Mandela Nkunda

650 posts

Mandela Nkunda banner
Mandela Nkunda

Mandela Nkunda

@mandelankunda

Advocate

Uganda Katılım Kasım 2018
790 Takip Edilen699 Takipçiler
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Katabarwa✨
Katabarwa✨@KataBarwaKR·
CABINET PREDICTIONS: PART 1 For as long as President @KagutaMuseveni is still President, their Cabinet Positions are secure; 1. Rt. Hon. Moses Ali 2. Rt. Hon. @RebeccaKadagaUG 3. Hon. @otafiire_k 4. Hon. @MatiaK5 Those that will most likely remain on the Cabinet List (Not State Ministers); 1. Hon. @FrankTumwebazek 2. Hon. @JaneRuth_Aceng 3. Hon. @norbertmao (if he doesn’t win the Speakership) 4. Gen. @jkmuhwezi 5. Gen. @GenWamala 6. Hon. @JudithNabakoob1 Next we will look at those most likely to be elevated from State Ministers to Cabinet
Katabarwa✨ tweet media
English
36
15
239
47.8K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Norbert Mao
Norbert Mao@norbertmao·
This is a great piece of art befitting a man of thought and a man of action. It has to be in the proposed Peace Garden to be built in Gulu City. Such a garden must pay tribute to the man described as a “warrior peacemaker”.
Oketayot Aaron (Wod Pà tiko)@Counselaaron

Money is in Kampala, God lives in Gulu city. The statue should be built in Gulu City. @mkainerugaba @norbertmao @KennethOmona Waiting for CDF to honor our request.

