Showing posts with label East Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label East Africa. Show all posts

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Kenya General Elections 2017

Kenya Elections 2017: Possible outcomes

By

Jacob Waiswa Buganga
IMI Uganda
www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
+256774336277
waiswajacobo@yagoo.co.uk

Kenya set precedence. It broke bare the traditional tendencies of African democracies - sticking to power and rigging elections or suspending elections, altogether. Therefore, it was "Unafrican" and strange part of the governance system in the region. Also, it must have been received with surprise by the regional leaders.

 Several reports showed that Uganda ever interfered in the electoral process of Kenya in the efforts to defend the statuesque. There were similar reports that Uganda security wore Kenya police uniform, with a mission of influencing election outcomes in Uhuru's favour. Russia too was said to have been involved. Besides, calls from Uganda and other regional countries to cling to power and reject Supreme Court outcomes were expected.

Analysts said that the court decision had a lot to do with the 2007 election violence in which over 1400 people died. The awful memories of the violence could not encourage perpetrators to stage a similar episode this time around. On the contrary, militant civilians were determined to die for justice or otherwise see Raila in power. Two of my friends in Kenya told said to me, "no Raila, no peace, and we are ready to die." This followed my question that, "what if Raila does not become president?" From their responses you could see sheer determination to see Raila in power. It was also evident from the conversation that, for long Raila was cheated out of elections and Kenyans had simply lost the patience. This time no chance would be given to Uhuru to either rig his way to power or assume the presidency. Simply, he had to go. It was just enough for majority of Kenyans to keep Uhuru and Ruto at the helm of Kenya leadership.

Early congratulatory messages and reports from observers caused outrage. At least, this time, civilians did not burst out in full-scale violence as the case in the Kibaki era. Media reports indicated total number of the dead as about 24 people. The congratulatory messages were sent along side concessions from some elite Raila supporters, who traditionally knew that once announced winner, no matter how victory was achieved, it remained valid. Not even the courts would nullify it. It would have been most pleasing if congratulatory messages returned after court ruling for the very extraordinary occasion in the history of democratic governance and thank Uhuru for consideration of nationhood against self. I think, on this event, Uhuru rose to become a hero, to be remembered alongside the likes of Nelson Mandela and other renowned statesmen and women.

Although there were some cases of violence, restraint was well exercised to give way for the courts to decide. The two "elephants" too made efforts to control respective supporters and give the courts a chance to arbitrate and decide on the matter. The outcome of the court was most eventful in the history of electoral disputes in any African country, when it ruled in favour of the opposition. The court decision was celebrated by oppressed people and opposition leaders in the region and made week-long news globally. Some opinion leaders explained that court action aimed at preventing another election violence that threatened the election process.

One aspect about Kenya people though, is: they are decisive and very well know what they want and get it if they have to, unlike people in other African countries. I would say, for example; that, Kenyans are not like Ugandans, even the Armies in both countries are different. Ugandans have been suppressed for long whose reaction is latent in a short run, but highly explosive in the long run, more over carrying an ethnic context.

Unlike Ugandan Army, which is still tied to a personality cult in Museveni, Kenyan Army is largely national. Uganda Army is still evolving in as far as carrying national image and appeal are concerned. Indeed the soldiers in Uganda care so much about their country, but the regime will never allow them to express it and respond to the plunder and chaotic socioeconomic and political environment in which the dictatorship thrives best. They only wish that civilians make the changes possible on their behalf, instead. Morally, they are at par with oppressed civilians as for any professional soldier or as human beings with families and friends within the civilian population.

The general elections in Kenya, as a whole, has for long carried a sharp ethnic line - featuring Kikuyu verses rest of the country's tribes. The country's socio-economic and socio-political structures have for decades been aligned, according Tribes, with the Kikuyu taking the biggest share of every aspect of Kenya resources and good life. There has been hopelessness on the part of other tribes, owing to generations of poverty and marginalisation, where urban crime has emerged as major way of life for the marginalised youths.

Despite the awful conditions of life most Kenyans have gone through for centuries, their proactive, principled and bold tendencies have never been compromised, and always showed promise that one day they would liberated themselves from maladministration and nepotism.

