Amasha

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Amasha

Amasha

@t3994764

Katılım Kasım 2025
67 Takip Edilen21 Takipçiler
Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@Bravejonathano2 History. Colonialism silently is still here, now in our DNA. Leadership, business.Partly explains why Africa is confused. The Colonialist singled out northerners as strong, recruited them in the army. Baganda and others, chiefs leaders. When they retire frompl polic, guard homes
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Brave
Brave@Bravejonathano2·
Why is this job usually done by people from the north?
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@SuunaKing_James Congratulations. It takes courage, honesty, TRUST, accountability.Its just a different kind of consciousness. We have people like Nabbanja, Oboth both and others who stole mabat meant for poor karimojongs,were appointed back to very powerful public offices. Promoting endemic corr
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Shaka Fred
Shaka Fred@FredShaka·
QN; Which sectors does the NRM government need to improve in order to win more trust from Ugandans?
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@ntvuganda Mbale industrial park was built in a huge wetland that filtered all the water on its way to Tirinyi, lake Victoria to the Nile all the way to Egypt. Industrial park is polluting the water with chemicals and raw feaces because they don't have a sewage system. Otafiire will be will
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NTV UGANDA
NTV UGANDA@ntvuganda·
The Minister of Water and Environment, Maj. Gen. Kahinda Otafiire has called for tougher action against wetland degradation, warning that environmental destruction threatens the survival of future generations #NTVNews tinyurl.com/bdz2j5tc
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Gloria Bae
Gloria Bae@gloriabae01·
Define He: Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu In three words>
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@mbales_finest Smililing is good, helps reduce obesity,heart disease.
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Hon Mwesigye Frank
Hon Mwesigye Frank@MwesigyeFranks·
We made it! At Namirembe Hill, in the historic St. Paul’s Cathedral, and in the presence of Archbishop Stephen Samuel Kaziimba Mugalu, I proudly said “I do” to the love of my life. We thank God for His grace and faithfulness in enabling us to fulfill this beautiful promise and begin this new chapter together as husband and wife. Our sincere appreciation goes to the Archbishop, the Church, and everyone who made it to the wedding ceremony on time. Your presence, prayers, and support mean so much to us. Now, let the celebrations continue! We look forward to seeing you at 2:00 PM for the reception at Kigo. Thank you all, and God bless you abundantly.
Hon Mwesigye Frank tweet mediaHon Mwesigye Frank tweet mediaHon Mwesigye Frank tweet mediaHon Mwesigye Frank tweet media
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@PeaceMbaba60607 Yes and No.If you position yourself strategically like Bobi, Senyonyi and others, Man, you are in business. But,imagine FOOT SOLDIERS, enchancha, enfufu, chikomando,nsula kumpi nomwala and you think afte Bobi takes government I will be rich, Wapi
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Hon Nsereko
Hon Nsereko@PeaceMbaba60607·
I will forever preach the gospel to you that supporting opposition is making yourself very poo'r
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@Wassajja_Aiden @otafiire_k So sad if proven true. I think what I learn from this is I need to hold on TRUST at all times. We are tested moment by moment, but are you honest with yourself and say-This woman is beautiful, BUT she's married. Women, girls all of lets practice, homesty, TRUST. Bugingo said if
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AIDEN OFFICAL
AIDEN OFFICAL@Wassajja_Aiden·
𝐉𝐮𝐬𝐭𝐢𝐜𝐞 𝐟𝐨𝐫 𝐍𝐢𝐱𝐨𝐧 𝐓𝐮𝐬𝐢𝐢𝐦𝐞 𝐚𝐧𝐝 𝐇𝐢𝐬 𝐅𝐚𝐦𝐢𝐥𝐲 The lady in the picture with Gen @otafiire_k is known as Loyce (also called Loice Natukunda) was legally and officially married to Nixon Tusiime in a recognized marriage. They had one child together. While Loyce was trying to sell and market Congolese oversized shirts for big-bodied men, she approached a client General Kahinda Otafiire. What started as a business visit turned into something else. General Otafiire allegedly took her by force, in the same manner he has been accused of grabbing people’s land over the years. To this day, Loyce remains with General Otafiire, and he also allegedly took their child by force, separating the child from the biological father, Nixon Tusiime. This is a cry for justice. Families are being destroyed, marriages broken, and children taken away by those in positions of power. We demand fairness, accountability, and the return of the child to his rightful father. Banage, what can’t Otafire grab?
