No image available
/ 23 February 2005
Rebels of Uganda’s rebel group calling themselves the Lord’s Resistance Army killed three people at a displaced persons’ camp on the eve of the expiry of a unilateral government ceasefire, officials said on Tuesday. The rebels also seriously injured two people and abducted another in the attack on Monday.
No image available
/ 22 February 2005
Peace talks between Ugandan authorities and the rebel Lord’s Resistance Army will go on beyond the end this week of a unilateral government ceasefire, officials said on Tuesday. However, as the talks continue, Kampala will press ahead with military operations against the rebels, whose ranks the government maintains have been decimated.
No image available
/ 18 February 2005
Ugandan authorities have banned the internationally acclaimed women’s rights play The Vagina Monologues as an affront to public morality and threatened to arrest organisers if they follow through on plans to stage benefit performances. Information Minister Nsaba Buturo said the play has been deemed offensive and vulgar.
No image available
/ 17 February 2005
Fifty-two hippos have died of anthrax in a western Ugandan game park since the beginning of the year. The disease killed 250 in the same park in the second half of 2004, Deputy Tourism Minister Jovino Akaki Ayumu said on Thursday. Anthrax struck the park bordering the Democratic Republic of Congo last July.
No image available
/ 16 February 2005
The Ugandan government is certain of military success against the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) should the rebel group prove to be less serious about dialogue. ”Just in case they are not that serious, the UPDF [Uganda People’s Defence Force] will continue its offensive,” the minister told Parliament in a statement on Monday evening.
No image available
/ 4 February 2005
The Ugandan government said on Thursday that it has decided to halt its military operations against Lord’s Resistance Army rebels for 18 days on condition that they confine themselves to a designated area in the north as efforts to revive peace talks continue. The truce will take effect on Friday morning.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
Anthrax has killed nearly 20 hippos in a sprawling reserve in southwest Uganda in the past two weeks amid fears of a new outbreak of the deadly disease, which claimed the lives of at least 200 of the animals last year. Anthrax occurs when animals eat remnants of vegetation in the dry months of September and October, absorbing bacterial spores that can live for decades in dry soil.
No image available
/ 26 January 2005
A prolonged drought in Rwanda and Tanzania has significantly lowered water levels on Lake Victoria, affecting hydropower generation in Uganda, the Ugandan minister of energy said on Tuesday. As a result, Energy Minister Syda Bumba said, load shedding had been increased across the country.
No image available
/ 26 January 2005
The Luzira cocoa processing plant is unusual. In the only operation of its kind in the vast region, the workers at this site are harnessing the power of the sun to dry cocoa for export. Cocoa is a major earner of foreign exchange in Uganda, fetching  500 to  700 (R9 000 to R10 200) a tonne — three times what Uganda gets for coffee, its main export crop.
No image available
/ 17 January 2005
South African Deputy President Jacob Zuma was due to arrive in Uganda late on Monday for talks with officials on Burundi’s fragile peace process, Uganda’s foreign ministry said. Among others, Zuma, the chief mediator in the process, is to meet with Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, who now serves as chairperson of a regional peace initiative for Burundi.
No image available
/ 15 January 2005
Up to 7 000 Congolese, mostly women and children, have crossed the border into western Uganda to flee fighting in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo region of Ituri in the past four days, officials and aid workers said on Friday. Aid workers are investigating whether another 10 000 Congolese crossed the border on Thursday.
No image available
/ 15 December 2004
New measures aimed at preventing the dumping of low-quality condoms in Uganda have resulted in shortages across the country. "After getting a batch of Engabu brand condoms recently with a bad smell, the process of allowing into the country consignments was lengthened," said Elizabeth Madra, National Aids Programme manager.
No image available
/ 8 December 2004
The current efforts to resolve the 18-year conflict in northern Uganda is "a historic opportunity to end the country’s humanitarian emergency", according to the United Nations emergency relief coordinator and under-secretary general for humanitarian affairs, Jan Egeland.
No image available
/ 1 December 2004
The Ugandan army said on Wednesday that it had deployed an unspecified number of troops along its border with the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to prevent incursions by ”negative elements” based there. Referring to Ugandan rebels in DRC, army spokesperson Major Shaban Bantariza said: ”They are not a great threat but we are following them and picking up some of them one by one.”
No image available
/ 27 November 2004
Rwanda and Uganda have expelled junior diplomats accredited to each others capitals, it was confirmed Friday. The move was started by Uganda when Kampala accused an administrative attache at the Rwanda embassy of being involved in the activities of a dissident organisation, government officials said.
