Saturday, 29 April 2017

CLASH OF THE TITANS Joshua vs Klitschko: Tale of the tape as heavyweight boxers clash for three world title belts at Wembley tonight

ANTHONY Joshua faces his biggest challenge on Saturday at Wembley Stadium.
In front a partisan crowd of 90,000 he comes up against Ukrainian giant Wladimir Klitschko, considered one of the greatest heavyweights of all time.
The prize, THREE heavyweight world titles — the IBF one he is defending as well as crowns from the IBO and WBA.
Anthony, 27, promises to “unleash hell” against Klitschko, 41 — who like himself, towers 6ft 6in tall.
A purse of some £15million awaits each fighter, win or lose, in a battle expected to smash pay-per-view records and gross a total heading towards £50million — making it the most lucrative in UK history.
The pair are well-matched physically.
Both are 6ft 6in tall, and have a similar reach, Joshua just nicking it at 82ins to Klitschko’s 81ins.
Joshua has a perfect professional record since leaving the amateur ranks following his Olympic gold medal at super-heavyweight at London 2012, with 18 wins and 18 KOs in 18 fights.
In contrast Klitschko, who also won Olympic gold medal at super-heavyweight at Atlanta in 1996, has fought 68 times as a professional.

Besigye threatens to organise LC elections

Opposition leader, Dr Kizza Besigye yesterday launched a campaign dubbed ‘LC Elections Now’ to hold local council elections, should the NRM party government fail to conduct one soon.
The retired army Colonel accused government of finding every excuse not to hold the grassroots elections, including “amending the law to create intimidation so that people can be manipulated.”
“We are going to focus on organising an LC1 election in this country whether the regime … is supportive of it or not. We are going to be working towards our people establishing legitimate leadership in the villages and it is achievable,” Dr Besigye said during a media briefing he called at his Katonga Road offices in Kampala.
When pressed to explain how they would go about holding elections for local leaders, the four-time presidential candidate, promised to provide details in the near future.
After being declared loser in last year’s presidential elections, which he claimed to have won by 52 per cent, Dr Besigye continued with his “defiance campaign”, leading to repeated confrontations. He was placed him under virtual house arrest from voting day, February 18, 2016, until recently when the police withdrew its forces camped just outside his premises.
Dr Besigye said LC1 elections are extremely important and critical in advancing the influence of the people.
“We have never had village elections, now for 20 years. No village elections; people to choose their voices, to get through whom their voices will pass at the most local level where they live,” he added.
“Can you imagine that in 2016 you are talking about elections through lining up behind candidates? Such a primitive and dangerous method! If I am a candidate and my wife doesn’t want to vote for me, what will she do? Will she stand behind another candidate and come back home with me or vice versa. This is causing chaos and insecurity in the community. How will people freely express themselves?”
The government has repeatedly announced, then postponed when it will be holding local council elections.

Joyful stadium crowd greets Pope Francis on day two of his Egypt trip

Elated crowds greeted Pope Francis at a Mass in Cairo's Air Defense Stadium on Saturday, unafraid despite recent suicide bombings at Christian churches.
"God will protect us," said Nada Youssef, 30, as she clutched the free ticket she received through church and waited to clear metal detectors and guards stationed at every entrance.
Francis entered the stadium at 9:30 a.m. to applause as a fleet of yellow and white balloons was released -- the Vatican colors -- and a choir sang "Gloria."
Francis has been warmly received since he arrived Friday for a two-day visit to Egypt. Many people said they admired his tenacity in visiting only weeks after twin suicide bombings targeted Christian churches in separate cities, killing 47 people.

Friday, 28 April 2017

Besigye re-appears before Nakawa court over treason charges, criticizes delay in investigations

Besigye is accused of attempting to ascend himself to the office of the president of Uganda by allegedly swearing in himself without following the prescribed legal process. 


The Director of Public Prosecutions has informed the Nakawa chief Magistrates court that police investigations into the treason case against former FDC ppresidential candidate Dr. Kiiza Besigye are on-going.
State Attorney Ann Ntimba informed grade one magistrate Noah Sajjabi that prosecution needs more time to conclude inquiries to have Besigye committed to High court for trial. The magistrate adjourned the case and gave Besigye an extension of bail to 30th June 2017.
Besigye is accused of attempting to ascend himself to the office of the president of Uganda by allegedly swearing in himself without following the prescribed legal process. 

