Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻

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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻

Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻

@watsonila

Just an ordinary village boy from Kashari creating extraordinary tech solutions for BoP Markets. Mpororo prince.

East Africa Katılım Aralık 2010
955 Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler
Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
Andre De Nation
Andre De Nation@AndreDeNation·
He is educating ...
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Gava Charles
Gava Charles@charlesgava_256·
We need to invest more in our universities. We need to invest more in our research visibility. We need to get a couple of young people who are interested in academia (like myself) into these universities. Let's tie it up nicely. We can do something 🤝
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
TV West Nehinda
TV West Nehinda@tvwestUG·
#Agacencwire || IBANDA Omweshongozi w'ebyeshongoro by'ediini y'abakristo, John Kazoora, yaafa #WestUpdates
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
Men of Purpose
Men of Purpose@Men_Of_Purpose·
He literally explained why you must keep going.
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
Ntare School Old Boys Association (NSOBA)
As we gear up for 25th July, get your jacket and tie ready. Order using the numbers on the poster.
Ntare School Old Boys Association (NSOBA) tweet media
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
Edward Agaba
Edward Agaba@EdwardAgaba3·
Dear Lord This is the week I have been telling you about Agaba Edward 4 Guild Amen🙏🏿
Edward Agaba tweet media
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
Government of Uganda
Government of Uganda@GovUganda·
The Government has proposed an enhanced salary structure for arts teachers, with primary school headteachers set to earn UGX 1.5 million, up from UGX 980,000, while deputy headteachers will see their pay rise from UGX 773,000 to UGX 1.3 million, part of ongoing efforts to improve welfare and motivation in the education sector.#OpenGovUg
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
NICHOLAS SENGOBA
NICHOLAS SENGOBA@nsengoba·
The intensity with which young Africans follow European football is baffling. They don't participate in politics, letting corrupt tyrants bring down countries, but are so emotionally attached to teams with which they identify with pirated jerseys. They can commit suicide for them
Daily Monitor@DailyMonitor

.@nsengoba: More than the death of clerics, the ‘inconvenience’ of being at odds with the government is the most existential threat Ugandans and the Church face today bit.ly/4e9qyvx #MonitorUpdates

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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
Aruho B Emmanuel
Aruho B Emmanuel@Aruhoemma1·
Father -Daughter moments!! A lesson to Bahima Dads 🥰 @karugire
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻 retweetledi
Herman Tuhairwe
Herman Tuhairwe@htuhairwe·
Herman Tuhairwe tweet media
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Bunyaate Rutindangyezi Rubogyeka 👨🏿‍💻
What @Allen_Kagina said in the recent video circulating on social media. 😌
Africa Today Media Group@africatodayMG

The last attempt of Idi Amin Dada to return to Africa. In 1989. This was the last time Amin visited Africa. He is seen here in Zaire on a plane that was to send him back after Mobutu’s government rejected his visit and detained him for one week. Amin’s travels began on New Year’s Day, when he appeared unannounced at the airport in Lagos, Nigeria, on a flight from his home in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Using an assumed name and carrying a Zairean passport, Amin swept through the airport in long, pink-flowered robes. He stayed briefly at the Lagos Sheraton, where he waved enthusiastically at Nigerians who recognized him. Then he continued on to nearby Gabon and his apparent final destination, Zaire. It is not clear what Amin hoped to accomplish in Zaire, where he had family and scattered supporters. The French news agency Agence France-Presse, reporting from Kinshasa, the Zairean capital, quoted "reliable sources" as saying there was "no doubt" Amin was hoping to get back to Uganda via Zaire. The two countries share a long, sparsely populated border. An Air Zaire pilot, however, recognized Amin as he got off the plane in Kinshasa. He was consequently arrested and held for more than a week at a military airport in the capital. He was questioned about his passport, which was discovered to have been part of a batch stolen from a Zairean government office several years back. A Zairean official was quoted in Nairobi newspapers as saying that Amin’s presence was a problem. "We cannot allow him in without endangering our relations with our neighbor Uganda, where Idi Amin is still considered an outcast." Diplomats in Kinshasa were quoted as saying that Amin’s presence was "an embarrassment" to Zairean President Mobutu Sese Seko, who once had close links with him. After being held for one week, Zairean officials put Amin on a Zairean government plane and flew him to Senegal, where he was supposed to board a flight back to Saudi Arabia. That night, however, Saudi officials refused to allow Amin on the plane. The authorities gave no explanation, but one source was quoted as saying he lacked the necessary visas. After being stopped in Senegal by officials Thursday, Amin reportedly reboarded the Zairean jet that brought him there and returned to Zaire before being allowed to enter Saudi Arabia again. In Uganda, news of Amin’s travels sparked mild interest but little fear. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said Amin should be brought back to Uganda to face trial. He added that the Ugandan government was in contact with Zaire, and that it was "high time" his country demanded that Saudi Arabia turn Amin over to Ugandan justice. Political observers in Uganda regarded Amin as a spent political force. He was considered much less threatening to the Museveni government than former president Obote, who was in exile in Zambia. Some claimed Obote’s troops carried out abuses that equaled or exceeded those of Amin’s army. This was not the first time Amin had ventured out of exile. In 1980, a year after invading Tanzanian forces chased him out of Uganda, he reportedly made a brief visit to Zaire. In 1985, apparently thinking the time was right for a return to power, Amin left Saudi Arabia for southern Sudan, announcing that he intended to lead guerrilla forces against then-president Milton Obote. Amin never entered Uganda, however, and when he returned to Saudi Arabia, officials there greeted him coolly and stripped him of his VIP status. Amin had lived with some of his family in the port of Jeddah from the time he was toppled. His expenses were catered for by the Saudi government as an act of Islamic charity to a fellow Muslim. He was known in Jeddah for his habit of sitting down for chats at local teahouses.

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Edris Kiggundu
Edris Kiggundu@ekiggundu·
Gen Charles Otema and his wife took a loan from DFCU. When they failed to pay, the bank advertised their properties for sale. They sued the bank, alleging it had 'defamed' them by putting their properties in the newspapers. They lost the case. @BbegMedia l1nq.com/3fvjaix
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Douglas Lwanga
Douglas Lwanga@DouglasLwangaUg·
What courses would you recommend right now at university for a student crossing to campus?
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