Construction of Mbarara’s Shs 20bn new market is completed after more than 5 years

MBARARA – Mbarara Central Market that had stalled for about five years since 2018 has been completed. The contractor, Roko Construction Company officially handed it over to the City Council.

The new market was officially handed over in a function that was presided over by Ettedu JJ Geoffrey, Assistant Commissioner Ministry of Local Government who warned leaders that the market is for vendors and not Mbarara politicians or civic servants.

“Please political leaders and civil servants of the city, let’s not become vendors because the new market facility is for vendors and not anybody who intends to make an attempt at business,” Ettedu said.

Ettedu said the ministry together with the city leadership are harmonizing the registers to ensure a smooth reallocation of vendors without causing any conflict.

“Before registration, we had asked the Municipal Council to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with each of the vendors; that is the basis we want to use to confirm the original vendors,” he explained.

The Assistant Commissioner said the resettlement duty will then be conducted by the constituted allocation committee.

“The allocation committee of vendors is constituted by heads of each section in the market, where the City Town Clerk conducted an election. The results of the election were then forwarded to us and discussed by a team from the Ministry in a meeting chaired by the Commissioner of Urban Administration,” said Ettedu.

Arthur Abirebe, the new City Town Clerk also confirmed that the new city market will be occupied by the vendors and not politicians and civil servants because they can afford to pay rent.

“If you know someone was a vendor in the old market, don’t maliciously block him/her from operating in the new facility. We appeal to the public to do this verification exercise objectively because this is a new market. It should not appear like some people are being victimized,” Abirebe emphasized.

The City Clerk also appealed to vendors to comply with the levies charged for the city to maintain the new face of the modern market structure.

“As officials of this city, we shall levy taxes on vendors to ensure that we maintain this market in good condition. So, when we call upon you to pay your taxes, please cooperate and do it with passion to that we are able to maintain its good ambiance,” he said.

Abirebe also encouraged the contractor to sort out all the defects within the given liability period as per the contract.

“Every function has to work properly including the day care centre that had an oversight. It must be corrected within the given 12 months period.”

The City Mayor, Robert Mugabe Kakyebezi expressed happiness at the achievement recorded during his 2nd term in office, and thanked the contractor and the ministry for delivering the first modern market in Mbarara.

“If there is anybody that is extremely happy, I am the one. The day has finally come, when I as the Mayor, will relocate the vendors to their original market where I had shifted them and I am sure the people of Mbarara will enjoy the beauty of the market,” Kakyebezi said.

However, Nyombi Muhammad, the Chairperson Mbarara Central Market Association advised the city leadership not to rush to allocate the vendors.

“We have spent about five years waiting for the completion of this market so we should not be pressured to occupy the stalls. Let’s take our time and prepare systematically to transit well to our new market space,” Muhammad said.

He also appealed to the city leadership to provide technocrats who should run some of the technological systems within the ministry.

“They installed some equipment such as ICTV cameras, which vendors cannot operate. We request that through council, technical people should be employed to run such services,” said Muhammad.

Mbarara Central Market was contracted to Roko Construction Company in February 2018 at a contract sum of more than Shs 20bn and was supposed to be handed over on 9th October, 2020.

The regional market located along Buremba road is among the presidential initiatives under the Markets and Agriculture Trade Improvement Project (MATIP) funded by USD 84.2M (about 284b) loan sourced from the African Development Bank (ADB) and USD 9.52M (about 32b) contributed by the government to alleviate poverty and improvement of agricultural trade.

The 485-lockup facility will accommodate about 1000 vendors selling food stuffs, salons, restaurants, day care, banks among others.

Several other central and auxiliary markets have been constructed in Busia, Masaka, Kasese, Arua, Soroti, Moroto, Tororo, Kitgum and Lugazi.

https://thecooperator.news/the-3rd-cooperative-strategic-research-on-resilience-launched-cooperators-advised-on-mindset-change/

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Value added pumpkins boost Gulu Farmers savings

GULU – A local farmer group in Unyama sub-county, Gulu district is adding value to pumpkins in a bid to cut out the middle man and earn more money from the fruit.

Opar pi wa Farmers Group located in Loyo-boo village, Unyama sub-county, Gulu district is mainly composed of elderly women and a few men who started adding value to pumpkins during the lockdown in 2021.

Ocaya Latigo, the group’s Chairperson said, “At that time, we had a lot of pumpkins yet weekly markets where we used to sell our products were closed. So, members sat down and decided that we should start processing the pumpkin into flour for porridge and also roasting the seeds for sale as a group. I started this as an individual before other members bought the idea.”

The group adds bananas, maize, soy bean, pumpkin seeds to the pumpkins to make a nutritious yellow porridge flour.

