Police fired used teargas and live bullets to disperse motorcyclists who had staged protests in Jinja over the skyrocketing fuel prices.
The motorcyclists staged protests within different trading centres along the Jinja-Kamuli highway, where they placed and lit logs and old car tyres in the middle of the roads. The protests were largely held in the trading centers of Mafubira, Namulesa, Wakitaka, Nakabango, Nsuube, Muguluka and Buwenge.
The protestors also attacked their colleagues who had failed to join the protest forcing a number of them to abandon the main road for feeder roads. They also pelted stones at police officers who had been called in to quell the protests.
Fuel prices have skyrocketed in recent months hitting a record high Shs 6,300 for a litre of petrol and Shs 6,200 for a litre of diesel at pump stations in major towns across the country. This is almost double, the cost of the same fuel product over the last one year.
Alimansi Mugerwa, a motorcyclist operating in the area faults legislators for failing to address the issue affecting their electorate. Another motorcyclist Joseph Mukose says that many of them cannot earn enough to support their families with the current cost of fuel.
“The cost of fuel in Uganda is the highest within the East African Community, but with this price discrepancy still, our area MPs have neither come out to educate us on this abnormally, neither do they use the parliamentary platform to agitate for us on the same,” he says.
While addressing journalists on the same, the Kiira regional police spokesperson, James Mubi said that intelligence reports implicate a section of individuals employing motorcyclists to fuel the protest over unknown gains.
Mubi stresses that footage retrieved from their highway CCTV cameras showcases a numberless saloon car, which was making stopovers at different points along the Jinja-Kamuli highway and issuing whistles, vuvuzelas, and old tyres, among other unidentified items to random motorcyclists with the aim of aiding the protest.
"We completely disagree with our brothers who are in the boda boda industry who blocked the road using stones and bricks and some of them were even demanding money from people who are travelling. So as police we had to step in restore sanity. However we're not stopping at that because intelligence indicates that there is a section of people who are fueling all this," said Mubi. - URN/The Observer
The characteristic of great innovators and great companies is they see a space that others do not. They don’t just listen to what people tell them; they actually invent something new, something that you didn’t know you needed, but the moment you see it, you say, ‘I must have it.
Innovation is about turning a vision into new products or services. This definition clearly depicts what Norah Magero has achieved in her career and how her unique inventions have impacted people’s lives positively.
She made history in the UK by being the second woman and the first Kenyan to be awarded the Africa Prize by the Royal Academy of Engineering.
Alessandra Buonfino, the judge for the Africa Prize, stated during a virtual ceremony that Magero’s invention, VacciBox, demonstrated the continent’s capacity for medical innovation.
We’re delighted to award VacciBox the Africa Prize. The potential impact of improving the cold chain delivery of medicine – especially vaccines – to rural areas is immense.”
“Norah truly represents the idea that one innovator can change an entire community. We look forward to watching her and her team scale this innovation to reach even more people,” Buonfino stated.
Magero won Ksh3.6 million (£25,000), which will enable the idea to reach more people throughout Africa. In order to safely store and carry medications, such as vaccines, for use in field vaccinations and distant clinics, VacciBox is a compact, portable, solar-powered fridge.
Magero expressed her gratitude for the honor and mentioned that the idea was created to help doctors practicing in underdeveloped areas.
“VacciBox was designed with our local challenges in mind. It’s versatile, reliable, and localized. We’re ensuring that it works the way healthcare workers need it to work for the conditions they face each day so that they can save lives without worrying about technology,” she stated.
The award, which began in 2014, is the continent’s biggest prize in the engineering field that seeks to recognise the inventions by men and women in the industry.
How did she come up with the unique innovation?
In a recent interview with The Optimist, a UK Publication, Magero says that she didn’t set out to use her appliances to help people get jabbed. She says her “lightbulb” idea came when she was approached by Kenyan farmers to find ways to keep their milk from turning sour during transit.
After the coronavirus pandemic struck and vaccines became available in Kenya, the team realized that the cool box solved two problems in one: Not only could it store vaccines and keep them cool, it was small enough to be portable, and so could be used to transport vaccine vials to the most remote outposts while keeping them at the right temperature.
The concept was then brought to life with the help of investors including RES4Africa Foundation and Startup Energy.
Magero has vast experience in the design and management of off-grid energy utilities. According to her LinkedIn profile, she is passionate about energy access in Africa and gender issues.
She has received other honors including a Booking.Com Technology Playmaker Award 2020 finalist and Women in Energy East Africa Community, Philanthropy Award winner 2017. She is also an alumnus of the Young African Leaders Initiative, YALI, and the Micro-Grid Academy.
Key takeaways
Find your purpose and stick to it. Norah had a clear vision when she created Vaccibox, she was passionate about making sure that healthcare was accessible. You too can be able to discover what your dreams and passions are.
Is it that online business? Is it that career in Project management? Whatever it is, go for it! Don’t give up!
L-R: Maj. Gen. Willy Rwagasana, Maj. Gen. Vincent Nyakarundi, and Maj. Gen. Ruki Karusisi.
President Paul Kagame, who is also the Rwanda Defence Force’s (RDF) Commander-in-Chief, on Monday promoted in ranks four senior military officers.
According to a communique from the military, Brigadier Generals Vincent Nyakarundi, Willy Rwagasana and Ruki Karusisi were promoted to the rank of Major General.
Nyakarundi is the head of defence intelligence while Rwagasana is the commandant of the Republican Guard. Karusisi is the Commandant of RDF Special Operations Force. They all retained their postings.
Nyakarundi, who was Rwanda’s first-ever military attaché to the United Nations (UN) in New York back in 2009, was promoted to Brig General in January 2018. The January 2018 promotion also saw Rwagasana elevated to Brigadier General.
Karusisi, a former Head of Operations in the Republican Guard, was promoted to Brigadier General in July, 2020. In other promotions, Colonel Ronald Rwivanga, the Spokesperson of the Rwanda Defence Force, was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General. Rwivanga had been promoted to rank of colonel on June 18, 2021. By
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