Lango Community Gulu

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Man Arrested in Lira for Hate Speech Against President Museveni

Lira, Uganda | Police in Lira City have arrested a 39-year-old man over alleged computer misuse after he circulated a video containing hate speech directed at the President of Uganda. The suspect, identified as Okuja Fred, a resident of Anai Oki Cell in Lira City West Division, was arrested on October 1, 2025, at around 12:12 pm. He had recorded and shared the video on social media, particularly TikTok, according to police. Police spokesperson for North Kyoga Region, SP PJ Okema, confirmed the arrest and said the suspect is currently detained at Lira City Central Police Division as investigations continue. Okema warned the public against engaging in computer misuse, including the circulation of hate speech, saying such actions are criminal and punishable under the Computer Misuse Act and other laws of Uganda. Source

Court Blocks Akena’s Presidential Bid but Allows UPC to Field Candidates

Kampala, Uganda | The High Court in Kampala has delivered a partial ruling in the case filed by Uganda People’s Congress (UPC) and its president, Hon. Jimmy James Michael Akena, against the Electoral Commission (EC). Justice Bernard Namanya, in a ruling delivered on October 1, 2025, declined to compel the EC to nominate Akena as a presidential candidate in the 2025/2026 General Elections, but allowed UPC to continue sponsoring candidates for other elective positions. The dispute began after the EC on September 22, 2025, rejected Akena’s nomination, citing non-compliance with the UPC constitution and an expired Executive Committee. The Commission maintained that Akena’s attempt to extend his term through a virtual delegates’ conference on July 26, 2025, was illegal, having been stopped by a prior court order. Several party members, including Peter Walubiri and Denis Adim Enap, had also lodged complaints challenging Akena’s legitimacy as party president. Justice Namanya ruled that it was impossible to reopen presidential nominations since the exercise had already closed on September 24, 2025. He emphasized that public interest and constitutional timelines for elections outweighed Akena’s request. The court observed that previous judgments had already barred Akena from seeking a third term as UPC president and said this cast serious doubt on the legality of the July 26 delegates’ conference. On the issue of party leadership, Justice Namanya faulted the EC’s decision that declared the UPC Executive Committee expired, warning that such a move would cripple the party’s ability to field candidates. He stressed that UPC should not be locked out of the 2025/2026 elections and issued an interim order restraining the EC from enforcing that part of its decision. The ruling means Akena remains off the presidential ballot, but UPC as a party retains the legal standing to sponsor parliamentary and local government candidates in the forthcoming elections. Source

Op-Ed: From Uncoordinated Troop Movements to Collective Vision: Why Lango Must Present a Real Agenda During the President’s Visit”

As the President begins his campaign tour in Lango – Nine districts, countless voices—but without unity, Lango risks walking away from the 2026 campaigns empty-handed once again! By Dr. Bob Marley Achura Lango today stands at a dangerous crossroads. We are a people of 2.1 million, spread across nine districts, blessed with fertile land, a resilient spirit, and a proud history of leadership. Yet in health and education, the two pillars that determine whether any community thrives or perishes, we are drifting without direction. The question that should trouble every Lango elder, elite, and cultural leader is simple but piercing: What exactly are our priorities for education and health, and how far behind have we fallen? A President in Our Midst, But What Shall We Say? In a few days, the President will set foot in Lango for his first lap of the 2026 election campaigns. He will spend a full week within our sub-region, meeting leaders and communities. The critical question is this: when that moment arrives, what will be our agenda as Lango? What shall we present to him as our collective priorities in health and education, just to mention two sectors that shape the destiny of any nation? Will we, once again, reduce ourselves to chanting for cattle compensation “Culu dok a Lango” while other regions present clear, forward-looking demands that secure scholarships, universities, hospitals, and infrastructure? If all we take to the President is another fragmented chorus about cows, we risk walking away empty-handed while other regions smile all the way to the banks. For once, let us be strategic and organized. A People Planning in the Dark The painful truth is that we do not even know ourselves. We lack a comprehensive record of our people, their ages, educational attainment, health needs, occupations, or skills. While NIRA maintains a national identification system, we have not leveraged this resource to build our own database that could serve as the backbone of community planning. Without such knowledge, our strategies are little more than guesswork. And the consequences are visible everywhere. Across universities in Uganda, our presence is fading. At Lira University, situated in the heart of Lango, fewer than one in ten students is from our own community. Even more alarming, nearly three-quarters of Lango’s brightest medical students are either dropping out or delaying their studies because they cannot afford tuition. Our cultural institution, meanwhile, continues to table billion-shilling budgets, yet the bulk of this money goes to administration rather than the education and health of our people. How Others Are Moving Ahead While we hesitate and debate, our neighbors are forging ahead with clarity of purpose. In Teso, the Iteso Cultural Union under Papa Emorimor Paul Sunde Emolot recently secured more than 300 scholarships for its young people, including aviation training slots, science scholarships directly from State House, and tuition discounts negotiated with universities. The Acholi have also demonstrated strategic boldness, working with private institutions to create bursaries and even exploring partnerships with Chinese firms for development projects. Buganda, long a master at institution building, sustains the Kabaka Foundation, a body that provides structured scholarships tied to community service. The Banyakigezi, often overlooked, have quietly built the Paulo Ngologoza Fund at Kabale University, targeting the education of the girl-child. The lesson is stark: while others negotiate, organize, and secure the future of their children, Lango continues to improvise and hope that government handouts or external goodwill will save us. What We Must Do Differently The first step is to accept that we cannot outsource responsibility for our destiny. No cultural institution anywhere in the world thrives on external donations alone. Buganda shows us that communities can mobilize their own people through structured contributions anchored in legal frameworks. We must summon the courage to do the same. Beyond resource mobilization, we must immediately invest in an emergency education fund to ensure no Lango medical student is forced out of university for lack of tuition. Our cultural leadership must follow the example of the Iteso and meet the Head of State to negotiate dedicated scholarship slots for our children. Teacher development, too, must move from rhetoric to action; without quality teachers, even the best scholarship programs will falter. In health, we need more than underfunded hospitals and empty promises. Lango must pioneer community health worker training programs, establish functional health facilities across all districts, and negotiate boldly with development partners for equipment and supplies. Our medical graduates, languishing in villages because government cannot fund internships, must be supported by our own community initiatives. And in doing all this, we should not ignore the power of our traditional medicine, which, if properly documented and integrated, can complement modern healthcare. The Role of the Elite and the Diaspora The educated class of Lango, our doctors, lawyers, engineers, entrepreneurs, and academics cannot afford to sit on the sidelines. Transformation is never driven by the masses alone; it requires vision and sacrifice from those who have had the privilege of education and opportunity. Our diaspora community, spread across continents, must also be mobilized systematically. Other African communities have built powerful networks abroad that funnel scholarships, mentorship, and investment back home. We cannot continue to treat our diaspora as a disconnected curiosity rather than an integral part of our future. A Time for Bold Decisions What Lango needs now is not another abstract strategic plan but decisive leadership. The Won Nyaci should urgently convene an emergency summit of our MPs, ministers, cultural leaders, and business elites to craft a unified agenda. That summit must not end with speeches but with binding commitments: a comprehensive database of our people, a properly governed education and health trust, diaspora engagement strategies, and concrete negotiations with State House and international partners. The President’s visit is a golden opportunity. If we approach it as nine districts moving in nine different directions, we shall achieve little, if not nothing at all. If we come with a united, strategic, and evidence-based agenda on health and education, we will walk

