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  • Uganda Voted the Best Place to Visit in 2012

    Uganda Voted the Best Place to Visit in 2012

    The Lonely Planet has voted the little known Uganda as the number one travel destination to visit in 2012. Uganda that emerged the top among the Best 10 Travel Destinations to be visited in 2012 is home to more than half of the few remaining mountain gorillas in the world. The country that was in the past known with the past dicatorship of Idi Amin Dada, is a growing tourism destination with much to see and do. From gorilla safaris that feature gorilla tracking in the natural tropical rainforests of Bwindi and Mgahinga to  wildlife tours in its national parks, this beautiful and natural country has much to see!

    The Lonely Planet which is the one of the best and largest World travel guide and media publisher in the world, voted Uganda over many other travel destinations that included Myanmar, Ukraine, Jordan, Denmark, Bhutan, Cuba, New Caledonia, Taiwan and Switzerland that followed in that order.

    On the criteria of choosing the top travel destinations for 2012, a team from Lonely Planet together with other bloggers and expert travelers came up with this list of the top ten countries to be visited by tourists for the year 2012. In choosing the best destinations, many factors were considered that include attractiveness, topicality, excitement, value and that special X-factor etc.

    For more information about Uganda and its tourist attractions visit the Uganda Tourism Portal, a portal with all the best places and things to see in the country.

  • Kitoko Performs at Ange Kagame’s Birthday Party

    Renowned Rwandan Afro-beat singer Kitoko, performed at Ange Kagame’s birthday party. The party, which was held as a private event, had an elite guest list, comprising of the who’s who in Rwanda.Kitoko’s performance was the highlight of the event. The singer stole the show with him crooning many of his  hit numbers, including his popular ‘You’. The audience were enthralled by his performance.The crooner who shot to fame with his recent performances, is also billed to steal the show at the Rwanda Day 2011.

  • East African Ministers Slow Tourist Visa

    East African Community (EAC) ministers in charge of immigration are yet to meet to consider a proposal for a common tourist visa-a proposal, which if adopted, would bring to the fore benefits of marketing East Africa as a single travel package.

    Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Rwanda’s state-run tourism agencies already market East Africa at international fairs as a single destination but failure by immigration bosses to make progress on the adoption of the proposal, has failed an unprecedented move that would boost revenues and tourist numbers.
    A Uganda immigration official told an East African consultative meeting on facilitation of air transport last week in Uganda’s eastern town of Jinja.  No progress has been made in Tanzania as the immigration bosses there are yet to meet to even consider the proposal.

    The proposal was mooted by the Kenya Tourist Board (KTB) more than three years ago. In Kenya,  the situation is the same as is the case in Tanzania, but there are plans to introduce visa stickers.

    The EAC Council of Ministers, which is the designated decision-making authority on all matters that touch on the sovereignty, revenue, policy and immigration matters, is the organ that will ultimately adopt the joint visas for tourists.

    A single tourist visa would allow tourists to travel through a series of endless borders to sample the unique attractions that East Africa has to offer.

    The EAC Secretariat has listed the single tourist visa among its foremost future plans and had initially hoped that it would have been agreed upon by the five states, Burundi, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and Tanzania by November 2006.

    Tourists continue to demand to sample the entire array of tourist attractions spread across the region, from Mombasa’s breathtaking beaches, Tanzania’s Ngorogoro Crater, the chimpanzee parks in Tanzania, Uganda and Rwanda’s mountain gorillas and other wildlife safaris. While the technocrats are still considering the proposal, their reluctance to agree on a joint visa for tourists, has, however not crippled the joint promotional activity.

    The strategy has been applied during international tourism exhibitions where tents of all the five member states have been placed close to each other. According to the plan, a tourist would apply for a visa in any one of the five states and would travel uninterupted to all the countries.

    Tourist boards from Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania are the joint inventors of the plan, a crosscutting measure, which aims to standardise all tourism facilities in the region, including hotels and other tourism facilities.