The Kenya's revolutionary outcomes I see today are therefore not surprising. I have had a chance to interact with Kenya youthful activists, but one thing you can never take away from them is the zeal and courage, which are very characteristic of youth-hood. In Uganda such activism happens in isolation, one time in a long time. Universities and colleges, which were the brains of the whole country ceased to be, activism significantly declined, vibrant intellectual debates at universities went so low down the drain, and any political discussions are now highly compromised. The Mamdanis and Nsibambis have never been replaced. From here, other public sectors assumed dysfunctional states and private sectors suffer as a consequence. A country where youths once became national leaders at 30 during the pre-colonial and post-colonial eras, active drivers of country's development endeavours, is no longer the same. Museveni succeeded at shuttering social life of Ugandans through poverty and political alienation as tools of oppression. What we have in Uganda is rule by pensioners who have ceased to act visionary and representative of the country's future. Should the majority and corrupt members of parliament also decide that, there should no longer be retirement age for civil servants. Incidentally, the regime youths working for pensioner-politicians are shameless, celebrating the short term pleasures from regime handouts and unknowingly compromises their lifelong legacies of being champions of youth-hood they ought to have and be part of the good history of Uganda and democratic Africa. That is very possible, more so, now, when the regime can change anytime, any day and very soon.

Kenya is very impressive. Young people are very much at the forefront of change, and never succumb to tendencies of oppression that Uhuru regime tried to exhibit. The 2017 general elections were not only about the struggle for the structural and fundamental changes, but a desperate need to change the highly corrupt and gangster government of Uhuru Kenyatta.

As such, for the first time in Kenya history, the tribal factor counted was minimal, and Uhuru was bound to fall. In fact, the election defeat of Uhuru was bound to be a rebirth of Kenya. The active participation of youths and women was very spectacular. It was a true reflection of the need for structural reforms, to eliminate structural violence and achieve lasting peace for Kenya.

Particularly, the women; their socioeconomic and political liberation has been long overdue. Their enormous entry into the political arena marks the end of much dreaded cultural stereotypes against them. And a new Kenya, without Uhuru, was bound to break the myth of change-of-regimes as evil, and instead push for change as guarantor of new lease of life for citizens in neighbouring countries, and change as much desirable if national development is to be fast tracked.

The court decision on disputed elections was highly celebrated as victory for democratic governance in Africa. Kenya took the model role of revolutionarising the region from military dictatorship to democratic governance, and join Southern and Western African countries. It showed how strong-willed Kenyans are and independence judicial arm of government, which in countries like Uganda, is only a dream. The poor young lawyers are nurtured in the same sorry state of the legal environment and are recycled to become corrupt as part of the profession. Many Ugandans wished to be citizens of Kenya, to be led justly and genuinely and express their political will, which they lack. This showed how proud Ugandans are of Kenya. They would beg Kenyans to keep pushing for good governance; inspire them so that they can aspire to become the Kenya of today.

The changes in Kenya will have some interesting yet positive outcomes in the region, as the decline in wars and humanitarian crises which characterise the region from independence times. Since independence, the departure of imperialists has seemed to be more curse than a blessing. The promising African leaders turned rulers and dictators, worse than the foreign colonisers. They became new colonisers.

Therefore, the final nail in the coffin of bad governance in the region shall be realised, when the Uhuru leadership finally falls. This should the prayer for Africa from any lover of liberated minds and fully liberated Africa. However, with all these said, Uhuru must be congratulated for respecting the court decision, which any other person in his position would castigate and, instead, stick to power. Even possible influences from his counterparts - Museveni and others could be resisted! It is a legacy set, for which he can always be remembered for.