Latigo told theCooperator that raw pumpkins fetch low prices compared to the pumpkin flour.

“Middle men buy raw pumpkins from us at a maximum of Shs 3,000 for a big fruit and resell expensively at markets in the city but they are able to earn Shs 8,000 per kilogram of pumpkin flour,” Latigo said.

Adding value to the pumpkin is the group’s first enterprising activity. On individual basis, they grow indigenous vegetables like egg plants, cow peas and night shade among others.

Akongo Santa, the group’s treasurer says, their first earning from the venture was Shs 120,000 from 10kgs of pumpkin flour.

Akongo said, they hope to earn more from pumpkin flour when they improve production and also access more markets.

Opar pi wa is currently capitalizing on local events like farmer field schools where they exhibit their product.

However, Magdalene Ocwee, a group member says the government should support them with ox-ploughs to ease opening of land and increase production.

“We are unable to grow on a larger scale because we are old and rely on hand hoes. We would wish for the government to support us with oxen so that we can grow pumpkins on large scale and earn more money,” Ocwee said.

In 2021, they grew a half an acre of pumpkins but plan to increase to three acres in 2022.

Challenges

The group’s other needs are a pumpkin slicing machine to reduce slicing time and a solar drier to avoid challenges that come with lack of sunshine during the rainy season.

“Our pumpkins take two days to properly dry under the hot sunshine during the dry season, we don’t know how many days it will take during the rainy season and the effect it could have on the pumpkins,” Latigo said.

He added that they are producing pumpkin flour in small quantities because the grater is slow. In a day, we can only grate two pumpkins yet we could do more if we had a slicing machine.

Opar pi war farmer group is one of several groups supported by Gulu Women Economic Development and Globalization (GWEDG), a Non-Governmental Organization under the Promoting Women Land Rights and Local Seed Bank project.

The 18 months project that ends in December 2022 aims to change the food production and consumption patterns through training and raising awareness about indigenous seeds and crops.

The National Planning Authority in its 2013 report titled, “Scaling Up Value Addition in Agricultural Products” noted that weak value chains have failed to provide incentives to farmers to adapt, improved technologies and pursue more commercial agriculture.

The report further noted that smallholder farmers in particular need to be able to benefit from local-level value addition and be exposed to competition.

https://thecooperator.news/reconstruction-of-tochi-irrigation-scheme-resumes-in-oyam-district/

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Women Boda-boda riders ask government for support to buy own motorcycles

FORT PORTAL – Women boda-boda riders under their umbrella association Fort Portal Women Boda-Boda Riders and Farmers Association have asked the government for support to buy their own motorcycles.

The association’s Chairperson Margret Asiimwe said women have embraced boda-boda business but are constrained by funds to buy their own motorcycles.

Asiimwe said most of these women are single mothers who are trying hard to put food on the table and pay school fees for their children.

“Most of us in this business are single mothers and we are trying our best to ensure that our children survive. I have been in this business for close to 17 years though I haven’t managed to buy my own motorcycle because I have a lot of demands,” she said.

Asiimwe further said, they are 20 members and they were all taught by their fellow women and are still teaching more how to ride a motorcycle.

However, she noted that most of these women don’t ride their own motorcycles but rather hire them and pay daily to the owners.

“We want more women in the business despite the challenges we face. Every job or business has its own challenges, but we try to solve what we can,” she said.

She also said, many boda-boda riders have lost their lives and others lost their motorcycles which are the most challenges affecting their operations.

Sarah Namara, one of the women boda-boda riders said, the business is dominated by men but they were forced to join so that they can make ends meet.

“Having something to do has helped some of us to reduce domestic violence because we are also improving our family’s income. Most of the domestic cases are as a result of poverty in our homes,” said Asiimwe.

She said they are planning on having their own stage in the middle of the city centre to attract more clients as they recruit more women boda-boda riders.

Launching a protection app

Under their association, they have started up a protection app known as WOBODA that will act as their protection tool while doing their business.

The app is meant to protect women boda-boda riders where each will have it on a phone connected to an office computer so that before setting off from the stage it’s updated on the places one is going to, customer taken and mode of payment.

She said the app will consist of one’s profile, places, orders and payments.

“Boda-boda riders face a lot of challenges where many have lost lives yet as women, we are not in position to defend ourselves but we hope this app will help us to trace everyone’s movements thus increasing protection” she said.

She added that the app will also be used to market their produces since most of them practice farming too, especially those who hire motorcycles to earn a side income.

The Fort Portal Woman Member of Parliament Hon. Irene Linda Mugisa appealed to women boda-boda riders not to miss on the Parish Development Model scheme since women are to benefit from over 60% of the funds.