    Tanzania’s Tourist Board (TTB) favours a system where member countries market their tourist attractions independently with a joint banner bearing common features designed by the EAC Secretariat on the background of the booths. These initiatives are aimed at ensuring decisions made by the Council of Ministers on promotion and cooperation in tourism are implemented. Tanzania is Kenya’s most serious competitor as a destination for foreign tourists after the US followed by the UK and South Africa.

    Uganda also ranks among the top 10 destinations in the world with a 6.2% preference level compared with the 21.7% who prefer to travel to  Tanzania is closer at 17.5%. These rankings are a powerful indicator that the East Africa region has potential to become one of the world’s biggest global  attractions as a single package rather than a disjointed bloc. Uganda Gorilla safaris are a key attraction for vistors to Uganda, while masai mara is a key attraction for Kenya safaris, while kilimanjaro is a key attraction for Tanzania

  • Haunted by the Rwanda Genocide: Girl Abandoned in Uganda

    Kampala:
    Orphaned at the age of 5, she lives with adopted parents, one of whom was this year killed by the same people who killed her parents. Now living as a ‘refugee’ after being abandoned in Uganda, Grace Anny Uwera cannot help regretting why she was born.

    Uwera, who comes from the Rwandan District of Gisenyi, lost both her parents and all relatives during the 1994 Rwanda Genocide-a common story for many Rwandan children.

    Uwimana Chautae, who adopted her in 1998, abandoned her recently at Entebbe Airport. Given only Ushs 3,000 (US$1.5) to bring her to Kampala, Uwera was ‘condemned’ to the streets of Kampala where she had to find a new home, food, relatives and all.

    “She told me that when she reaches London, she will call the refugee camp and direct them to send me to London. Up to now, I don’t know where the refugee camp is,” Uwera says.

    Now aged 16, Uwera was recently ‘saved’ by a Muzungu lady, only identified as Sarah, who took her to Candlelight Foundation, an NGO based in Mengo, Kampala. The NGO collects disadvantaged girls from the streets. Even with some care here, hope is still distant for Uwera.

    After many days of negotiation, Uwera has finally agreed to talk to us. Uncontrollable tears roll down her chubby cheeks as she narrates her ordeal. Even when she is beckoned by her new friends at Candlelight to “be strong”, tears continue to come as she narrates the unforgettable night the soldiers came to their house and killed her family members using machetes during Rwanda’s historic turmoil in 1994.

    “The Hutu soldiers butchered my father and mother, together with two of my elder sisters. I was left alone,” Uwera says with much effort.

    The 11 years that have passed have not made Uwera forget anything of the gruesome murders. “My father was a Senegalese while my mother was a Rwandese (Tutsi). My father became a Rwandese national after marrying my mother. I still remember them and miss their love and attention. My father’s name was Niwemugabo Ally Djuma and my mother’s, Bankundiye Amina,” she recalls.

    That is when she looses her temporary smile. She says the memory of her parents makes her envious of children who have ‘the luxury’ of their parent’s love and care. Even when they were still alive, Uwera never had the opportunity to experience their full attention.

    “My father was a driver of a petroleum truck that used to transport fuel from Mombasa to Rwanda and was rarely at home. My mother was a nurse and she operated her own clinic,” she reminisces. That was years ago, and she has accepted her fate.

    Uwera says that knowing about her Senegalese origin and relatives is something that would make her life different; since it is the only way she could get the love of a relative.

    “My family perished before my father could take me to Senegal. He used to say that my grandparents are in Senegal and I always dreamt of going there,” she says.

    Uwera takes Uwimana, with whom she had lived for the last five years, to be a good parent, although she abandoned her. She believes this happened because Uwimana failed to get necessary documents for Uwera and her two kids to travel to Britain.

    Uwera says that Uwimana was escaping from Rwanda because she realised that her life was in danger after opposition politicians killed her husband in May this year.