Saturday, September 16, 2017

Integrated Mental Heath Initiative 2016/17

INTEGRATED MENTAL HEALTH INITIATIVE
Current and on-going activities:
Regular studies and analyses on mental health related subjects.  
Home visits and home based care.
Psychotherapy sessions.
Mindfulness practice for mental development and peaceful states of the mind and the environment
Caregiver training.
Community sensitisation for mental health empowerment.
Partnerships and collaborations for conducting interventions and resources mobilisation.
Formation of community mental health clubs for self-help and achieve self-sufficiency.
Capacity building for organisations, community leaders, teachers and parents.
Strengthening development linkages and form affiliation for clients, supported communities and auxiliary mental health services reinforcers.
Streamlining mental health practices among development agencies and grass root organisations.
Monitoring and learning.
Integration of best practices in programing.
Competency and professional development for staff and updates and newly developed psychotherapeutic programmes.
Advocacies and campaigns to promote public mental health.
IMI Experience (Lessons):
The mind was the vehicle for achieving the highest of goals, including public health goals. However, mental illness from across the globe was increasingly evident highly contagious. The sick and neglected environment set the stage for the trials and tribulations. Healing needed integration. The macro level conditions provided trying moments for individuals to either be subdued or to subdue and prevail. It was those who failed to overcome the conditions that suffered. And both preventive and healing medicines were rendered ineffective. Life after chronic stage was not catered for, yet clinical conditions were insufficient without aspects of environment and spiritual diagnostics of mental illnesses. Without dealing with macro level conditions, mental health care was not care at all. Stronger attention ought to focus on institutional net-working and cooperation with related institutions and persons combining forces to realize the project’s goal, through carrying out annual national-wide conferences on conflict resolution, international relations and nurturing peace as gateways to human and ecological security as well as initiating community-led and support development infrastructure to reduce vulnerability to mental dysfunction and prosperity for all. Such conferences formulate adoptable guidelines, legislative or legal structural designs and policies for local and international managers for use in decision-making processes. The project membership and affiliation was unlimited (consisting of its staff, hired experts, researchers, volunteers, interns, guest speakers, collaborating institutions, etc) in nature, since we all need one another in the struggle for human and ecological rights and entitled to them. In its interventional programmes, the project has interests and undertakings in spirituality (faiths, beliefs or religious sects); mental and general health, including socio-cultural, socio-environmental, ecological, socio-economical, and socio-political spheres for general well being and functioning of the communities in their day-to-day lives.
Sustainability strategy and lessons:
Community ownership and mainstreaming mental health services in the main vessel of health care delivery.
Representation of mental health concerns in key areas of health administration and policy formulation.
Formation of mental health clubs and associations -with which to build capacity and help reduce pressure on existing manpower while helping to reduce adverse impact caused by mental poor health -characterising violence, abuse and neglect of family and social responsibilities.
Integrate major predisposing factors to mental illnesses such as human rights abuses, environmental degradation, ignorance and poor socioeconomic environment to lessen vulnerability and promote economic and general mental well being.
Beneficiaries will be grouped in viable economic forces to gain economic, social and participation power so as to recover fully from economic and psychological depression -in addition to strengthening mental abilities to adjust towards and forth from any degree of depression (Mental health empowerment).
After working for the parent organisation, they are graduated to manage their own businesses with minimal supervision.
The IMI continues to thrive from the shared resources to run organisations projects further ahead with remits from its internal investments build from tapping from the mighty talents and skills of its clients.
Replicability:
After three years of clients working with IMI, they are prepared to enter a one year transition into gaining administrative independence so that they can run and thrive on their own using the proceeds gained from working for the parent organization (IMI) plus a booster grant of 500USD -given to them.

First by widening resources base through renewable resource strategy, direct engagement with potential funding, utilise local engagement -to raise resources for self-help, and investment in its accumulated assets for sustainable revenue and self-funding as well as maximise private consultations. In line with increased resource base, the organisation, which now operates at district level, will initialize country-wide, regional, inter-regional, and global mental health facilities for it service and products utilization.
Best practices:
Improve office infrastructure,
Support sessions so that we do not have to charge fees to needy clients,
Reach out to communities who cannot make it to our offices,
Provide free food and clothings to beneficiaries,
Support self-sustenance of our beneficiaries,
Provide basic literacy trainings to children and youth,
Support mental empowerment programme for our beneficiaries -including youths, parents and local leaders.
First by widening resources base through renewable resource strategy, direct engagement with potential funding, utilize local engagement -to raise resources for self-help, and investment in its accumulated assets for sustainable revenue and self-funding as well as maximize private consultations. In line with increased resource base, the organisation, which now operates at district level, will initialize country-wide, regional, inter-regional, and global mental health facilities for it service and products utilization.
Way forward:
Future IMI will provide entrance for sustained healing and empower affected individuals to cope with the wider worldly challenges, brave the test, find mechanisms for problem solving and overcoming them so that they emerge victorious and happy yet mentally well. IMI in its response relishes multi-systemic and multi-ideological strategies to transform afflictions of individuals, groups, communities, nationals, and regions for into drivers of mental and general wellbeing. Without such amount of leadership that rallies forces and professional responses towards social, economic, governance and individual afflictions, communities like any other organism will endlessly be threatened by misery and extermination from life while adding more pressure to already vulnerable sections of society, unable to cope with macro development pressures and overcome them in order to be mentally well –with established comprehensive mental healing infrastructure under IMI that, after chronic stages of mental illness, gives caregivers support; community is prepared on how best to relate with vulnerable members, leadership is lobbied to allocate resources, and support vulnerable communities physical and spiritual needs with ties to mental illness, and mental and skills training for vulnerable sections of the community.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