Hon. Linda said, the Parish Development Model is targeting women more than any other category of people and therefore its high time they embraced it.

https://thecooperator.news/mbarara-city-to-host-the-national-meteorological-day-focusing-on-farmer-seasons/

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World Vision invests 1.7 million dollars in the education sector

HOIMA – Hoima Catholic Diocese has signed a five-year Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with World Vision with the aim of promoting education in the diocese.

The MoU was signed by the Bishop of Hoima Catholic Diocese, Rt. Rev Vicente Kirabo and Jeremiah Nyanga, the World Vision Uganda Program Director under a project dubbed Collaboration and Partnering for Greater Impact in the Lives of Children.

The focus of the project is to increase enrolment of learners in primary schools to be able to read and write.

Nyanga in his address said, the organization is partnering with religious and cultural institutions in implementing the project to ensure sustainable education since such institutions have strong roots and are respected.

Nyanga further noted that nationally, World Vision will invest 1.7 million dollars in the education sector for the financial years 2021-2025 with a target of 5 million children.

These funds will be shared by different districts where World Vision operates to support the education sector.

The project will also focus on observing children’s rights by fighting against early marriages, rape, torture and illiteracy among children.

During the implementation of the project, World Vision will offer capacity building for teachers, and teaching and learning aids besides supporting with school management and leadership skills.

“World Vision is a faith-based organization and we partner with the church as a choice and as indispensable partners; we want to put resources and synergy together so that we are able to do more. The kind of investment we are making are both financial and also human resource focused which is our greatest asset,” said Nyanga.

Speaking after the signing of the MoU, the Bishop of Hoima Catholic Diocese, Rt. Rev Vicente Kirabo commended World Vision for the initiative saying, it will help to ensure a holistic education and that it will transform Bunyoro.

The Bishop also noted that the MoU is important because it seeks to address issues affecting children in the diocese.

He expressed concern over the increasing cases of child neglect and abuse especially during the Covid-19 pandemic, adding that there is need for parents, religious leaders, teachers and government leaders to emulate Jesus as an example by loving and protecting the children so that they can live their lives to its fullness.

“I must say, as parent we must love our children, so that we can nature and form them into better citizens, if a teacher loves a child then that teacher will see to it that the child gets a holistic education,” said Bishop Kirabo.

Keneth Happy Mugabe, the World Vision Western region manager said, 23,465 children in Hoima Catholic diocese will benefit from the project.

He also noted that 60% of the population in the region are youth and children whose illiteracy levels are high.

Mugabe further noted that 65% of schools that work with organizations in the region are Catholic founded but the capacity of teachers to teach the children in some schools is lacking and promised that during the implementation of the project, they will look at capacity building of teachers.

Fr. Patrick Mugisa the Diocesan Secretary for Education said, Covid-19, dilapidated school structures and illiteracy are some of the setbacks of the education sector in the diocese, and that such challenges need a combined effort.

https://thecooperator.news/alebtong-district-failed-to-recover-shs-840m-from-youth-projects/

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NARO engages stakeholders to scale up production of bananas in Gulu

GULU – National Agricultural Research Organization (NARO) engaged Gulu district stakeholders in an effort to scale up commercial production of bananas in the district.

During a meeting at Paicho sub-county in Gulu district, Milton Tenywa, a Research Officer at NARO noted that, Acholi and Lango sub-regions consume bananas worth Shs 24 billion annually yet only produce bananas worth Shs 6 billion locally from the two sub-regions.

“We want more farmers to start growing bananas so that they earn that remaining Shs 18 billion and export some to our neighbors in South Sudan,” Tenywa said.

Tenywa also argued that bananas are a good perennial crop for farmers in Acholi sub-region considering that they don’t have any.

“Farmers in Acholi sub-region lack a reliable perennial crop. Every season, farmers must till the land to plant crops,” he said.

NARO established 25 banana demonstration sites in Paicho sub-county in 2020, from which 400 farmers received training on banana growing.

The research organization also generated tissue culture seedlings which it distributed to 86 farmers. The 86 farmers are now each expected to supply free suckers to two farmers in 2022.

“We now need partners to help scale up banana production and tell farmers that they can earn more from farming through bananas,” Tenywa said.

He further added that, “If well maintained, an acre of land can earn a farmer up to Shs 9million annually.”

He said that a similar project implemented in Western, Central and South Western Uganda has seen banana production increase from 5 tons to 30 tons annually in the last five years.

Gulu district Production and Marketing Officer, Jackson Lakor noted that banana production is mainly done on subsistence level and not properly managed because of the belief that the crop cannot do well.

“The few farmers growing bananas lack proper knowledge on how to plant, manage and market the crop. You will find a banana farm having 20-30 plants which produce very small bananas,” he said.