    “It was being said they were looking for Uwimana to kill her too. I would go back to Rwanda, but it’s impossible because every body knew that I was a daughter to those people. They can kill me as well,” says the teenager. Our attempts to confirm this allegation from Rwandan Authorities were fruitless.

    Uwera who says she left Rwanda while in secondary school wants to go back to school and sees school “as the only way for my future.”

    Rosette Nabuuma, the Manager Candlelight Foundation says the Organisation is considering taking Uwera back to school like the rest of the girls they get from the streets. “But we need continuous assistance in order to appropriately cater for these disadvantaged girls and make their lives better,” Nabuuma says.

    Uwera, like the rest of the girls, has been taught how to make candles so that she can earn some little living. Not much hope for Uwera though! Because for every day that passes, her hopes of going back to school and finding her relatives in Senegal-the two things she loves most in the world, become more and more slim.

  • Uganda Now the Fraud Capital of Africa

    Beating Nigeria in crime statistics is no easy feat. Monitored by international law enforcement agencies from Scotland Yard to the FBI and blacklisted by immigration authorities from Tacoma, Washington to Taipei, Nigerian crime networks reach far. Every year, the private and public sectors of the West African nation lose $40 billion (U.S.) to corruption. And every day the oil-rich nation loses 100,000 barrels of crude to thieves, many of them government employees.

    Now, Uganda, once hailed as the model emerging economy in Africa and one of the standards for financial transparency on the continent, is racked by a growing scandal: check fraud. Whether the spike in financial crime is a sign of a population increasingly seduced by material wealth, or if it is a reflection of a desperate public striving to get along by whatever means it can, the statistics make for bad public relations. For a nation dedicating a sizeable share of its resources to attracting international investment, the news of fraud is even more threatening. Hung in the balance between steady economic growth and what many suspect may be a creeping downturn, Uganda is a nation of many faces. The rising fraud is one of its ugliest.

    Fraud has nothing to do with the country or ethnicity. It is the individuals who defraud banks and international businesses. Of recent, Uganda has recorded more fraud attempts than Nigeria in sub-Saharan Africa, said Johan Hartman, Citigroup fraud manager for Europe, Middle East and Africa. Speaking last week at a seminar on fraud management at the Grand Imperial Hotel in Kampala, Hartman said his firm, working with others, is organizing to stamp out the growing theft problem.

    Local authorities have also adapted a more aggressive stance to the corruption. Justine Bagyenda, a director at the Bank of Uganda, said committees have been formed to study the nature of the schemes and identify its perpetrators. She also instructed banks and other financial institutions to be vigilant in checking the backgrounds of people they hire. Some people have bad track records,” she warned.

    Meanwhile on the streets of Kampala, a loose network of criminals, savvy on the Internet, familiar with international financial networks, aligned with Ugandans abroad, and plugged into financial industry insiders, are forging checks and enjoying the spoils. The criminals illegally pull money from bank accounts in Europe and the United States by using routing numbers and dummy checks. They also write bad checks for trophy automobiles, electronics and other goods in Asia.

    United Nations groups have also stepped up their investigation of the scandals, not only in Uganda but also in a broader region of countries that include South Africa and Botswana. But the informality of the criminal networks makes spotting the schemes difficult. And the criminals take advantage of an unsophisticated law enforcement infrastructure unaccustomed to fighting white collar crime.

    Also, increasingly becoming a hub of international money laundering, Uganda faces pressure from the international community to play an active role in stemming the corruption at home. Right now, a law against money laundering is making its way through the Ugandan legislature. The government response has been positive and swift but what impact the laws will have on the disorderly and erratic nature of the scams, has yet to be seen.

    In a globalizing Africa where the public access to technology is outpacing the governmental cyber-defense mechanisms in place to regulate it, expect to see these problems grow — and spread. It will require broad-based international cooperation, both private and governmental, to tackle and hold down this growing wave of crime. How this will affect the continents individual economies has yet to be calculated.