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Gomba District Hazard, Risk and Vulnerability Profi Le
Gomba District Hazard, Risk and Vulnerability Profi le 2016 GOMBA DISTRICT HAZARD, RISK AND VULNERABILITY PROFILE a Acknowledgment On behalf of Office of the Prime Minister, I wish to express my sincere appreciation to all of the key stakeholders who provided their valuable inputs and support to this Multi-Hazard, Risk and Vulnerability mapping exercise that led to the production of comprehensive district Hazard, Risk and Vulnerability (HRV) profiles. I extend my sincere thanks to the Department of Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Management, under the leadership of the Commissioner, Mr. Martin Owor, for the oversight and management of the entire exercise. The HRV assessment team was led by Ms. Ahimbisibwe Catherine, Senior Disaster Preparedness Officer supported by Mr. Ogwang Jimmy, Disaster Preparedness Officer and the team of consultants (GIS/DRR specialists); Dr. Bernard Barasa, and Mr. Nsiimire Peter, who provided technical support. Our gratitude goes to UNDP for providing funds to support the Hazard, Risk and Vulnerability Mapping. The team comprised of Mr. Steven Goldfinch – Disaster Risk Management Advisor, Mr. Gilbert Anguyo - Disaster Risk Reduction Analyst, and Mr. Ongom Alfred-Early Warning system Programmer. My appreciation also goes to Gomba District Team. The entire body of stakeholders who in one way or another yielded valuable ideas and time to support the completion of this exercise. Hon. Hilary O. Onek Minister for Relief, Disaster Preparedness and Refugees GOMBA DISTRICT HAZARD, RISK AND VULNERABILITY PROFILE i EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The multi-hazard vulnerability profile outputs from this assessment for Gomba District was a combination of spatial modeling using adaptive, sensitivity and exposure spatial layers and information captured from District Key Informant interviews and sub-county FGDs using a participatory approach. -
DISTRICT BASELINE: Nakasongola, Nakaseke and Nebbi in Uganda
EASE – CA PROJECT PARTNERS EAST AFRICAN CIVIL SOCIETY FOR SUSTAINABLE ENERGY & CLIMATE ACTION (EASE – CA) PROJECT DISTRICT BASELINE: Nakasongola, Nakaseke and Nebbi in Uganda SEPTEMBER 2019 Prepared by: Joint Energy and Environment Projects (JEEP) P. O. Box 4264 Kampala, (Uganda). Supported by Tel: +256 414 578316 / 0772468662 Email: [email protected] JEEP EASE CA PROJECT 1 Website: www.jeepfolkecenter.org East African Civil Society for Sustainable Energy and Climate Action (EASE-CA) Project ALEF Table of Contents ACRONYMS ......................................................................................................................................... 4 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT .................................................................................................................... 5 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .................................................................................................................. 6 CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................. 8 1.1 Background of JEEP ............................................................................................................ 8 1.2 Energy situation in Uganda .................................................................................................. 8 1.3 Objectives of the baseline study ......................................................................................... 11 1.4 Report Structure ................................................................................................................ -
Nakaseke Constituency: 109 Nakaseke South County