English
50
66
355
73.8K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
JORAM
JORAM@joramtweets·
Congratulations Jacob Kiplimo for setting a new national record of 2:00:28 & earning a Bronze medal in the London Marathon 💪
JORAM tweet media
English
1
7
29
765
Muhoozi Kainerugaba
Muhoozi Kainerugaba@mkainerugaba·
Where I'm I? I'm in Israel, at the empty grave of my ancestor and my God. Praying for strength and peace.
English
163
246
1.7K
55.6K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
JORAM
JORAM@joramtweets·
Loyal hearts, unshaken love for our Supreme Leader, Gen. @mkainerugaba💪 #MKat52
English
6
24
78
4.1K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Charles Lwanga
Charles Lwanga@BorninAfrica6·
Overwhelming love ❤️ and support for Gen @mkainerugaba as crowds gather at Kololo to take part in the #MK@52 Birthday run Unstoppable
Charles Lwanga tweet mediaCharles Lwanga tweet mediaCharles Lwanga tweet mediaCharles Lwanga tweet media
English
2
22
57
3.8K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Anthony Natif
Anthony Natif@TonyNatif·
Regardless of political differences, all Ugandans should be grateful for public spirited, brilliant, selfless lawyers like @PhillipKarugaba. They don’t make them like him often.
English
27
158
625
42.7K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
The Olympic Games
The Olympic Games@Olympics·
With the #LondonMarathon taking place tomorrow, we have to throw it back to Stephen Kiprotich making history on these same streets! 🇺🇬🥇 Uganda’s first Olympic marathon gold at #London2012 #Olympics
English
37
454
1.8K
86.1K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Africa Today Media Group
Africa Today Media Group@africatodayMG·
In 1962, at the age of 17, Dr. John Garang de Mabior attempted to join the Anyanya I uprising in southern Sudan, but was encouraged by its leaders to continue his secondary education in Tanzania. He went on to win a scholarship to Grinnell College, in Iowa, USA and, in 1969, took a BSc in economics. He was offered a graduate fellowship at the University of California in Berkeley, but chose to return to Tanzania as a research fellow at Dar es Salaam University. There, he met a future ally, Museveni, but was soon back in Sudan, with Anyanya. When the Addis Ababa agreement of 1972 ended Sudan’s first civil war, many rebels, Garang among them, were incorporated into the Sudanese armed forces. After that, during 11 years as a career soldier, he rose from captain to colonel, completed an advanced course at the US army infantry school in Fort Benning, Georgia, and took a four-year break to study for an MA in agricultural economics and a PhD in economics at Iowa State University. On returning to Sudan in 1981, Garang found great change. President Jaafar Nimeiri, formerly close to the Communist party, was leaning towards the Islamists, who favoured the introduction of sharia law, even in the predominantly Christian south. Garang realised that the peace agreement was doomed, even before Nimeiri abrogated it in 1983 and imposed sharia throughout the country. In May 1983, Garang was sent to his old command in Bor to quell a mutiny of 500 southern troops – commanded by officers absorbed from Anyanya – who were resisting orders to move north. He vanished. More than two months later, he reappeared in Ethiopia, where Mengistu Haile Mariam enthroned him as head of the new Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA), with the rebellious Bor garrison as its nucleus. Early military successes were followed by lengthy stalemates and crippling splits within the SPLA, often along tribal lines and exacerbated by the arrogant, authoritarian leadership of Garang and his Bor Dinka inner circle. When Mengistu’s regime collapsed in 1991, and the SPLA lost its chief financial backer, Garang looked west, stressing the Christian character of much of the Sudanese south and Khartoum’s efforts to impose sharia upon it. In its early years, the SPLA was, in the words of an internal critic, “a militarist instrument intolerant and averse to democratic methods and principles”, hostile to politicians and intellectuals. Many southerners were killed; others were imprisoned and tortured. But the SPLA evolved – slowly and not always surely – from its origins as a brutal, Soviet-supported, insurgency towards a movement more genuinely representative of all Sudanese who craved Garang’s “New Sudan” – a secular, pluralist, democratic nation dominated by southerners and marginalised northerners. Garang never deviated from his vision of the New Sudan. He knew that most southerners, even within the SPLA, wanted a separate state which they later achieved in a referendum six years after Garang’s death. Garang refused to participate in the 1985 interim government or 1986 elections, remaining a rebel leader. However, the SPLA and government signed a peace agreement with Khartoum on January 9, 2005 in Nairobi, Kenya. On 9 July 2005, he was sworn in as vice-president, the second most powerful person in the country, following a ceremony in which he and President Omar al-Bashir signed a power-sharing constitution. He also became the administrative head of a southern Sudan with limited autonomy for the six years before a scheduled referendum for possible secession. No Christian or southerner had ever held such a high government post. Commenting after the ceremony, Garang stated, “I congratulate the Sudanese people, this is not my peace or the peace of al-Bashir, it is the peace of the Sudanese people.”
Africa Today Media Group tweet media
English
4
47
148
15.9K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Daudi Kabanda
Daudi Kabanda@DaudiKabanda·
💪
Daudi Kabanda tweet media
QME
50
180
1.1K
15.6K
Mandela Nkunda
Mandela Nkunda@mandelankunda·
"To achieve the mood of a warrior is not a simple matter. It is a revolution." Carlos Castaneda, often attributed to his mentor, the Yaqui sorcerer Don Juan Matus, in his book Tales of Power. Happy birthday to you our fearless CDF @mkainerugaba
Mandela Nkunda tweet media
English
2
7
36
657
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Katabarwa✨
Katabarwa✨@KataBarwaKR·
GEN. MK@52. On your 48th Birthday Celebrations at State House in 2022, something fundamental in our geopolitics happened. President @PaulKagame who had not stepped foot in Uganda for 4 years attended your Birthday, a statement of profound Statesmanship in you. I wrote and said, “Don’t live in denial, just watch Gen. MK. ” (see my pinned tweet) I am happy that 4 years letter, those that lived in denial have started to watch and have accepted that Gen.@mkainerugaba is Uganda’s big thing. From Celebrations by MPs to a Nation wide celebration of the Birthday that will be climaxed by a Run at Kololo Ceremonial Grounds, Gen. MK is a Movement. He is an idea and a leader that we all waited for. A military man that is allergic to Corruption. A man that the corrupt in the Main stream Public Service are worried about. Like I always say, “Leaders Emerge” and Gen. MK has emerged. Happy 52nd Birthday General🙏
Katabarwa✨ tweet media
English
1
3
14
301
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Katabarwa✨
Katabarwa✨@KataBarwaKR·
This is @norbertmao’s Campaign Poster in 1990/91 Guild Presidential bid at Makerere University. At the time, Mao was a 2nd Year Student of a Bachelor of Laws. He stood for; 1. Academic Freedom 2. Self Determination 3. Guild Autonomy 4. Greater Student Power He was to go ahead & trounce the then Lt. Noble Mayombo of the NRA (UPDF)
Katabarwa✨ tweet media
English
9
29
135
14.2K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Amon 👷
Amon 👷@rwenzori_·
The Mukwano Group's Story. If you look closely at your kitchen or laundry room today, you will almost certainly find a product made by the Mukwano Group. From cooking oil to laundry soap, this empire is deeply woven into the daily lives of Ugandans. But the story of the Karmali family is a fascinating generational tale of survival, resilience, and incredible business acumen. The foundation was laid way back in 1904 when pioneer investor Ali Mohamed Karmali arrived in Uganda. He eventually settled in Bukandula in Mpigi district, where he did a roaring trade in cotton and coffee. He was so incredibly popular with the locals that they nicknamed him "Mukwano gwa bangi" (a friend of many), a title that was later affectionately shortened to just "Mukwano." His son, Amirali Karmali, was born in the 1930s and took the family hustle to a whole new level. He acquired a single second-hand truck to transport produce from Fort Portal to Kampala. When President Idi Amin expelled Asians in 1972, legend says Amirali never actually went into exile. Instead, he was hidden by good Samaritans and quietly waited out the turbulent storm. Emerging from the shadows in the late 1970s and 1980s, Amirali completely rebuilt the business from scratch. He established Mukwano Enterprises and rapidly grew it into a massive conglomerate covering manufacturing, plastics, detergents, and transport. In 1995, he proudly relinquished control of the group to his son, Alykhan Karmali, choosing to spend his later years growing and processing tea in Fort Portal. Sadly, the legendary Mzee Amirali Karmali passed away in July 2019, but his vision is stronger than ever today in 2026. Under Alykhan's ongoing leadership, the Mukwano Group has expanded far beyond household products into prime real estate, most notably owning the famous Acacia Mall in Kampala, alongside vast agricultural logistics networks. The family's fortune, once estimated at $700 million back in the early 2000s, has solidified into a multi-billion dollar East African dynasty. From a single shop assistant in 1904 to one of the continent's most powerful business families, the Mukwano story proves that great brands outlive their founders. Which Mukwano product has been a staple in your home over the years? Drop your answers in the replies! Guys, involve your children in your Businesses.
Amon 👷 tweet media
English
6
29
131
11.6K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Samson Kasumba
Samson Kasumba@SamsonMKasumba·
There is absolutely nothing wrong with this girl riding to school. What exactly is wrong with her cycling to school? It would be better for you if she walked? First help those walking to school and they are many. Just get her a brand new cool sports bike. She does not need your Boda Boda. The challenge with men who do not want empowered women. This mentality she should not ride because he is a woman.
English
48
19
180
9.6K
Mandela Nkunda retweetledi
Shaka Fred
Shaka Fred@FredShaka·
Video; This man Hon.@norbertmao is a good and reliable leader, listen to his short advice to the intending couple.
English
15
68
421
24.8K