Lakor however said, Gulu district has a huge potential of producing bananas commercially because it has good temperatures and receives adequate rainfall.

“Gulu receives 1500 milliliters of rainfall annually which is adequate for banana production, we also have adequate land,” Lakor said.

The Production Officer noted that there is a need to organize a farmers’ stakeholder platform at parish or sub-county level to make access to inputs and skills easier and cheaper.

“In order to change the mindset that bananas cannot grow well here, we need to establish demonstration sites where farmers can learn from,” he said.

Brigadier General Francis Ongom Achoka, the Operation Wealth Creation (OWC) Coordinator for Acholi and Lango sub-regions said, bananas would be included among the priority crops to be supplied to farmers in 2022.

The five-year project worth Shs 36 billion is funded by USAID through feed the future-a non-governmental organization.

It is also being implemented in Alero sub county in Nwoya district, Amach sub-county in Lira district and Myene sub-county in Oyam district.

Its target is to have more than 8,000 farmers in Acholi and Lango sub-region to embrace commercial banana production in the next three years.

https://thecooperator.news/increased-cotton-prices-excite-farmers-in-acholi/

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France offers Uganda a grant worth Shs 286b for extension water services in Isingiro district

ISINGIRO – The French government has offered Uganda a grant totaling 69M Euros (about Shs 286b) in a bid to extend water services in Isingiro district.

The funding to build a water project in Isingiro district was allocated through the French government’s agency Françoise de Development (AFD).

The money was received by the Uganda Finance Minister, Matia Kasaija and the French Ambassador to Uganda, Stephanie Rivoal and witnessed by the National Water Sewerage Corporation (NWSC) Executive Director, Engineer Silver Mugisha.

According to Mugisha, the funds are intended to construct water supply systems in 15 sub-counties and 8 Town Councils in Isingiro district.

He adds that the funding is a fulfilment of part of the Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) signed in 2019 between France and Uganda to improve water supply in Kampala and South Western Uganda.

Mugisha said that the project when completed, will address the water supply challenges in districts of Isingiro, Mbarara, Masaka and the surrounding areas.

“Congratulations to NWSC, this is a milestone and it should go a long way in addressing water stressed areas in Isingiro district,” says Mugisha.

The French Ambassador in his remarks said, AFD has committed more than 1billion Euros over the last 20 years with 200 Euros committed in 2018 alone in an effort to support Uganda’s sustainable and equitable development in water, sanitation, energy, environment and climate change, as well as strengthening the private sector.

Rivoal added that access to water and good sanitation is a major contribution to human development.

Speaking to Jeremiah Kamurari, the former Chairman Isingiro district, welcomed the project stressing that the district had never received any piped water in the area.

“All the other districts in Western Uganda have some water supplies either from national water or gravity but it has been only Isingiro where there is no single water supply scheme in the district,” Kamurari explained.

He is however worried that if the project is not monitored well, the money will be stolen by unscrupulous civil servants in the country.

“We have big worries always accompanied by bigger projects like this one. So, we expect that if there is no involvement of IGG, DPP and other related institutions, we are likely to have half of the money for the project swindled,” Kamurari emphasized.

He therefore appealed to the Inspector General of Government (IGG) to be part of the supervision such that, there is effective supervision to guarantee that the money will be put to proper use because of the rate of corruption that has ruined the country.

“Our call goes to the National Water and Sewerage Cooperation and Ministry of Water to ensure that there is constant supervision and monitoring to ensure that the money is put to its intended use. Even the local leaders in the area should be vigilant to ensure that this money is not squandered,” said Kamurari

According to Aaron Turahi, the current Chairman Isingiro district, the water project was contracted last month to BRL Ingeniere Company.

He appealed to the contractor to employ the locals so that they can also benefit from the project.

“We agreed that 70% should be our locals from Isingiro district who should be employed in non-technical works,” Turahi said.

https://thecooperator.news/cooperators-raise-alarm-over-bundibugyo-water-crisis/

He says the water project in the district is a fulfilment of the presidential pledge while he was last campaigning in Isingiro.

“This does not just come to us but it was the president who promised water to the people of Isingiro. And it will basically be used for irrigation, production and animal feeding where we shall no longer register death of people’s animals because of drought as you have always seen during the dry spell,” LC V Boss explained.

My role is to welcome each and every project that is coming in the district and to see that there must be a sustainability of that project, added Turahi.

He also encouraged proper monitoring for quality water project in the district.

“As a district we are involved and we shall ensure that the project is done successfully because we are the overall supervisors and monitors of the project in the district. And whoever comes here to do shoddy work, we shall deal with him because we are already served with bills of quantities,” Turahi said.

The water project in Isingiro will be implemented in line with Uganda’s vision 2040 which highlights access to clean piped water for all and the National Development Plan.

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