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@prime_rakon I want to hear more.May be they are unregistered immigrants, may be criminals, may be. Thank you for sharing.
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Prime Rakon
Prime Rakon@prime_rakon·
BREAKING: Ireland deports 42 South Africans on charter flight #PrimeRakon
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ᗪᖇ. ᒪᗩᗯᖇEᑎᑕE ᗰᑌGᗩᑎGᗩ
The time to pay attention to AI is now. As we look ahead, one thing is becoming increasingly clear: a child who grows up without exposure to technology, especially emerging technologies like AI, could face a much tougher future than we can imagine today. I am not claiming to know everything, but the signs are right in front of us. We can all see that things are changing. AI is already transforming the way people work, learn, and solve problems. In a few years, that change will be even bigger. That is why I encourage parents to help their children learn at least one AI-related skill. One of the most valuable is prompt engineering, which simply means learning how to communicate with AI and get it to produce the results you need. The future will not belong to people who fear technology. It will belong to those who learn how to use it. #UBCGMUEXTRA @ubctvuganda
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@M_Kananura Great. Thank you for all you do to keep US all safe. Thank for the updates. Asante sana.
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SP kananura Michael
SP kananura Michael@M_Kananura·
In addition to the ongoing operations aimed at improving road safety on our roads, the Directorate of Traffic and Road Safety is engaging road users and key stakeholders through road safety sensitization campaigns. An engagement held on yesterday on the 18th June 2026 at Court Lane Hotel Masaka, bringing together representatives from the @PoliceUg , local government, transport industry, religious institutions, education sector, business community, civil society organizations, health sector, road contractors & the media. This intends to promote behavioural change among road users and emphasize individual responsibility in ensuring road safety and targets regions that were most affected by road crashes, as highlighted in the 2025 Annual Crime Report. The campaign, led by the Ag. SCP Traffic and Road Safety commenced in the Masaka Region and have now moved to KMP South, which recorded the highest number of road crash fatalities in the country. We hope these engagements will have a positive impact on road user behaviour and contribute significantly to reducing crashes on our roads. Together we can make a difference! #RoadSafetyFirst #EveryRoadUserCounts #TogetherForSaferRoads
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Justine Nameere Nsubuga
Justine Nameere Nsubuga@JustineNameere·
Katonda wa Nameere mukwambwemu! The God that fights for Nameere is tough! And on the sidelines karma loves to be my volunteer🤷‍♀️🤣😂😂
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@rwenzori_ It's because its silently done. Many women tell men, I love you, can we date. My mother told me ,wait until a woman tells you that I love you. It has worked for me. Just position yourself, I mean kwetega. The serious one will tell you, naye musajja gwe muntu nebwakolaki tolaba
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Amon 👷
Amon 👷@rwenzori_·
Hon. Miria Matembe is advocating for women to be allowed to approach men and propose marriage 😂 "A woman is historically not permitted to go and tell a man, "I want you to marry me." And that is a norm I also want to fight against or break, so that we can do it. A woman should also be able to approach a man she likes and tell him, "You know... I feel I love you, and perhaps we can build a home together." Why is it frowned upon? Now you insult women claiming that single mothers have increased. Yet, here I am sitting, growing old waiting for someone to marry me. What should I do then? Should I remain without wanting to have a child? I don't have the permission to approach a man and tell him, "I am here and I love you." And men... I really pity men. A man, if a woman gets up, goes and tells him, "You know, I love you," he runs away at top speed! They lie to us that they are strong, but I don't see it. He runs at high speed and leaves you there as if he has encountered a wild animal. Wondering, "How can a woman come to tell me such a thing!" But why shouldn't I tell you if I love you? You are moving into the digital age, you are embracing social media, things have changed."
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@ApolloBuregyeya We need to continue with this conversation,create a think tank .What do you think?