IMI Sponsored Information - SunSystems Hotel Management System

Internationally Digitised Hotel
Computerised Hotel Management System 

SunSystems Hotel Management System is a new generation of hotel management software for Windows. It is a complete solution, beginning with reservations, checkIn/checkOut, and ending with billing and tax reports. Other privileges; you can make reservations, indicates current stays, gives restaurant orders and prices prints invoices and receipts, gives clients' financial statements, shows status of rooms and calender of days lived, provides for staff shift management, provides for computerised stock management of hotel, shows purchase orders made by hotel, provides for management of vendors and suppliers, gives timely reports about all transactions, has emailing system, gives client invoices and many more from the system. The user interface is highly optimised for high speed in put and the prevention of common mistakesIt is designed for use of multiComputers, and contains reliable and secure authorisation levels. The program can be set up for any currencies, taxes and gratuities. Payments can be accepted by cash, credit cards and checks.


For order call:
Uganda: Jacob +256774336277
Tanzania: Kotecha +255713376155
Or email: Jacob, mailto:waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk
Kotecha,
mailto:jiten.kotecha@gmail.com 


Tuesday, September 5, 2017

IMI MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES AS AT 2017/2018

Founder Speaking at Psychological Trauma Conference and Training Workshop in Catholic University of East Africa, Nairobi-Kenya, 2011

IMI HOMEBASED AND CLIENTCENTERED MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES
  • Psychotherapy Research and Development Services
  • Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation Services 
  • Psychological Trauma Management
  • Psychosocial Support Services – Social crisis interventions
  • Mindful Therapy and Development Services
  • Children Mental Health and Development Services
  • Love and Marriage Development and Psychotherapy Services 
  • Education Support, Mental Health and Development Services
  • Livelihood Support and Development Services
  • Refugee Mental Health and Development Services
  • Disability Support and Recreation Services
  • Conflict Transformation and Peace Building Services
  • Counterterrorism and Terror Handling Services 
  • Organisation Process and Development Services
  • Mental Health Governance and Development Services
  • Indigenous and Alternative Psychotherapy Services
  • Spirituality and Faith Healing Services

HOW YOU CAN BE INVOLVED
  • As client
  • As volunteer
  • As service activity sponsor
  • As client sponsor
  • As fundraiser
  • As donor/funder
  • As ambassador
  • As development partner
  • As friend
  • Visit us
  • Visit our blog www.integratedmhi.blogspot.ug
  • Visit our facebook page: www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative 
HOW YOU CAN REACH US
Telephone: +256774336277 or +256752542504
Email: waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk or dishma.imhs@gmail.com 

Friday, March 24, 2017

Wakiso Town Primary School: Education for a God-fearing, self-reliant, upright and responsible Citizens

Introduction
Wakiso Town Primary School (Watops) is a proud supporter of children wellbeing and education, both of which feed into each other (Wellbeing and Education).
Watops is a foundation of excellence, modeling young men and women to be God-fearing, self-reliant and patriotic. At Watops, we make the difference we want to see. 

Description of Watops:
Watops is a privately-owned primary education school that has impacted lives of community in Wakiso Town Council and Uganda in general, for the last 15 years. 

Location
We are located in Kasengejje road in Wakiso Town, along Hoima road.  

Services offered:
We offer pre-primary and primary education, mentorship and co-curricular services.

Our Vision:
Our vision is to mold upright generations for an upright nation.

Our Motto
“We struggle for tomorrow.” 

Our Mission:
Our mission is to provide a purposeful education that will help the children to be God-fearing, self-reliant, patriotic and responsible citizens.

Below are the visual impressions:


Upper School: Photo By Patience, March 2017
Headteacher Monitoring School: Photo By Patience, March 2017
Lower school learners happy to appear in photo:
By Patience, March 2017
Lower School: By Patience, March 2017


For further inquiries please do not hesitate to reach us

instantly by telephone +256772651018 or +256782393851












Monday, August 8, 2011

ENVIRONMENT AND MAN’S SELF-DESTRUCTION IN EAST AFRICA

Jacob Waiswa
Situation Health Analyst
Dishma-Inc.
P.O. Box 8885,
Kampala-Uganda
Tel. +256392614655/+256752542504
dishma.imhs@gmail.com
www.situationhealthanalysis.blogspot.com

In recent years, globalization in all facets has taken its share of influence on ways individuals live. It is the nature of their lifestyle that yields certain consequence –which, ultimately, impacts the environment –negatively or positively.

As a natural interaction phenomenon, the natural environment too gives its feedback proportionately to how individuals interact with it.