No image available
/ 17 November 2004
A promotions van drives by, its four loud speakers blaring news of a concert that is scheduled to take place over the weekend. At taxi ranks, hundreds of vehicles assemble to load passengers who are called to get on board. In the noisy St Balikudembe, Uganda’s biggest market, almost every vendor asks passersby in a sing-song voice to take something off the shelf. A car alarm goes off, then a second, and a third. Heard enough? Wait — there’s more…
No image available
/ 15 November 2004
Uganda is ready to ask the International Criminal Court (ICC) to abandon its investigation in the war-ravaged north of the country if rebels there show a credible commitment to peace. The announcement came a day after President Yoweri Museveni declared a week-long halt to military operations against Lord’s Resistance Army rebels.
No image available
/ 2 November 2004
The Ugandan army and police have arrested a Roman Catholic cleric they accuse of collaborating with Lord’s Resistance Army rebels, church sources said on Tuesday. Army spokesperson Major Shaban Bantariza confirmed the arrest, but declined to comment further.
No image available
/ 28 October 2004
A cholera outbreak has killed two people and affected about 50 others in the largest camp for people who fled their homes to escape an 18-year insurgency in northern Uganda, the United Nations said on Thursday. UN investigations have shown that all household domestic water pots are contaminated with faeces.
No image available
/ 26 October 2004
Lake Victoria has long been a name to conjure with. The world’s second-largest fresh water lake, it stretches out endlessly — rippled by the breeze that characteristically blows over the lake. Up to 30 million people live along Victoria’s 3Â 500-kilometre shoreline, which is shared by Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. But alarm bells are being sounded about the effect their activities are having on the lake.
No image available
/ 22 October 2004
Two people were killed and five injured when a commercial building under construction in a south-eastern suburb of Kampala collapsed, crushing the building-site workers, police officials said on Friday. ”The building went down as the workers were pouring the concrete mix on the third floor,” the Kampala chief fire officer said.
No image available
/ 13 October 2004
Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni has said he doubted the United States’s strategies in Iraq, but he supported the war that ousted Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein blindly, Ugandan Information Minister Nsaba Buturo said on Wednesday. Buturo said Museveni feared weapons of mass destruction would find their way to Uganda.
No image available
/ 11 October 2004
A conference exploring the evolving dynamics of small arms as the most pressing security challenge in Africa ended on Friday with Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni calling on governments to address the causes of their use and proliferation. ”Small arms will not find a market if there are no unresolved issues in our midst,” he said
No image available
/ 27 September 2004
His left leg missing, Jackson Acama stands uneasily on crutches. At 42, he is one of the oldest former rebels from the Lord’s Resistance Army to have taken up residence at the World Vision rehabilitation centre in Gulu, northern Uganda. By Acama’s own account, he was a major in the notorious guerilla movement. e Acama, many ex-rebels say they heard about the amnesty on the radio, especially Gulu’s Mega FM.
No image available
/ 8 September 2004
Police and army stormed a Ugandan government office where three gunmen had taken a Cabinet minister’s secretary and an unidentified man hostage on Wednesday. An Associated Press photographer heard shooting in the building and saw several bodies being taken out, but could not tell whether the people were injured or dead.
No image available
/ 7 September 2004
Hippos in a Ugandan game park are dying of a disease yet to be identified by scientists. Sixty have so far perished in the past two months, wildlife officials said on Tuesday. ”We have been finding the animals dead with saliva oozing out of their mouths,” said John Bosco Numwe, the chief warden of Queen Elizabeth National Park.
No image available
/ 6 September 2004
The World Bank has approved -million for programmes aimed at reducing poverty and improving the road network in Uganda, the bank said in a statement on Monday. ”The project will help rehabilitate or upgrade a total of 830km of national roads, and improve or rehabilitate 1 300km of district roads,” the statement said.
Regional heads of state will gather in Tanzania this week to discuss the latest advances in Burundi’s peace process as well as last week’s slaughter of 159 Congolese refugees in the tiny central African nation, Ugandan officials said on Monday.
The women of the Kawempe Positive Women’s Union are among the new faces of the HIV/Aids epidemic in Uganda. The recent Aids conference in Bangkok, Thailand, shed light on the growing feminisation of HIV: 57% of those infected in sub-Saharan Africa are women. And 75% of the young people infected are females aged 15 to 24.
The Ugandan military has achieved a major breakthrough in its battle with anti-government rebels after capturing a high-ranking rebel commander described as ”the heeart and spirit” of the rebellion raging in the north of the country. ”Brigadier” Kenneth Banya was captured following a skirmish at Okidi.
Ugandan insurgents killed more than 100 people while raiding villages in southern Sudan in late June, a church leader in the war-torn region said on Friday. Reverend Paul Yugusuk, the head of the region’s Anglican deaconry, said in Kampala that rebels of the Lord’s Resistance Army had gone on a killing spree in the area.
At least 6 000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) were left homeless after a fire gutted parts of the sprawling Pabbo camp in northern Uganda, destroying hundreds of grass-thatched huts where the IDPs had been living, local leaders and the army said.