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Buregyeya Apollo, PhD
Buregyeya Apollo, PhD@ApolloBuregyeya·
The real reason industry is disconnected from education. ======= Every few years, we discover a new culprit for unemployment, weak industrialisation, and low innovation. Sometimes it is the curriculum. Sometimes it is the universities. Sometimes it is lecturers who publish too much and supposedly solve too few problems. The latest fashion is to argue that education must become more practical, more innovative, and more competence-based. While well-intentioned, I believe this diagnosis misses the real problem. The disconnect between education and industry is actually a disconnect between nation planning and nation building. A university does not exist in isolation. It is part of a larger economic system. The skills demanded by graduates are determined not by what universities teach but by what the economy rewards. If an economy primarily imports, distributes and consumes products, it will naturally create demand for traders, distributors, salespeople and manual labour. If an economy designs, manufactures, improves and exports products, it will create demand for engineers, scientists, researchers, technologists and innovators. In other words, the sophistication of skills demanded by an economy is determined by the sophistication of its commerce. This is why I find it strange when we place the burden of industrialisation on universities alone. Every year, governments prepare national budgets worth trillions. Yet how often are those budgets informed by research agendas developed jointly with universities? How many national programmes are translated into funded research questions and communicated to academia? How many government projects deliberately require local technology development, local standards development, or local intellectual property creation? Very few. As a result, government plans in one direction, universities research in another direction, and industry operates in a third direction. We then complain that education is disconnected from industry. The truth is that the disconnect began much earlier. Consider something as simple as an MRI scanner installed in a national referral hospital that requires internet WiFi to function. Most people see a machine that helps diagnose patients. What they do not see is the knowledge system behind that machine. Every scan generated contributes valuable information about disease patterns, equipment performance, software effectiveness and clinical outcomes. Who learns most from that information? Too often, it is not the country using the machine. The manufacturer of the internet enabled MRI machine and its research ecosystem are usually better positioned to collect, analyse and transform that information into improved technologies. Researchers linked to those firms use the data to refine algorithms, improve hardware, develop new applications and create the next generation of products. We provide the data. They develop the technology. We purchase the next machine. They strengthen the next industry. This is not merely a technology gap. It is a sovereignty gap. When people hear the word sovereignty, they often think about flags, borders and armies. Yet modern nations also require sovereignty in knowledge, technology, standards and institutions. Without knowledge sovereignty, others understand our realities better than we do. Without technology sovereignty, others transform our realities into products before we can. Without standards sovereignty, others define quality and compliance for our industries. Without institutional sovereignty, others shape the rules under which we participate in the global economy. This is where the debate about competence-based education becomes problematic. The reform assumes that the primary problem is the nature of the skills being produced. But what if the larger problem is that the economy itself has insufficient demand for advanced skills? No curriculum can create industrial demand. No examination system can build factories. No lecturer can create a national innovation ecosystem alone. A country that mainly rewards importing over manufacturing will not become innovative simply because its students complete more practical assignments. A country that spends little on technology development will not become technologically sovereign because its curriculum contains entrepreneurship modules. The challenge is much bigger. We must begin connecting national planning to research, research to industry, industry to procurement, and procurement to technological capability. National programmes should come with clearly defined research agendas. Research funding should be linked to strategic sectors. Public procurement should deliberately create opportunities for local innovation. Universities should be treated not merely as training institutions but as strategic national assets in the creation of knowledge and technology. Only then will education and industry naturally converge. Until then, we risk endlessly reforming the curriculum while leaving untouched the deeper question of who produces knowledge, who controls technology, who sets standards, who builds institutions, and ultimately, who exercises economic power. The problem is not our universities. The problem is that our education, industry and national plans are not pulling in the same direction. This is the deeper argument I make in my forthcoming book, The Five Levels of Economic Power: that nations do not rise by owning resources alone. They rise when they control production, technology, markets, standards and institutions.
Buregyeya Apollo, PhD tweet media
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@DailyMonitor In industrial park Mbale also known as Sino, a person is paid six thousand shillings(6,000 shs) for over 8hrs of work, working under violent chinese. Most companies are tax free. We are slaves in our own country. Labour export is the way to go. Kadama earns 1,200,000 per month .A
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Amasha
Amasha@t3994764·
@mkainerugaba I think at this point we declare a one party state. Let's be honest. We can do better. Democracy is not working. What do you think?
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Muhoozi Kainerugaba
Muhoozi Kainerugaba@mkainerugaba·
My arrest of Lukwago is just the beginning of the 'Rectification Campaign' in Uganda. The lists are long. Many more traitors are going to be arrested too. Uganda will be purified.
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Muhoozi Kainerugaba
Muhoozi Kainerugaba@mkainerugaba·
I'm glad to announce that I will visit Afande Kagame and my relatives in Rwanda soon.
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