The feedback, once negative, takes the forms of natural disasters like food shortages, disease epidemics, and uncertainty of the future. The opposite will be true if the interaction is positive –like sustainable utilization of natural resources.

Lifestyle choices towards management of natural resources depicted food availability and a healthy population to manage them. Modernization is so –if there are tarmac roads, high administrative and commercial building, corporate life and not all, in terms of development of the natural environment of which humanity was part.

In just one year 4/5 days in the coolest month (July) in Kenya was as warm as Uganda unlike the previous year. There were seasoned flooding that broke sewerage systems –which in turn went on to contaminate food, water and other human environments –denying affected population access to main roads, and without electricity.

Rather than the selfish and egocentric yet destructive behaviors towards nature and feedbacks from the natural environment characterized by generating conditions for infectious diseases and “wild” rains, and famine –the people of Uganda districts of Kampala, Jinja, Mayuge, Iganga ought to borrow a leaf from their Nairobi counterparts by learning to really co-exist with nature and sustainable use of natural resources.

Buddhists cultivate their relationships with the natural environment through insight meditations. The matter of conserving the natural environment ought to go spiritual –as integral part of worship.

That will help dissolve aggression and greed towards the environment. However, recent months have showed that even a model country like Nairobi (Kenya) almost falls in the bracket of countries like Uganda in terms of food shortages and implications of climate change.

Saturday, January 15, 2011

UGANDAN PEOPLE - A BOOK ON UNDERSTANDING THEIR CULTURE...

THE BOOK

The book “Ugandan Society Observed” is a selection of Kevin’s best newspaper articles over the last 13 years. The 262 page book contains 111 articles, divided into 14 subject chapters (Religion; Sex and Love; Language; Sport; Music; Education; Media; Poverty and Inequality; Health; Tobacco; Gender and Sexual Orientation; Bazungu and Aid; The Environment; Pot Pourri). Each chapter contains a cartoon by the Monitor’s Moses Balagadde, together with a striking front cover cartoon.



THE AUTHOR


Kevin O’Connor was born in London in 1952. He obtained an MA in Economics from Cambridge University and then spent two and a half years as a volunteer (VSO) teacher in a village in Northern Nigeria . This was followed by a 20-year career with the British Council, with his last posting as its Deputy Director in Uganda . Kevin and his wife Sue, a professional photographer, returned independently to Uganda in 1997 and Kevin began his weekly Roving Eye column, initially in the Sunday Vision and then in the Sunday Monitor. The column has become an acclaimed part of the Ugandan media. Kevin and Sue are also accomplished volunteer athletics coaches.



REVIEWS

Reviews include:



“Forget the travel guide books about Uganda . If If you want insight into the country's media, music, development assistance, foreigners (whites) and sex-life, this collection of articles from the column "Roving Eye" is more entertaining and just as interesting.” Bistandsaktuelt (Norwegian monthly newspaper on Aid and Development)



“Visitors looking for a general read about contemporary Uganda to complement the travel info in the Bradt Guide are pointed to Ugandan Society Observed, a collection of essays written by Kevin O’Connor AKA “The Roving Eye”, the outspoken columnist for The Sunday Vision and more recently The Sunday Monitor.” Philip Briggs The Bradt Travel Guide – Uganda (Internet Update)



"Being Ugandan is more than skin deep. After more than a decade of living in Uganda , no matter how blond one's hair is and how pale their skin is, one is bound to take on all the characteristics of a Ugandan through and through. Kevin has produced a book that anyone coming to Uganda for the first time, and wants to bring themselves up to speed, should buy as a matter of importance." Sunday Monitor, Uganda



"Agree or disagree with him, this book is guaranteed to give you plenty of good reflection as well as great entertainment." Fr. Carlos Rodriguez, Leadership Magazine



“Ugandan Society Observed is a classic read. I thoroughly enjoyed it. Congratulations to Kevin.” Rachel Magoola (Ugandan Pop Star)



PURCHASE OPTIONS

Bookshops in Uganda e.g. Aristoc (Ug Sh 15,000).



Websites for purchase include:



Amazon www.amazon.com; Michigan State University www.msupress.msu.edu; Barnes and Noble www.bn.com; the African Books Collective www.africanbookscollective.com. The publisher's website www.fountainpublishers.co.ug (prices vary between websites)



And to hire Research Assistants and Field Officers Contact dishma.imhs@gmail.com or Call +256774336277


To attend Vipassana Meditation Technique in Uganda, book your place via Purna Wasti

And to donate to Dishma Community Advancement Programs let us know through dishma.imhs@gmail.com or call +256752542504

A case for digital mental health services in Uganda

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