Abner Niike Nasasira

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Abner Niike Nasasira

Abner Niike Nasasira

@ABNASASIRA

Renewing the Mind

Kampala, Uganda Katılım Ağustos 2022
4.4K Takip Edilen247 Takipçiler
cynthiechoco
cynthiechoco@cynthiechoco·
I'm recording this from inside the house, but it feels like I'm right at the crusade itself. @KCCAUG @nemaug @PoliceUg This crusade is organized by Kingdom TV and hosted by David Kiganda.They have been shouting nonstop since Sunday and they expect us to tolerate the noise
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cynthiechoco
cynthiechoco@cynthiechoco·
I have contacted this pastor via text message & email,requesting them to stop making noise but they have refused @nemaug @PoliceUg The pastor is holding a crusade near my home,generating a lot of noise & expects me to halt my work until Sunday when their crusade ends Unacceptable
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Carol Prim ❤️🤭
Carol Prim ❤️🤭@CarolPrim3·
Guys how do you meet such Father in laws, please involve me🥹
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Abner Niike Nasasira
Abner Niike Nasasira@ABNASASIRA·
@cynthiechoco @nemaug @PoliceUg If it's muslims.ur silent.. if it's bars..ur silent... you will not take over the born againmovement..and will not succeed in fighting the church. Go hang . Let's not forget....we saw some idiot RDC try the same inKla...he failed and was sent flying away to KJong
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BigEyeUG
BigEyeUG@BigEyeUG·
Man of God
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State House Investors Protection Unit
The State House Investors Protection Unit (SHIPU), in coordination with Kira Police Division [@PoliceUg], has today successfully apprehended two suspects in connection with land fraud, criminal trespass, impersonation, and forgery of land located in Kiwologoma, Kira Division, Wakiso District. The matter was reported to SHIPU by Ms. Susan Karungi, the bona fide owner of the land. According to the complaint received by the Unit, unknown individuals had impersonated her and used forged land documents to fraudulently present themselves as the rightful owners of the property. Preliminary investigations indicate that the suspects reportedly used the forged land documents to obtain a loan of over UGX 30 million from PLC Financial Services, Ntinda. As part of the loan processing procedure, officials from the Financial institution reportedly conducted a site verification visit to the land which blew the cover of the fraudsters. During this verification exercise, neighbours and caretakers of the property alerted the legitimate owner that unknown individuals, two women and a man were present on the land and appeared to be claiming ownership. Concerned by this development, the rightful owner immediately reported the matter to the Kira Police Division, where a case file of criminal trespass, forgery, and uttering false documents is under investigations Following the report, SHIPU commenced coordinated intelligence-led investigations in collaboration with the Kira Police Division & Wakiso Lands office. Acting on the findings, a joint operation was conducted today which led to the arrest of two suspects found in connection with the alleged fraud. The suspects have been identified as: • Kamakune Lucky • Nabatanzi Hadijah, who is also reportedly presenting herself as Karungi Susan. The two suspects have been handed over to the Kira Police Division for prosecution. Under the guidance of the Head of Unit, Col. @edthnaka, SHIPU reiterates its commitment to safeguarding, protecting investors, & working with MDAs to combat fraud for economic development. #EmpoweringInvestors
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Mohammed Hersi : Mr Optimist
Mohammed Hersi : Mr Optimist@mohammedhersi·
My fellow Kenyans , To construct the Thika Superhighway, an entire mall that housed a Nakumatt supermarket was demolished. When questioned in Parliament, Chris Obure, the Infrastructure Minister at the time, stated plainly that roads are not built in the air and that even flyovers require land. His words were direct, but they captured an unavoidable truth: development demands sacrifice. At the time, the demolition of Nakumatt along Thika Road sparked public outrage. There was a hue and cry, and many viewed it as excessive or unjustified. Yet today, Thika Highway is lined with multiple malls, residential complexes, and countless commercial developments. The corridor has transformed into one of the country’s most vibrant economic zones. Few people remember what was demolished; most benefit from what was built. That is often the nature of progress—initial discomfort followed by long-term gain. Kenyans routinely