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Uganda Cranes head coach Milutin ‘Micho’ Sredojevic has said that the 2023 TotalEnergies Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON) qualifiers will be competitive because there are no more small teams in the continent.

Sredojevic who guided Uganda to return to the AFCON (2017) after 39 years of waiting says Group F where Uganda is placed will equally be very competitive.

In the draw conducted on Tuesday, Uganda was placed in Group F alongside 2019 AFCON champions and reigning FIFA Arab Cup champions Algeria, Niger and Tanzania.

Uganda Cranes

“Someone would look at Algeria as group favorites but in modern football there are no small teams because gaps in African football have been reduced,” stated Sredojevic.

“We are facing teams with different approaches including two Francophone countries in Algeria and Niger then CECAFA opponent in Tanzania. Algeria have had disappointments recently not making it out of the group stage at the last Africa Cup of Nations and conceding a late goal to miss out on qualifying for the World Cup. So these Qualifiers will be a chance to redeem themselves,” reasoned Sredojevic.

He said even looking at the other groups it will not be that easy, but competitive because there is no team to write-off.

The experienced coach who has been in the African continent since 2001 made it clear that he believes Uganda have a chance to return to the big stage of the AFCON.

“I’m calling upon every stakeholder, all the technical people and all of us in FUFA to have a good organization and detailed strategic plan on how we shall approach these games. I’m also calling upon the players who are the producers of results that this is the chance to show that you have what it takes to go back to the Africa Cup of Nations,” he added.

Uganda returned to the AFCON in 2017 in Gabon after 39 years of waiting before they made it again in AFCON 2019 in Egypt where they reached the last 16 losing 1-0 to Senegal.  Source: CAF

Kenyan climate and environment activist Elizabeth Wathuti, 26, shaking hands with His Holiness the Dalai Lama in  Dharamshala, India, on April 22, 2022. 

Pool/Photo Courtesy Daily Nation

Kenya’s 26-year-old climate and environmental activist Elizabeth Wathuti on Friday met His Holiness the Dalai Lama as the world commemorated this year’s Earth Day, an annual event held in more than 193 countries on April 22 to demonstrate support for environmental protection. 

Ms Wathuti, who is on a visit to Dharamshala, a city in the Indian state of Himachal Pradesh on the edge of the Himalayas and home to the Dalai Lama, is the founder of the Green Generation Initiative, a non-profit youth led organisation that aims at creating a generation of environmentally conscious individuals by educating and empowering children and communities to love nature.

The initiative runs programmes focused on tree growing in bid to help communities implement nature-based solutions to the climate crisis while simultaneously addressing food insecurity.

“Today I had the great honour of meeting His Holiness the Dalai Lama. I asked @DalaiLama how we can appeal to world leaders to open their hearts, feel the suffering of frontline communities and act urgently to save lives from the worsening impacts of the climate crisis,” she said in a tweet.

 

On Thursday the climate activist opened the Dialogue for Our Future: A Call to Climate Action conference organized by Dialogue for Our Future, a global platform which aims at calling on leaders to work together and save the earth from runaway climate change in which she shone a spotlight on the devastating climate-driven drought in the Horn of Africa and other climate impacts currently affecting countries across the African continent – saying that compassion and collective action must lead the fight against the climate crisis.

“I was invited to give a keynote address at the Dialogue for Our Future and then have a private audience with the Dalai Lama with   other delegates from the conference,” Ms Wathuti told the Nation in an exclusive interview. 

The climate activist who is inspired by the late Professor Wangari Maathai while planting trees with local children in the Asian country reminded that no one is too small to make a difference. 

“Stockholm +50 spans two of my lifetimes. It should be a moment to reflect honestly on what has been achieved for all those years. We have an opportunity to stop sidelining and subsidizing the destruction of nature. We also need to put in place policies that protect and restore nature.

 I look forward to an outcome that puts an urgent focus on the protection and restoration of our natural systems. An outcome that will not threaten our own survival and commit a gross injustice against future generations who will inherit the mess we leave behind,” she told the Nation.

Multilateral environmental action

 “Stockholm+50: a healthy planet for the prosperity of all – our responsibility, our opportunity” (Stockholm+50) will take place five decades after the 1972 United Nations Conference on the Human Environment.

The event will provide leaders with an opportunity to draw on 50 years of multilateral environmental action to achieve the bold and urgent action needed to secure a better future on a healthy planet,” the United Nations explains on its official website while announcing that the main event will take place between June second and third this year though other related side events will officially commence on 31st May 2022.

