.co/0LncFXQRyv
#VisionUpdates
Agnes is in Senior Four in Kampala. She has no parents, and she has stayed in school through everything. This year she sits her UCE exams, if her fees are cleared in time.
Her full goal is 1,375,000 UGX. Fees, a uniform, books, shoes. The campaign closes on 17 June.
Contributing takes under a minute by mobile money, no account needed. Every contribution appears on her public list the moment it lands, so you see exactly how close she gets to the exam room.
Her campaign link is in the first comment. Help Agnes sit her exams.
Deep breath!
I read this and I genuinely did not know whether to laugh or to sit down and cry. I have done both at several points in my life when dealing with government!
Lunch. They want to give them lunch.
You have worked 36-hour shifts. You have watched patients die because there were no consumables and You had no money to buy them yourself. You have resuscitated people at 3am, gone home on a boda-boda you could barely afford, eaten one meal that day, and woken up to do it again.
And the response from Cabinet, from the people who eat buffet at State House, is to offer you a plate of posho and beans and call it welfare support!
Do they know what internship actually costs a person?
You finish six years of medical school. You are deployed, often far from home. You pay rent. You pay transport. You buy your own stethoscope, your own gloves sometimes, your own meals, because the "food at the facility" that Minister Baryomunsi so casually references is frequently food meant for admitted patients, which we are quietly told to help ourselves to when no one is watching.
That is not a benefit.
That is an indignity.
The allowance was already Shs 1 million, a joke for someone doing the work of a medical officer. Before that it was 2.4 million.
Each time they have cut, they have dressed it up in policy language. Now there is no allowance at all, and the replacement is a cafeteria arrangement.
Meanwhile, Shs 24 billion was earmarked for public holiday celebrations!
What this government is telling young doctors is very simple: your labour is not worth money. Your six years of training, your sacrifice, your sleepless nights sustaining a health system that would collapse without you, here is a plate of food. Be grateful.
And if you complain, you are being difficult. If you strike, you are abandoning patients. They have Interns perfectly trapped, and they know it.
The Interns cannot walk away from sick people. That is not who they are. They are betting on their decency to extract free labour from them, and they have been doing it for years.
I am not angry on my own behalf anymore. I am angry for more interns coming after. The ones finishing now, the ones who borrowed money to get through medical school, the ones with children, with rent, with parents to support. What are they supposed to do? Survive on principle? Am crying for those the country has missed, because they have changed their dream of becoming doctors.
Dr Asiimwe is right. An intern is an officer on probation. Seventy-five percent of a medical officer's salary is the floor, not the ceiling. This is not an unreasonable ask. It is basic dignity. Having Shs 24 billion for celebrations and not finding Shs 2.4 billion per month for 2,000 doctors holding the public health system together is sickening!
It is not a resource problem. That is a values problem.
There is no 28billion to pay intern doctors in the budget Museveni is presenting today, no 8billion for UNEB to train teachers on how to mark new syllabus, no 3.5billion to complete new syllabus but there is 211billion for welfare and entertainment for big people, 536 billion for special meals and drinks for big people, 196 billion for big people to donate, 17 billion for firewood, gas and charcoal and 2.6 trillion for classified expenditure!
Uganda Airlines needs to be shutdown. We need to bring this circus to an end.
Since its revival, the government has pumped Shs1.98 trillion into Uganda Airlines. The airline’s generous return on that investment has been losses every financial year it has existed, Shs325 billion in 2023, Shs238 billion in 2024, and Shs231 billion in 2025.
Over the last two years alone, more than half a trillion shillings of public money went in and did not come back. The most recent Auditor General’s report found that only one of 29 planned outputs was fully implemented during the financial year.
Trade payables surged to Shs235.7 billion by June 2025. Shs61.8 billion was paid for aviation fuel without a valid supply contract. The airline was fined Shs6.3 billion by a supplier over documentation that did not exist. A CRJ900 aircraft has been grounded since September 2025 because nobody could find a spare part.
And today, the “president” is at a Boeing signing ceremony for ten new aircraft. How ridiculous!
This country cannot keep medicine on the shelves of its public hospitals. Medical interns go months without their salaries and finally told they won’t even be paid the small stipend they have been getting late.
The roads in and outside Kampala will destroy your car and your morale in the same pothole. But this thing we call a government has someone found more money for an airline that has never turned a profit for ten more planes it cannot afford to maintain.
How ridiculous!