Inside the NRM Manifesto 2026–2031: Museveni Vows to ‘Protect the Gains’

Kampala, Uganda | President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni has unveiled the National Resistance Movement (NRM) Manifesto for 2026–2031, pledging to consolidate the country’s progress under the theme “Protecting the Gains.” The manifesto outlines ambitious plans to drive wealth creation, expand infrastructure, improve social services, and deepen regional integration. Seven Pillars for Transformation In his address, Museveni highlighted seven key priorities that will guide Uganda in the next five years: peace, development, wealth, jobs, services, markets, and political federation. He said Uganda’s economy has expanded from USD 3.9 billion in 1986 to USD 66.1 billion by 2025/26, attributing the growth to peace, stability, and infrastructure investment. He stressed that the NRM’s mission is to fully monetise the economy by turning every Ugandan into a producer of goods or services. The Candidate’s Profile The manifesto also presents Museveni’s political journey, from his early activism in the 1960s, his leadership in the NRA liberation struggle, to his four decades at the helm. It highlights his Pan-Africanist outlook and global recognition for peace and development initiatives. Five Priority Areas The NRM manifesto focuses on five thematic areas: Growing the Economy and Creating Wealth – advancing commercial agriculture, manufacturing, tourism, ICT, and youth talent. Infrastructure Development – expanding transport networks, energy, housing, and industrial parks. Human Development – investing in education, healthcare, water, and environment. Democracy, Governance and Security – deepening democracy, fighting corruption, improving security and justice. Regional Integration and Federation – strengthening Pan-Africanism and the East African Federation. Achievements Listed The party points to significant gains made over the past five years: GDP growth averaging 6.3%. Poverty reduced from 21.4% in 2016 to 16.1% in 2025. Life expectancy rising to 68 years, from 43 in 1986. Infant mortality reduced to 28 per 1,000 live births. Literacy rate improved to 74%. Electricity access expanded to 60% of the population. Tarmacked road network increased to 6,288km. Unfinished Business Museveni acknowledged challenges that still require urgent attention, including 33% of households stuck in subsistence farming, limited value addition to exports, high youth unemployment, persistent corruption, and weaknesses in public service delivery. Key Promises The manifesto pledges free education in government schools, improved healthcare and accountability in drug distribution, expansion of industrial parks and urban development, investment in irrigation, science and technology, and greater support for sports, arts and creative industries. Regional Integration Museveni underscored the importance of East African unity, warning that fragmented states cannot secure prosperity or defend their interests against external powers. He said that for Africa to guarantee prosperity and security, political unity is not optional but essential. The Bottom Line The NRM manifesto positions the party as the custodian of Uganda’s achievements, with Museveni urging voters to renew their trust. He assured Ugandans that the government has more capacity now than ever before and pledged not to let them down. Key Facts at a Glance: Theme: Protecting the Gains. GDP target: USD 500 billion economy in coming years. Priority Sectors: Agriculture, Manufacturing, Tourism, ICT. Free Education: To be implemented in all government schools. Regional Goal: East African Federation. Source