Printed on: Monday, January 18, 2021 16:36:23 PM PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS, (Presidential Elections Act, 2005, Section 48) RESULTS TALLY SHEET DISTRICT: 069 NAKASEKE CONSTITUENCY: 109 NAKASEKE SOUTH COUNTY Parish Station Reg. AMURIAT KABULETA KALEMBE KATUMBA KYAGULA MAO MAYAMBA MUGISHA MWESIGYE TUMUKUN YOWERI Valid Invalid Total Voters OBOI KIIZA NANCY JOHN NYI NORBERT LA WILLY MUNTU FRED DE HENRY MUSEVENI Votes Votes Votes PATRICK JOSEPH LINDA SSENTAMU GREGG KAKURUG TIBUHABU ROBERT U RWA KAGUTA Sub-county: 001 KAASANGOMBE 014 BUKUUKU 01 TIMUNA/KAFENE 716 1 0 1 0 278 2 0 1 0 1 140 424 43 467 0.24% 0.00% 0.24% 0.00% 65.57% 0.47% 0.00% 0.24% 0.00% 0.24% 33.02% 9.21% 65.22% 02 LUKYAMU PR. SCHOOL 778 2 2 0 1 348 2 2 0 1 0 110 468 24 492 0.43% 0.43% 0.00% 0.21% 74.36% 0.43% 0.43% 0.00% 0.21% 0.00% 23.50% 4.88% 63.24% 03 BUKUUKU PRI. SCHOOL 529 0 0 1 1 188 0 1 0 0 0 74 265 3 268 0.00% 0.00% 0.38% 0.38% 70.94% 0.00% 0.38% 0.00% 0.00% 0.00% 27.92% 1.12% 50.66% Parish Total 2023 3 2 2 2 814 4 3 1 1 1 324 1157 70 1227 0.26% 0.17% 0.17% 0.17% 70.35% 0.35% 0.26% 0.09% 0.09% 0.09% 28.00% 5.70% 60.65% 015 BULYAKE 01 NJAGALABWAMI COMM. -
Bank of Uganda
Status of Financial Inclusion in Uganda First Edition- March 2014 BANK OFi UGANDA Table of Contents List of Abbreviations and Acronyms ..................................................................................................... iii Executive Summary ....................................................................................................................................iv 1.0 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................. 1 2.0 Concept of Financial Inclusion ......................................................................................................... 1 3.0 Financial Inclusion Landscape for Uganda .................................................................................. 4 3.1 Data Sources ...................................................................................................................................... 4 3.2 Demand Side Indicators ................................................................................................................. 5 3.3 Supply Side Indicators .................................................................................................................... 7 3.3.1 Financial Access Indicators .................................................................................................... 7 3.3.2 Comparison of Access Indicators across Countries. ...................................................................... 14 3.3.3 Geographic Indicators -
Pdacl827.Pdf
Promoting Community-Based Distribution / Community Reproductive Health Worker Provision of DMPA Educational Visit to Uganda – Summary Report February 18 – 20, 2008 Family Health International • Plot 6 Kafu Road • Kampala, Uganda • 256 414 235035 TABLE OF CONTENTS I. Executive Summary II. Overview III. Introductory Session with Key Stakeholders in the Uganda CBD of DMPA Project IV. Meeting with Key Stakeholders and District Officials V. Field Trip to Luwero and Nakaseke Districts VI. Debriefing with Key Stakeholders and District Officials VII. The Way Forward – Country Team Planning Sessions VIII. Tour Reflections and Take-home Messages IX. Conclusion Appendices: A: List of Participants B: Educational Tour Program E: Contents List of Informational Packages Provided to Delegates ACRONYMS ARFH Association for Reproductive and Family Health CBD Community-based Distributors/Distribution CPR Contraceptive Prevalence Rate CBD AGENT Community Reproductive Health Worker CTPH Conservation Through Public Health DDHS District Director of Health Services DMPA Depot-Medroxyprogesterone Acetate (Also called Depo-Provera) EH EngenderHealth FHI Family Health International FP Family Planning MIHV Minnesota Health Volunteers MOH Ministry of Health NGO Nongovernmental Organization RH Reproductive Health RHD Reproductive Health Division SC Save the Children TFR Total Fertility Rate USAID United States Agency for International Development I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Agenda An educational tour to Uganda on February 18–20 provided delegates from other countries with an introduction to the community-based distribution (CBD) of the injectable contraceptive DMPA (depot medroxyprogesterone acetate, or Depo Provera). The goal was to learn about Uganda’s experiences with the CBD of DMPA and to forge relationships between the delegates so that they could exchange information about such programs in their home countries. -
