Tuesday, 4 March 2014

TORO KING OYO RESHUFFLES HIS CABINET.



King Oyo Nyimba of Toro kingdom has reshuffled his cabinet. The new cabinet was presented to the kingdom parliament on Friday by the Omuhikirwa (prime minister), Steven Kaliba.
In the changes,  Kennedy Gusalire was appointed finance minister, replacing Francis Mugenyi who was shifted to the water and environment portfolio.

The former kingdom regent, Rev. Richard Baguma was appointed culture minister to replace Harriet Nyakake who becomes the deputy kingdom prime minister and minister of clan mobilization.

Amos Mugisa, formerly kingdom premier who resigned in 2012, was appointed minister for palace affairs.

Oyo also appointed new members of the kingdom land board, who were later approved by the Orukurato (parliament). For close to one year, the kingdom did not have a land board. This stalled the collection of revenue from squatters on kingdom land.

During the meeting, Oyo’s paternal aunt Princess Elizabeth Bagaya, presented to the Orukurato a copy of the amended kingdom constitution, which will be discussed in the next Orukurato session.

Oyo also directed the kingdom speaker Saul Mugasa and the prime minister to have the Orukurato members sit after every three months.


Gov’t announces sh105b for rural financial services

Prime Minister Amama Mbabazi has disclosed that the government has designed a new rural financial services programme, the Project for Financial Inclusion in Rural Areas (PROFIRA) under which village savings and loan associations will be supported.

Mbabazi said the seven-year sh105b project would be funded by the Rome-based United Nations agency, International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) which has already committed US$30m (close to UShs 74bn) on concessional terms.  
 “You have already heard from the President that we are abolishing NAADS,” Mbabazi affirmed. He said the money saved would become government counterpart funding for the new project aimed at providing better rural financial services.

The government has been implementing the rural finance programme through the Micro finance Support Centre. Mbabazi reaffirmed government commitment to fighting household poverty.

He said the government was reviewing financial laws to protect people’s savings in banks, micro finance institutions, and village savings and credit cooperative organizations (SACCOs).

“Saving is a source of wealth but Ugandans have the worst saving culture in the world with less than one percent,” Mbabazi noted. He advised them to emulate the Japanese, whose economy is the third richest and save 60 percent of their income for investment.

“We are determined as a government to raise the standards of our people by empowering them to fight household poverty, using the money that has been going to NAADS,” he said.

There are 2,030 SACCOs in the country, 735 of which have been getting government support through provision of technical advice, office furniture, safes and computers, among others. Under the new project, more support will go to struggling SACCOs.