I call unto your support as we support 5 primary schools in Jinja with Water Filters from our friends at @spoutsofwater . Please reach out if you’d like to be a part of this effort scheduled for 18th July, 2026 in Jinja.
ITC has built the professionals who make that trust possible.
We train the people who protect what families and businesses value most.
With our professional Certificate and Diploma programmes, you don't just study insurance, you become the person behind the promise.
It is day 4 of being here at the PEWOSA Expo in Lubiri Mengo. What insurance related issue do you think needs to be tackled urgently?
Have you planned to pass by the IRA tent to interact with the team from IRA?
#DrivingInsuranceGrowth#BeInsured
Live from Lubiri Mengo- it is the POWESA expo.
Need to have a physical interaction with us, we are here because of you. Come through and let us talk about how you are experiencing insurance.
#DrivingInsuranceGrowth#BeInsured
"Ministry of Justice gives Sudhir Ruparelia 450 million shillings in rent.
The Ministry of ICT gives Sudhir 320 million.
The Ministry of Gender at Simbamanyo pays Sudhir 250 million.
The Anti-Corruption Court in Kololo gives Sudhir 180 million shillings per month.
The Ministry of East African Affairs pays Sudhir 280 million shillings at Kingdom.
The Equal Opportunities Commission pays Sudhir 86 million shillings at Kingdom.
Ministry of Internal Affairs pays another 60 million shillings because of some other small departments.
Parliament of Uganda pays 860 million shillings to Sudhir every month.
Presidential advisors, these ones, Amelia Kyambadde, Kintu, Sara Kyingi, who sit at Kingdom, every month they pay 66 million shillings in rent.
Uganda Revenue Authority pays Sudhir 300 million shillings for a warehouse on Kampala Road.
The Electoral Commission pays 300 million shillings to Sudhir for a warehouse in Ntinda.
Which means, if you total this, that every month government pays Sudhir every month 2.9 billion shillings.
Which translates into 97 million shillings per day, and 4 million shillings per hour, and 600,000 per minute. So every minute, Sudhir collects 600,000 from government"
This data was spoken by Hon. Ibrahim Ssemujju Nganda sometime back.
All the Benzs and Lexuses in the hospital parking lot? Relax, those belong to the patients.
That dusty Vitz and the old Prado parked under the tree? Those are the consultants'.
The Subarus? Mid-career doctors. Still paying them off alongside school fees, rent, and a loan they took to clear another loan.
The Sientas? For the female medics, probably a gift from the husband.
The intern doctor came on a boda.
With an old handkerchief in his pocket to wipe off sweat after walking half the journey.
Leader of the Opposition in Parliament, Hon. @JoelSsenyonyi, has arrived at the Parliament of Uganda for the final day of vetting ministerial designates.
#NBSUpdates
“Growth in the insurance industry will depend on the ability to combine technology, human capability, and ecosystem thinking while remaining agile in decision-making,”
Details in this link 👇👇👇
https://t.co/AF6H357Hzx
Congratulations Hon. Dr. Monica Musenero Masanza, energy looks good on you.
A strong vote of confidence from the fountain of honor.
Blessed in service!
Aliko Dangote and Donald Trump started business almost same year but Dangote is now far richer than Donald Trump.
Donald Trump got a “small loan” of $1 million from his father in 1975.
Aliko Dangote also got "small loan" of about $1 million from his uncle in the late 1970s.
But here’s the crazy part most people miss. Trump’s $1 million was already massive wealth in America at the time while Dangote’s reported ₦500,000 in the 1970s was so powerful that, because the naira was stronger than the dollar back then, it was worth roughly $1 million
Yes, Nigeria’s currency once traded ABOVE the dollar.
Two businessmen, two family boosts, two completely different economies.
One went into Manhattan real estate. The other started trading sugar, cement, and commodities in Lagos. Today, Donald Trump became President of the United States while Aliko Dangote became Africa’s richest man.
The lesson here is most billionaires don’t start from absolute zero. What separates them is what they BUILD after the opportunity lands in their hands.
And maybe the wildest part of this story is realizing how powerful Nigeria’s economy once looked in the 1970s compared to today.
I think the school business is somehow up there.
Students are sent to buy stationery items like reams and other supplies, yet the same people own the stationery shops around the schools.
Students buy the items and bring them to school, then the same items somehow find their way back to the shops for resale again. 😂