FY 2019/20 Vote:551 Sembabule District
LG Approved Workplan Vote:551 Sembabule District FY 2019/20 Foreword 6HPEDEXOH'LVWULFW'UDIW%XGJHW(VWLPDWHV$QQXDO:RUNSODQVDQG3HUIRUPDQFH&RQWUDFWIRU2019/2020 manifests compliance to the legal requirement by PFMA 2015 and the Local Government Act Cap 243 as ammended, that mandates the Accounting Officer to prepare the Budget Estimates and plans for the District and have it laid before Council by the 31st of March of every financial year . The Local Government Act CAP 243 section 35, sub section (3) empowers the District Council as the planning authority of the District. Sembabule District Local Government thus recognizes the great importance attached to the production of the for Draft Budget Estimates the District which guides the budgeting process, identifies the key priority areas of the second 5 year NDP 2015/2016-2019/2020DQGWKDWRI6HPEDEXOH2nd five year DDP (2015/2016 - 2019/2020). The execution of the budget is expected to greatly improve service delivery and thus the livelihood of the populace in the District. The 2019/2020 budget process started with the regional budget consultative workshops that were held mid September 2018. A number of consultative meetings involving various stakeholders took place including the District Conference which was held on 8th November 2018 to prioritize, areas of intervention in the financial year 2019/2020,this was follwed by the production of the BFP which was submitted to MOFPED on 13th November 2018. The District shall comply with reforms of physical transfers guided by the MoFPED that are geared towards improved financial management service delivery and accountability. However, Sembabule District still faces a challenge of funding the nine newly created and sworn in Lower Local Governments of Nakasenyi, Katwe, Mitima, Bulongo, Kawanda, Nabitanga, Mabindo kyera and Ntuusi Town Council. -
Bidding-Document-For-Provision-Of
BANK OF UGANDA Bidding Document for the Procurement of Non-Consultancy Services PROVISION OF CLEANING SERVICES AT BANK OF SUBJECT OF PROCUREMENT UGANDA HEADQUARTERS AND BRANCHES OCUREMENT REFERENCE BOU/SRVCS/20-21/00043 NUMBER PROCUREMENT METHOD OPEN DOMESTIC BIDDING DATE OF ISSUE October 08, 2020 Provision Of Cleaning Services at Bank of Uganda Headquarters and Branches Standard Bidding Document Table of Contents Section 1. Instructions to Bidders ............................................................................................ 7 Section 2 Bid Data Sheet ....................................................................................................... 21 Section 3. Evaluation Methodology and Criteria ................................................................... 24 Section 4 Bidding Forms ....................................................................................................... 27 Section 5. Eligible Countries .................................................................................................. 65 Section 6. Statement of Requirements .................................................................................. 66 Section 7: General Conditions of Contract ............................................................................ 74 Section 8 Special Conditions of Contract ............................................................................ 86 Section 9. Contract Forms ...................................................................................................... 88 Provision -
2-2-4 Implementation Plan 2-2-4-1 Implementation Policy the Project
