Caroline Adikini

12 posts

Caroline Adikini

Caroline Adikini

@CarolineAdikini

Being myself

Katılım Mayıs 2024
137 Takip Edilen13 Takipçiler
Naymah☆♡
Naymah☆♡@NamazziNaymah·
Do you guys really think before commenting?
Caroline Adikini@CarolineAdikini

@mark_keron Can't they take the heart institute out of Kampala, must all services be in Kla. We talk of congestion and decentralisation but still promoting centralisation of all services within Kampala

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Cactus
Cactus@____CactusJ____·
@Omwojjo_Atwooki @mark_keron @CarolineAdikini Like man some of these things don’t need u to think too much. Why would u put the heart institute or kidney institute outside of the city? Im struggling to understand ur reasoning other than being very foolish(to put it nicely)
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Zong Feng
Zong Feng@mark_keron·
Parliament said Phaneroo should NEVER have gotten that Naguru land. Parliament voted to CANCEL their title. The title was not cancelled. Now they're blocking the Heart Institute's emergency road. 8,000 children need heart surgery every year. Uganda only does 1,000. The church is literally in the way. 🧵
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Mwami lu
Mwami lu@lulanzeashirafu·
Shamim Mayanja's statement has sparked debate. She asserts that her husband's children aren't hers, emphasizing they have their own mothers and she doesn't feel responsible for them. Is this a healthy boundary or a lack of empathy?
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Jim Spire Ssentongo
Jim Spire Ssentongo@SpireJim·
Taiwan has one of the lowest fertility rates in the world, with over 20% of their population above 65 years! Their government is worried about the increasing decline. So they’ve added another incentive for their people to produce children. Starting January 2026, government will give 11.6 million (USh) cash for every child born. For twins, it will be 23.2 m. Though this is not a challenge in Uganda, I’m imagining what would happen if government tried such an incentive.
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Prophetess Faith Mhembere
Prophetess Faith Mhembere@prophetessfay1·
Before I sign out for today this is for someone here: "You leaving June 2025 with a testimony"
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Lucky Mbabazi
Lucky Mbabazi@LuckyMbabazi·
What are you grateful for today?
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Baluku Bright
Baluku Bright@BalukuBright3·
@CarolPrim3 @FrankGashumba And BTW what is taught is even irrelevant, the day someone punished my kid for not knowing the grandfather of Shaka Zulu yet he doesn't know his own grand father is the day I gave up on our education.
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Frank M. Gashumba
Frank M. Gashumba@FrankGashumba·
Please parents, this madness MUST STOP. Stand up and be counted. Schools don't own our children. It has bothered me for a while, when you browse all search engines, a kindergarten is a place where kids go and have fun If it's a place where kids should go and have fun, why would our toddlers wake up at 4:30am to go to school? Surprisingly, some parents after preparing the kids for school and the van picking them up, they go back to their beds and sleep. To a certain extent some parents don't even see their kids when they are going to school because they are prepared by maids and helpers. It's a common norm in Kampala, the van will pick these toddlers from different areas forexample Munyonyo, Mbuya, Luzira, Nasana and drop them to Namirembe road where the school is and by the time the kids reach, they are already exhausted. Parents must raise up and stop this madness. There is a new tendance of lower primary kids for example P.1 and P.2 having weekend classes. When do these kids participate in extra cocurricular activities fore example football, netball etc? If I am to recall during our school days, after each period we had playing time for example after break, we had 30 minutes of play and an hour after lunch and we go back to class. Which school in kampala still does that these days? Homework started as a joke and now it's a norm where these kids are given homework on a daily basis. When do these kids ever rest. Look at a primary kid who leaves home at 5:30am and returns at 8:00pm and still has homework they need to do. I remember very well during our O' & level in Masaka Aghkan Senior Secondary School. Sometimes I pass via Greenhill primary school and find our kids with heavy bags on their backs as if they are pilgrims on a pilgrimage. This subjects kids to depression at such an early age due to their minds being over worked. What is even more painful is that these kids are not being taught to be innovative, it's plain cramwork of the same things over and over again. If taking these kids to school very early in the morning results into high innovation and developments, the social media apps like Snapchat, TikTok, Facebook, Instagram and search engines like Chrome, Google among others would be developed by Ugandans which is not a case in point. Finally, during our days at school, they used to tell us "to be at the right place, at the right time and doing the right thing" and if it's so, why is it that when kids breakoff for holidays, they are still given holiday packages and sometimes holiday coaching. If you are reading this post from Europe, Asia, North America, USA and other parts of Africa, kindly share with me your experience. I will dig deeper into this Monday 5th August, 2024 on radio 4 (103.3 Fm) from 9:00am to 11:00am. Frank M Gashumba Info@frankgashumba.com @JanetMuseveni @KagutaMuseveni @StateHouseUg @mkainerugaba @AnitahAmong @Thomas_Tayebwa @OPMUganda @Educ_SportsUg @MoICT_Ug @ReachDrMuganga @VUKampala @ntvuganda @nbstv @DailyMonitor @newvisionwire
Frank M. Gashumba tweet mediaFrank M. Gashumba tweet mediaFrank M. Gashumba tweet media
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Nile Post
Nile Post@nilepostnews·
BREAKING: The crescent moon has been sighted in Saudi Arabia. Eid al-Adha will be on June 16, 2024. #NilePostNews
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