praise cities such as Dubai, Kigali, and Addis Ababa. Comparisons flood social media, often portraying Kenya as stagnant or incapable of progress. Yet the contradiction is striking. When authorities take concrete steps to restore order or reorganize public spaces, resistance quickly follows. We cannot demand world-class cities while defending disorder at home. Pavements are for pedestrians. Highways are for transport. They are not extensions of private enterprise. The unchecked spread of kiosks onto walkways and road reserves has normalized congestion, safety hazards, and urban chaos. Order cannot coexist with selective obedience to the law. Kigali did not become organized by accident. President Paul Kagame’s administration enforced regulations firmly and consistently, including prohibiting kiosks along major roads and pedestrian paths. The same determination has been visible in Addis Ababa under Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and Mayor Adanech Abebe. These leaders did not ask whether enforcement would be popular; they recognized that lasting order requires resolve. What undermines reform in Kenya is not merely resistance from affected traders but the predictable politicization that follows. Law enforcement should not be turned into campaign material. Where notice has been issued and regulations are clear, implementation should proceed without apology. Many of the kiosks being removed were erected illegally and should never have occupied public spaces in the first place. Pretending otherwise for political convenience only entrenches impunity. A nation cannot mature if every enforcement action is framed as oppression and every demolition becomes a rallying cry. Yes, people must earn a living. Informal trade sustains thousands of families. But economic survival does not grant permission to appropriate pavements and road reserves. Kenya has designated markets that remain underutilized because roadside visibility is seen as better which is a bad mindset. This mindset steadily erodes urban order in the long term. The real question is simple: what kind of country do we want? It is inconsistent to criticize leadership for failing to match Kigali or Addis Ababa while resisting the discipline required to achieve similar outcomes. Progress is rarely painless, but it is often worthwhile. The benefits of order tend to outlast the protests that precede it. If we genuinely aspire to have organized, functional cities, then the law must be applied firmly and consistently—and both politicians and citizens must stop sabotaging that process. As always I choose to remain an optimist
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Abner Niike Nasasira
Abner Niike Nasasira@ABNASASIRA·
@brucenahabwe1 1. This is an Ai video. 2. There is no law against asking anyone to be impeached....and no one can have u arrested....ploz stop using such videos to boost views......u can be arrested for PC misuse
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Alon Mizrahi
Alon Mizrahi@alon_mizrahi·
When the war eventually breaks out, and I think it is a matter of days now, Iran surely understands that it needs to make Israel dysfunctional and broken (major services and industries incapacitated, movement and large-scale mobilization mostly impossible, ports unusable) within 48-72 hours - to make a decisive lasting impression before the US and the Europeans can step in and fight Israel's war on its behalf, as they surely will. Therefore I think that what we're going to see this time will be more dramatic by an order of magnitude or two. Very little sleep for many of us for a few days at least. By the end of this, there will either be no Islamic Republic of Iran, or no Israel. And I'm betting on Iran outsmarting, outperforming and outlasting Zionism. This is it, folks. That's It. The great big War. that will shape history and our consciousness for years and decades to come. The chances of stopping it now are less than 1% in my estimation
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António Guterres
António Guterres@antonioguterres·
I condemn the Israeli Government’s decision to resume land registration procedures in the occupied West Bank. The decision could lead to the dispossession of Palestinians of their property & risks expanding unlawful Israeli control over land in the area. I call on Israel to reverse these measures & on all to preserve the only path to lasting peace, a negotiated two-State solution in line with international law.
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Abner Niike Nasasira
Abner Niike Nasasira@ABNASASIRA·
@wekesa_amos Please share why it took 9 years....why does it have to be a fight to develop Africa....please share
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Amos Wekesa