2-2-4 Implementation Plan 2-2-4-1 Implementation Policy The Project will be implemented in accordance with Japan's Grant Aid scheme. Accordingly, its implementation will only take place after approval of the Project by the Government of Japan and the conclusion of Exchange of Notes (E/N) between both governments. Basic issues and points to be noted in the process of implementing the Project are described as follows. (1) Implementing Agency The implementing Agency of the Project on the Ugandan side is the Rural Electrification Agency (REA). After completing the installation work for the Project, the planning department at REA entrusts the relevant work to a private-sector company called operator(s) in a similar manner as other areas. It will, therefore, be necessary for REA to maintain close contact and consultation with Japanese consultants and contractors (equipment suppliers) and to appoint a person responsible for the Project to ensure its smooth progress. The appointed person responsible for the Project at REA will be required to fully explain the contents of the Project to other REA staff, concerned parties of districts, etc. and local residents at the project sites in order to facilitate their understanding of the Project and to encourage their cooperation in its implementation. (2) Consultant A Japanese consultant will conclude a consulting services agreement with REA and will provide a detail design and work supervision concerning the Project in order to implement procurement and installation of the equipment under the Project. The consultant will also prepare tender documents and open tender(s) for REA, the implementing agency of Project. -
Vote:113 Uganda National Roads Authority
Vote:113 Uganda National Roads Authority Table V1: Summary Of Vote Estimates by Programme and Sub-SubProgramme Thousand Uganda Shillings 2021/22 Draft Estimates Programme 08 Integrated Transport Infrastructure and Services GoU External Fin Total 51 National Roads Maintenance & Construction 1,846,105,652 973,331,768 2,819,437,420 Total For Programme 08 1,846,105,652 973,331,768 2,819,437,420 Total Excluding Arrears 1,831,085,301 973,331,768 2,804,417,069 Total Vote 113 1,846,105,652 973,331,768 2,819,437,420 Total Excluding Arrears 1,831,085,301 973,331,768 2,804,417,069 Vote 113Uganda National Roads Authority - Works and Transport Vote:113 Uganda National Roads Authority Table V2: Summary Of Vote Estimates by Sub-SubProgramme,Department and Project Thousand Uganda Shillings 2020/21 Approved Budget 2021/22 Draft Estimates Sub-SubProgramme 51 National Roads Maintenance & Construction Recurrent Budget Estimates Wage Non-Wage AIA Total Wage Non-Wage Total 01 Finance and Administration 71,105,193 32,150,150 0 103,255,343 71,105,193 24,928,248 96,033,441 06 Project Preparation Studies 0 0 0 0 0 35,825,000 35,825,000 Total Recurrent Budget Estimates for Sub- 71,105,193 32,150,150 0 103,255,343 71,105,193 60,753,248 131,858,441 SubProgramme Development Budget Estimates GoU Dev't External Fin AIA Total GoU Dev't External Fin Total 0265 Upgrade Atiak - Moyo-Afoji (104km) 4,334,763 23,972,460 0 28,307,223 19,133,720 38,828,280 57,962,000 0267 Improvement of Ferry Services 48,284,110 0 0 48,284,110 29,449,000 0 29,449,000 0952 Design Masaka-Bukakata -
Challenges of Development and Natural Resource Governance In
Ian Karusigarira Uganda’s revolutionary memory, victimhood and regime survival The road that the community expects to take in each generation is inspired and shaped by its memories of former heroic ages —Smith, D.A. (2009) Ian Karusigarira PhD Candidate, Graduate School of Global Studies, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies, Japan Abstract In revolutionary political systems—such as Uganda’s—lies a strong collective memory that organizes and enforces national identity as a cultural property. National identity nurtured by the nexus between lived representations and narratives on collective memory of war, therefore, presents itself as a kind of politics with repetitive series of nation-state narratives, metaphorically suggesting how the putative qualities of the nation’s past reinforce the qualities of the present. This has two implications; it on one hand allows for changes in a narrative's cognitive claims which form core of its constitutive assumptions about the nation’s past. This past is collectively viewed as a