“When we talk about urgent action, we are talking about the present needs of the most impacted. People need food, water, shelter and a livable planet. But that is threatened by rising climate impacts such as droughts, and extreme floods. 

The current drought across East Africa for instance will push approximately 25 million people into extreme hunger by July.

In addition to stopping investments in fossil fuels, we also need real and tangible solutions that protect and restore nature.

Wealthier nations that have contributed the most to historical emissions must also honor their climate finance pledges to support developing countries,” Ms Wathuti urged. By Leon Lidigu, Daily Nation

 

Elderly persons line up to get SAGE money at Midigo Town Council headquarters in Yumbe District on April 20, 2022. PHOTO/ROBERT ELEMA/Photo Courtesy

 

What you need to know:

  • The elderly persons in Yumbe say the prices of commodities have been increasing and the Shs25,000 is nolonger enough to sustain them.

Elderly persons benefiting from the Social Assistance Grant for Empowerment (SAGE) programme in Yumbe District have petitioned government to increase the money given to them from the Shs25,000 to Shs100,000 to cater for the increasing cost of living. 

Speaking during the visit of the State Minister for the Elderly Affairs, Mr Mafaabi Gidudu, in Midigo Town Council on Wednesday, Mr Ahumed Aliga Ujhoku, the chairperson for the elderly in the district, said: “We are experiencing high prices of commodities in the country. The Shs25,000 can’t do anything tangible in this season where prices of all the commodities have gone very high.”
 
Mr Mursali Adronga, a beneficiary of the programme, said money has lost its value.
 

“I have been using the SAGE money to pay school fees for my children but prices of commodities have gone high. Schools have also hiked school fees. We request the government to increase the money to at least Shs50,000 or Shs100,000 per month,’’ he said.

Ms Neisha Drabo, another beneficiary, said: “Through this money, I have bought some animals and I use part of it to buy things like sugar, soap, food items and medication since I don’t have any other means of earning money. If it is increased, this will make our lives better.”


The district chairperson, Mr Abdulmutwalib Asiku, said about 7,000 elders have benefited from the programme in the district in the last nine years now. 
He said Shs18 billion has been injected into this programme and the money has improved the livelihood of the elders in the district to some extent.

“Since this money is paid after every three months, there is need for the elders to plan to not only use the money for consumptive expenditure but also to see what specific investments they can put up,” he said.


Ms Catherine Mavenjina, the Member of Parliament representing Elders in Northern Region, said they have formulated a Bill appealing to government to reduce the SAGE beneficiary age from 80 years and increase the amount of money for the elders.


“In northern Uganda, many people die before reaching the age of 80 years, so for that matter, we are saying the age be reduced to at least 70 years. We also want the money to be increased from Shs25,000 to either Shs 100,000 or Shs50, 000.” By Robert Elema, Daily Monitor

 

The editor-in-chief of South Sudan’s oldest English-language newspaper, the Juba Monitor, has been arrested for allegedly defying a court order to stop publication over alleged malpractice.

Anna Namiriano was arrested Tuesday afternoon after not acting on an order issued last week by Juba’s Kator High Court to shut down the paper. She reportedly was being held at Juba’s central prison.

The case involves a dispute between the newspaper’s management and the family of its late founder, veteran journalist Alfred Taban, who died in April 2019. Taban’s family had filed a lawsuit in 2020 against the independent newspaper’s managers and its publisher, Grand Media Africa, accusing them of mismanaging the paper’s ownership and resources.

The family has sought restrictions on the newspaper’s activities until the case is resolved.

Last week, the Kator High Court suspended the Juba Monitor’s activities, said Becu Pitia Lagu, an attorney representing the Taban family.

“Anna deliberately refused to implement the court ruling which was passed on the date 13th of this month asking her to close down the newspapers, cease the activities of the company,” Pitia told VOA’s South Sudan in Focus.

Lazarus Yuggu, an attorney representing Namiriano, said the court never informed his client or the publisher of the shutdown order. He called his client’s arrest illegal.

“There is no reason why the judge issued that order,” Yuggu told VOA’s South Sudan in Focus. “There is no court contempt at all, because all of us were present at the court. I think this company is not actually a foreign company, whereby a judge may suspect [someone] of absconding or running away from the jurisdiction or something of that kind. The parties are present before the judge.”

Yuggu said the paper’s management had already paid printing fees for a week in advance, so they continued publishing. “They just wanted to print for the one week that has been paid for,” the attorney said.

Namiriano plans to appeal the court orderYuggu said.

The Juba Monitor was established in Juba roughly a decade ago after Southern Sudan seceded from the rest of Sudan. - Viola Elias, Voice of America

 
 

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