Amos Wekesa@wekesa_amos·
Mwamba Lodge Tarangire story Around 2012, a friend of mine Paul Mukasa working with IFC told me about a site in Tanzania that he thought I would love. He added, it’s going to be a fight but I know you can put up a fight and also needs patience because it would take years. He introduced to the lawyer of the community called Martha, we arrange for my travel to Tanzania . I met the community leadership and speaking Swahili was an added advantage and we visited the site. Wow, I thought. They too told me, it was going to be fight and would take long and since we had bonded, they offered me another site which was easier for me they thought. I told them I wouldn’t go for another site besides this, I told them I was ready for the fights behind this location. The fight took around 9yrs, everytime I posted about visiting Tanzania, I was coming over to help in the fight. The community up today can’t believe I waited for all this long. The chairman kept telling me, osikate Taama . Don’t discard the appetite. The chairman had real faith in me but the rest of the group doubted me on many occasions. They thought I wouldn’t handle this. My dress code always gave them reason to doubt and I can understand. Once in a while i hear, these guys doubt if I was capable of investing. God was in it and here we are now, am here also enjoying the views today evening as a nice beautiful room awaits me tonight. Like I was say, we only charge you expensively for the views but rooms and everything else is free , like free!
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Path of Men
Path of Men@PathOfMen_·
Sigmund Freud believed a father must be a “threat,” not a friend, or the son never fully becomes a man. A boy is born into the world of the mother, warmth, forgiveness, safety. But maturity begins only when the father introduces limits, hierarchy, and resistance. Freud called this the “Law of the Father”. not violence, but authority that doesn’t collapse under emotion. When a father becomes a buddy too early, the boy never exits childhood. Historically, initiation meant separation from the mother, fear, discipline, even pain. The father was the guide into danger, responsibility, and competition. Today that role is diluted into reassurance and endless empathy. The result is visible everywhere: grown men addicted to comfort, terrified of criticism, avoiding risk, seeking approval. Friendship with father is possible, but only after strength is proven, not before. Until then, firmness is not cruelty. It is preparation. The world will not negotiate. A father existed to make sure his son could survive that fact.
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Abner Niike Nasasira
Abner Niike Nasasira@ABNASASIRA·
@PabloBach The UN has always been concerned...that's where it ends...theybhave been in Congo f9r years..and?????? Do people still listen to such.... we r also concerned abt Maduro.
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Paul Bakibinga
Paul Bakibinga@PabloBach·
UN Secretary-General, says he is deeply concerned by reports of arrests and violence involving Uganda’s opposition figures. He’s urged all sides to exercise restraint and called on the govt to respect international human rights, including freedom of expression and association.
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Nicholas Opiyo (Pronouns He/Him)
Beware of rage-baiting social media actors. Their influencer business model is covered in thin layers of public intellectualism. They accumulate pelf through such approaches and means. They have ‘expert’ opinions on all manner of subjects. One day, they are ‘experts’ in latrine digging, and another day, they are ‘experts’ in aerospace engineering. They are pleonastic in their expositions. Such is their range of expertise! They write thick texts and seem to be online every minute. Their intention is not to engage in a meaningful, good-faith debate. Instead, stirring emotions, lighting a fire, and once they have done so, they look on with glee. Their poppycock actions may be missed by many, but if you look closely, you’ll be sure to ignore them.
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Ronald Amanyire
Ronald Amanyire@amronaldo·