fight against profanity and restoration of political sanctity; On the other hand, it subjects memory to new scientific heuristics involving its interpretations, transformation and distribution. I seek to interrogate the intricate memory entanglement in gaining and consolidating political power in Uganda. Of great importance are politics of remembering, forgetting and utter repudiation of memory of war while asserting control and restraint over who governs. The purpose of this paper is to understand and internalize the dynamics of how knowledge of the past relates with the present. This gives a precise definition of power in revolutionary-dominated regimes. Keywords: Memory of War, national narratives, victimhood, regime survival, Uganda ―75― 本稿の著作権は著者が保持し、クリエイティブ・コモンズ表示4.0国際ライセンス(CC-BY)下に提供します。 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/deed.ja Uganda’s revolutionary memory, victimhood and regime survival 1. -
THE UGANDA GAZETTE [13Th J Anuary
The THE RH Ptrat.ir OK I'<1 AND A T IE RKPt'BI.IC OF UGANDA Registered at the Published General Post Office for transmission within by East Africa as a Newspaper Uganda Gazette A uthority Vol. CX No. 2 13th January, 2017 Price: Shs. 5,000 CONTEXTS P a g e General Notice No. 12 of 2017. The Marriage Act—Notice ... ... ... 9 THE ADVOCATES ACT, CAP. 267. The Advocates Act—Notices ... ... ... 9 The Companies Act—Notices................. ... 9-10 NOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR A CERTIFICATE The Electricity Act— Notices ... ... ... 10-11 OF ELIGIBILITY. The Trademarks Act—Registration of Applications 11-18 Advertisements ... ... ... ... 18-27 I t is h e r e b y n o t if ie d that an application has been presented to the Law Council by Okiring Mark who is SUPPLEMENTS Statutory Instruments stated to be a holder of a Bachelor of Laws Degree from Uganda Christian University, Mukono, having been No. 1—The Trade (Licensing) (Grading of Business Areas) Instrument, 2017. awarded on the 4th day of July, 2014 and a Diploma in No. 2—The Trade (Licensing) (Amendment of Schedule) Legal Practice awarded by the Law Development Centre Instrument, 2017. on the 29th day of April, 2016, for the issuance of a B ill Certificate of Eligibility for entry of his name on the Roll of Advocates for Uganda. No. 1—The Anti - Terrorism (Amendment) Bill, 2017. Kampala, MARGARET APINY, 11th January, 2017. Secretary, Law Council. General N otice No. 10 of 2017. THE MARRIAGE ACT [Cap. 251 Revised Edition, 2000] General Notice No. -
Population by Parish
Total Population by Sex, Total Number of Households and proportion of Households headed by Females by Subcounty and Parish, Central Region, 2014 District Population Households % of Female Males Females Total Households Headed HHS Sub-County Parish Central Region 4,672,658 4,856,580 9,529,238 2,298,942 27.5 Kalangala 31,349 22,944 54,293 20,041 22.7 Bujumba Sub County 6,743 4,813 11,556 4,453 19.3 Bujumba 1,096 874 1,970 592 19.1 Bunyama 1,428 944 2,372 962 16.2 Bwendero 2,214 1,627 3,841 1,586 19.0 Mulabana 2,005 1,368 3,373 1,313 21.9 Kalangala Town Council 2,623 2,357 4,980 1,604 29.4 Kalangala A 680 590 1,270 385 35.8 Kalangala B 1,943 1,767 3,710 1,219 27.4 Mugoye Sub County 6,777 5,447 12,224 3,811 23.9 Bbeta 3,246 2,585 5,831 1,909 24.9 Kagulube 1,772 1,392 3,164 1,003 23.3 Kayunga 1,759 1,470 3,229 899 22.6 Bubeke Sub County 3,023 2,110 5,133 2,036 26.7 Bubeke 2,275 1,554 3,829 1,518 28.0 Jaana 748 556 1,304 518 23.0 Bufumira Sub County 6,019 4,273 10,292 3,967 22.8 Bufumira 2,177 1,404 3,581 1,373 21.4 Lulamba 3,842 2,869 6,711 2,594 23.5 Kyamuswa Sub County 2,733 1,998 4,731 1,820 20.3 Buwanga 1,226 865 2,091 770 19.5 Buzingo 1,507 1,133 2,640 1,050 20.9 Maziga Sub County 3,431 1,946 5,377 2,350 20.8 Buggala 2,190 1,228 3,418 1,484 21.4 Butulume 1,241 718 1,959 866 19.9 Kampala District 712,762 794,318 1,507,080 414,406 30.3 Central Division 37,435 37,733 75,168 23,142 32.7 Bukesa 4,326 4,711 9,037 2,809 37.0 Civic Centre 224 151 375 161 14.9 Industrial Area 383 262 645 259 13.9 Kagugube 2,983 3,246 6,229 2,608 42.7 Kamwokya