Hello Good People; We can't thank God enough for his Grace and Mercy! I take this opportunity to share with you God's massage as a nation and a people. Kindly
Pray, Repent, turn your life back to GOD. Acts 3:19
@Pastor__West@RobertKayanja@BishopJakes#Prayer@KagutaMuseveni
"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.
How Kampala thieves operate:
These criminals move with a well-planned strategy on the streets. In most cases, they work in groups consisting of a woman carrying a bag and several male accomplices acting as backup.
Once they identify a target, the woman quickly approaches and deliberately bumps into the person. Suddenly, her bag falls to the ground, or she throws herself down and starts shouting, “Omubbi! Omubbi!” (“Thief! Thief!”).
Immediately, her accomplices rush in, pretending to respond to the alarm. They begin searching, harassing, and accusing the victim while checking for valuables. In many cases, they start beating the victim, attracting a mob that joins in without knowing the truth.
A friend of mine once fell victim to a similar scheme. Thank God his “Inzikuru” 🏃🏾♂️ ancestors watched over him and helped him escape the danger. Otherwise, he could have lost his life.
Sadly, this appears to be a growing trend in our country. Even more concerning are allegations that some of these criminals are protected or aided by corrupt security personnel.
We must all remain careful and vigilant when walking on the streets, driving along highways, or stopping at traffic lights. Stay alert, be aware of your surroundings, and never rush to judge a situation before knowing the facts.
Your awareness could save your life or someone else’s!
Sometimes we say we’ve done everything the people we admire did but we’ve failed to achieve their ‘success’. Although sometimes they don’t tell us all, it might not necessarily mean that they hid something about their ‘success’. At times, it is because we try to literally apply ideas that were helpful at a time different from ours. What made my father successful may not work for me.
It is helpful to read or listen to experiences of those we admire. However this should always go along with understanding our own times and their uniqueness (if any); and understanding our own abilities. Sometimes we admire people with natural abilities and privileges that we neither have nor can achieve; where trying to follow their path can only lead to frustration. Do not imitate or consume biographies uncritically, analyse and find out what could fit you and your world.
Sometimes young people lose hope, because they’ve only seen and heard of the rosy side of those they want to be like. So they imagine that it could have been a straight path for their role models. Hence quickly getting frustrated when theirs doesn’t seem to be working out as early as hoped. It happens, but a bit rare that academic success or even excellence immediately lands you where you want. After undergrad, I tried to go to UK for kyeeyo. I was denied visas twice! Those days when you would have to line up at the UK visa office from as early as 3:00am, to be attended to starting at 9:00am. And by 9:00am, the queue would be almost 1km long! All for an opportunity, to go do unskilled work. Looking back, I’m happy that they denied me the visas.
Injustice.
In the decade after treatment existed, 16 million people died of AIDS—12 million in Africa.
That’s twice as many people who had died before treatment was developed.
Access to medicines wasn’t blocked by science.
It was blocked by unfair laws and monopoly that placed profit over people.
This was a failure of politics.
The Deception of the Devil - Apostle Michael Orokpo, PhD.
(Full Message Title: Forces that Negates your Glorious Manifestation)
For the full sermon, download The Encounter Jesus App on Google Play Store or IOS
My internship experience:
The previous night, I was on call and had worked until 4am. I was also in my periods and my whole body felt like it had been pounced. By 8:30am again, I was on table for a C/section. I thought it would be just one case and I would forcefully go and rest.
However, emergencies kept coming and Before I knew it, I was on the second, third and fourth C/section. My head started spinning. I wasn’t sure if I were getting finger pricks in the process or not. Then I couldn’t feel my legs anymore.
The Next sequence of events that followed, I have no clue. I just woke up and found myself in the nurses room with I.V dextrose running in my vein.
Now, imagine undergoing this kind of stress for one year without pay!
By the time I was finishing my internship, my whole being was screaming ‘ophthalmology, where are you?’ I can’t continue like this!
6 Things that Defines the Ecclesia - Apostle Michael Orokpo, PhD.
(Full Message Title: The Convocation of the Ecclesia)
For the full sermon, download The Encounter Jesus App on Google Play Store or IOS
What killed the intern doctor was not the calling to serve. It was the silence around the struggles many young health professionals endure every day.
As we grieve this loss, let us remember that compassion must extend beyond patients to those who care for them.
“Redeeming the time, because the days are evil.” — Ephesians 5:16
Beloved, every moment is a gift from God. Do not allow yesterday’s failures, disappointments, or missed opportunities to define your future. Our God is a Redeemer!
A National Referral Hospital without a CT scan machine. A National Referral Hospital without essential emergency equipment.
This is what I witnessed firsthand.
Yesterday, my uncle was involved in a tragic road accident along the Kayunga Highway in Mukono District. Despite the efforts of the first responders who did everything possible to save him, he later succumbed to the injuries he sustained.
My two cousins, who were travelling with him, survived but suffered critical injuries. We rushed them to Mulago Hospital, Uganda's premier national referral facility, hoping they would receive urgent specialized care.
What followed was deeply disappointing.
For nearly 40 minutes at the casualty ward, no one attended to the patients. When assistance finally came, we were advised to transfer them to Ryan Hospital opposite the Law Development Centre because Mulago reportedly lacked a functioning CT scan service. To make matters worse, we had to arrange and pay for private transport ourselves, as there was no ambulance readily available to facilitate an emergency referral.
It is difficult to understand how a National Referral Hospital can lack such critical diagnostic services and emergency response capacity. One would expect the country's highest-level public health facility to be the place where lives are saved, not where patients are referred elsewhere in their most vulnerable moments.
Sometimes it feels as though our health system operates on a simple principle: survive the accident first, then survive the referral process.
This experience has left me heartbroken, frustrated, and profoundly disappointed. My family's tragedy has exposed painful gaps in a system that millions of Ugandans depend upon.
Ugandans deserve better.
It's hard for me to explain to those outside #Uganda just how irritated the Ugandans are to be lumped in with DRC for the #Ebola epidemic. As of this writing, there have been hundreds of deaths and over 1000 cases in Congo, whereas Uganda has had only 9 cases -- three Congolese, four medical workers who treated them, one driver who drove them, and one other known contact. Only one person has died in Uganda, a Congolese.
So when WHO and Al Jazeera talks about the Ebola epidemic in "Congo and Uganda," it's like saying because there are wildfires in California, you should cancel a trip to the Grand Canyon because some Californians lit a campfire there. Yes, it is possible it *could* spread and you have to be vigilant, but these two situations are nowhere near the same magnitude.
As of this writing, the only Ugandan death has been the tourism industry.
Augustine Idoot @KAAdvocates explains the amendments to the Act regarding the welfare of breastfeeding women and the provision of childcare facilities by employers.
#LabourLawConf2026
As A Sent Man, God Gives You Strategy - Apostle Michael Orokpo, PhD.
(Full Message Title: The Sent Man)
For the full sermon, download The Encounter Jesus App on Google Play Store or IOS