Richard Todwong, @TodwongR, you know me and I know you. I supported you and cheered for you during your campaign for Guild President at Makerere University as a Gallant Elephant. I do not know what lessons you have gathered from the time you served as Assistant Secretary General in 2018 to now, as Secretary General. I hope the journey has taught you a great deal. I also hope that your current position gives you the power and space to confront the issues that you spoke out against passionately and eloquently in this clip from 2018. Allow me to share my perspective on how corruption grows—slowly, quietly, and then completely out of control. This may be long as most of my posts usually are. 1. The Beginning: “Small” Bribes When you join the Civil Service as a fresh recruit, like I did in 2000, a small bribe of 20,000 or 50,000 shillings feels harmless. You convince yourself that you are not hurting the economy or anyone else. You tell yourself it is simply “appreciation” for the service you have provided. 2. Per Diem Culture Then come the field trips. You receive per diem for several days, but you spend fewer days and pocket the balance. It feels normal because the entire system treats it as an unofficial salary top-up. On the same trip, you request more fuel money than you need, and your boss converts the excess into cash. Again, it feels harmless. 3. Substandard Service Delivery Depending on your ministry, the next stage is more serious. You begin delivering substandard work while making the surface look perfect. A road may look smooth and black on top, but beneath it is poor workmanship (with one of Subgrade, Subbase, Base Course missing, and public or donor money quietly finds its way into your pocket. You show it off by driving a sleek vehicle on a really bad road. 4. Workshop Kickbacks If your work involves organising stakeholder workshops or nationwide consultations, you start colluding with hotel owners. You cut down on amenities, meals, or days to create room for kickbacks. The ministry pays the hotel in full, and you share the difference. That is why certain hotels host government workshops month after month—they are part of the ecosystem. 5. Addiction and Impunity By this stage, corruption becomes addictive. You begin paying off the “right” people—PAC, COSASE, Procurement, Internal Audit, Accounts, Admin, even Auditor General staff (before they turn up to Audit) to protect questionable expenditures. You realise you can operate with impunity. Integrity during appraisal becomes redefined as “Did you give your boss their cut that you promised?” 6. Corruption Enters the Budget Cycle Now corruption becomes institutionalized. You insert unnecessary procurements into the budget—services or items the country does not need. Even auditors struggle to question them because they do not see their value. For genuine procurements, such as office blocks or roads, you inflate costs so that the contractor knows they must return a portion to you if they want future contracts. I know one where 10 billion had been included until @KagutaMuseveni pulled the carpet from under the feet of the suspected beneficiary 7. Capturing the System At this point, you eliminate competition entirely. You register multiple companies—events firms, HR consultancies, technical consultancies—and ensure they win all contracts within your docket and beyond. Greed takes over. You stop thinking about the country, your children’s future, or even the risk of investigation. You only think of yourself although you may lie to yourself that you are also doing this for your children when you really do not know what they want yet. You already have the people who would investigate you on speed dial, in fist, in your pocket or whatever term comes to mind. For every billion you steal, you pay them ten million, and they are very thankful for it. 8. Manipulating Government Initiatives In programmes like Entandikwa, NAADS, OWC, or PDM, you bribe farmers and businesses that succeeded on their own so they can be showcased to the President during regional tours or election campaigns. The illusion of success becomes more important than actual service delivery. 9. Punishing Those Who Question the System If you dare question this status quo, you are sidelined. You are labelled toxic, untrustworthy, or disloyal. You are threatened and investigated—often by the IGG. I still do not understand why the IGG is the primary tool used to witch-hunt civil servants. Personally, I have been investigated by IGG three times. The first one I did not even know they were investigating me. @CID1_UG @IGGUganda @AntiGraft_SH @OAG_Uganda @GovUganda @rggoobi @mofpedU
Daily Monitor@DailyMonitor

"Corruption, greed, nepotism are things that are making Ugandans more disgusted in the leadership of our party ( @NRMOnline) in government...I'm speaking to you this because I know you're my shield. My church told me to be honest. ...I've told this to the president (@KagutaMuseveni). If we don't control our greed on how we use public resources, how we steal with impunity, then Ugandans will push us out of power"- @TodwongR, then deputy Secretary General of NRM on April 6, 2018 #MonitorUpdates #UgandaDecides2026 #MonitorArchives 📹 @ntvuganda

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