As Uganda prepares to celebrate World Aids Day on 1st.Dec.2019, the first ever public memorial lecture of Philly Lutaaya will be on 29.11.2019 at Imperial Royal Hotel Kampala.
2016. Two events shaped the global news that year. The British Brexit vote and Donald Trump’s election victory over Senator Hillary Clinton in the United States Presidential elections. These two events were not supposed to happen, pollsters and political pundits were left jarring.
H.E President Yoweri Kaguta Museveni in 2016 launched the Presidential Fast-Track Initiative on AIDS aimed at ending AIDS in Uganda by 2030, which was the first of its kind globally.
In 1990, the guild contest at Makerere was between Nobert Mao and Nobert Mayombo. In many ways, this contest defined and shaped student activism politics at Makerere University.
In the 1980s when Dr. Luc Montagnier of Pasteur Institute, a French research organization was busy feuding with Dr. Robert Gallo of the American National Cancer Institute over who found the virus that causes Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS), Ugandans were grappling with what had befallen them.
African Demographers, Statisticians and Planners sat in Addis Ababa Ethiopia in March 1984 and established the Union for African Population Studies (UAPS), a Pan-African non-profit organization.
African Demographers, Statisticians and Planners sat in Addis Ababa Ethiopia in March 1984 and established the Union for African Population Studies (UAPS), a Pan-African non-profit organization.
57 years. Dating back to 1962 from 2019, Uganda broke free from the chains of colonialism. Uganda effectively gained the opportunity to exercise self-governance.
President Yoweri Museveni has said that after achieving recovery of Uganda’s economy with an annual growth of 6.1 percent over the last three decades, government is now focusing on reducing the cost of doing business by investing in electricity, lowering the cost credit and transport.