Oil: President Obiang tells Uganda to be careful

Uganda is looking to tap into Equatorial Guinea’s experience of oil production, in order to build its own capacity before oil production starts.
Speaking at the Joint Oil and Gas Convention and Regional Logistics Expo at the Kampala Serena Hotel, on Thursday, country’s President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, who wrapped up his visit to Uganda shorty after speaking at the conference, said they had agreed with President Museveni of Uganda on areas of corporations especially in the petroleum sector.
Equatorial Guinea which produces 300,000 barrels per day has been an oil producing country for the last 20 years.
“This visit has actually enabled us to identify a number of important areas for economic cooperation for the two countries, such as those areas where we have been able to sign accords like the petroleum and gas sectors,” President Obiang said.
The details of this partnership are still not yet known but the Uganda government is keen on picking lessons from countries that are involved in oil production.
During bilateral talks between heads of state of the two countries on Wednesday night, Uganda’s Energy Minister, Ms Irene Muloni signed an MoU for cooperation in oil and gas with Equatorial Guinea’s minister Obiang Lima.
Mr Nguema said as Uganda proceeded with production cycle, there were important issues the country needed to address in order to maximise benefits. 

Monday, 24 April 2017

Dr. Nyanzi is Returning to Court Today

The incarcerated Makerere University academician Dr. Stella Nyanzi is today expected to appear before Buganda Road Court for mention of the cases against her.
Dr. Nyanzi on 13th April, 2017 appeared before the same court and was charged with two counts of Cyber Harassment and Offensive Communication contrary to the Computer Misuse Act 2011.The charges are in relation to offensive facebook posts she made about president Museveni and the First Lady. She was remanded to Luzira until today when she will reappear in court.
 Prosecution states that on January 28th, 2017 while in Kampala, Dr. Nyanzi used a computer to post on her Facbook page information referring to President Museveni as a pair of buttocks which suggestion/ proposal is obscene or indecent. Prosecution further states that Dr. Nyanzi between January and March 2017 willfully and repeatedly used electronic communication to post messages offensive in nature via Facebook, to disturb the peace of his Excellency the president of Uganda.

Barack Obama returns to remind us how radically different he is from Donald Trump

Former President Barack Obama re-emerged into public life on Monday in Chicago and, in the process, offered a potent reminder of what a radical change in direction the country took in the 2016 election.
Obama sat in the middle of a group of young people -- all of whom shared their own personal stories about their involvement in public life and why more people their age didn't follow their lead. He spoke, briefly, at the start of the event about what drew him into community service and politics -- "this community taught me that ordinary people, when working together, can do extraordinary things" -- but spent most of the rest of the event serving as the moderator of the panel.
    Obama asked questions here and there to prompt answers from the (nervous) panelists and occasionally would interject his own views, particularly about how the silo-ing of media consumption had created a culture where no one really listens to each other anymore.
    But, generally speaking, Obama wasn't actually talking all that much. And, what he did talk about -- the importance of organizing, gerrymandering, the fracturing of the media -- weren't exactly red-meat talking points. It was a professor holding a discussion group with students.
    Which, of course, makes sense. Obama's default position is professorial -- to the delight of his allies and the anger of his opponents.
    After almost 100 days of Donald Trump, the contrast could not have been more striking.
    Trump's first three-plus months in office have been largely defined by a flair for the dramatic and an absolute conviction that the course he is charting -- even if he changes course --- is the right one. There is very little in the way of philosophical conversation about what binds us -- and ails us -- as a country. It's full speed ahead at all times; no BS -- or navel-gazing -- allowed.
    That isn't to say one style of leadership is better than the other (although public polling suggests Trump is significantly less popular at this stage of his four-year term than Obama was). It is to say that it's hard for me to imagine that the American public could have chosen two more opposite people to lead the country in consecutive elections.
    Some of this has to do with the psychology of the voter. Most people tend to favor a clear change in leadership at the end of one president's eight years in the White House. They react to the qualities they dislike in the current president and seek out a new candidate who seems to embody the opposite of those traits.
    So we went from the brilliant but scandal-plagued Bill Clinton to the solid and steady George W. Bush to the young dynamic leader in Obama. And then to to businessman and political outsider Donald Trump.
    But this latest change isn't just par for the course. While Bush clearly represented a break from the negative aspects of the Clinton years, he and his predecessor were still on the same political continuum. Both had been governors. Both had spent years cultivating a political operation. Both were, at their root, orthodox politicians.