Friday 28 September 2012

Top education ministry official summoned over graft

Top education ministry official summoned over graft
By Simon Masaba

Police detectives on Wednesday summoned the commissioner for secondary education over misappropriation of $150m (about sh375b) meant for the training of post-primary school teachers countrywide.

John Mary Agaba was due for interrogation yesterday, but failed to turn up at the Criminal Intelligence and Investigations Directorate (CIID) in Kibuli where the detectives were to quiz him.

Agaba’s lawyer talked to the CIID director, Grace Akullo, apparently explaining why his client failed to show up, but declined talk to the press about the subject. It is also not clear when Agaba will appear.

Sources said Agaba is facing charges of embezzlement, causing financial loss and abuse of office.

“Most school teachers countrywide never got trained and the hardship allowances for primary school teachers in the hard-to-reach areas never reached them,” a Police source said.

Last week, the Police opened a probe into the ministry with the interrogation of John Baptist Ssemakula, the former assistant commissioner for personnel and Florence Malinga, the former commissioner in charge of planning.

They were questioned over alleged sectarianism and nepotism at the ministry in which the permanent secretary, Francis Lubanga, is accused of replacing several employees in key positions with his relatives.
  

Accessed from: http://www.newvision.co.ug/news/635677-top-education-ministry-official-summoned-over-graft.html

Saturday 8 September 2012

BUNYORO COMMUNITY ON OIL


OIL: SATATEMENT ISSUED BY PUBLISH WHAT YOU PAY UGANDA - BUNYORO CHAPTER MEMBERS AT THE END OF COMMUNITY PEOPLE’S PUBLIC HEARINGS REGARDING THE RIGHTS OF LAND OWNERS AND ENVIRONMENTALISTS UNDER ARTICLES 244 AND 26 OF THE CONSTITUTION, HELD IN THE VILLAGES OF KYAPULONI, KIGAAGA, BUTIMBA, KIDOMA, KABAALE, TONYA, BUJUMBURA, KYANGWARI, KABWOYA AND KIZIRANFUMBI-BUNYORO, BETWEEN 28TH AUGUST AND 1ST SEPTEMBER 2012
 
Preamble
The Africa Institute for Energy Governance (AFIEGO) in partnership with the Publish What You Pay Uganda-Bunyoro Chapter (PWYP Uganda-B C), Navigators for Development Association, World Voices Uganda and Kwatanisa Womens Group organized 10 community hearings in the above villages entitled: “Understanding the Rights of Individual Land Owners Under Articles 244 and 26 of the Constitution in View of the Upstream, Midstream and Downstream Oil Bills 2012”. The hearings held were organized in each of the 10 villages between 28th August and 1st September 2012. On average, 52 participants comprising land owners, LC officials, community elders, CBO leaders, religious leaders, PWYP Uganda-B C executives and others participated in each of the different hearings.
The main objective of the Community hearings were to help the participants especially those being affected by the oil and other projects such as the refinery, Buseruka dam, etc to appreciate how to use Articles 244 and 26 of the Constitution to protect their land rights and tap economic opportunities created by the ongoing projects. The participants aimed at assessing the situation in view of the oil bills which are before Parliament in order to communicate their views and concerns to the legislators. We hope our contributions will help parliament to put in place good oil laws to promote social, economic and environmental rights of the communities for the common good.
During the hearings, AFIEGO lawyers and partners took the participants through various laws and policies that provide for the protection of citizens rights on natural resources, land, water, lakes, rivers, fisheries, cultivation, grazing and others. The participants were also trained on the various opportunities and challenges that are more often associated with the oil industry and how to go through them successfully. In this respect, the Constitution, relevant environmental laws (NEMA Act, Water Act, Tree Planting Act, UWA Act, etc), oil laws/bills and others were reviewed to assess the strength and weaknesses and how to fill such gaps. Specifically and with emphasis, the 3 oil bills currently before parliament were summarized and presented to the participants to enable them increase their appreciation of the contents therein to ensure effective public participation in decision making processes. The gaps were identified, observations and recommendations made.
After presentations and animated discussions, the hearings made the following common observations and recommendations:
 
Observations
  1. The current oil bills 2012 do not protect the interest of individual land owners as envisaged under articles 244 and 26 of the Constitution 1995 (as amended). There is no mention about the fate of land owners in the oil bills.
 
  1. The interest of individual land owners under Article 244(3) cannot be addressed by flawed Resettlement Action Plans that are being prepared and compiled by consultants who don’t understand the conditions under which the affected communities live,
 
  1. Further, the current Resettlement Action Plan (RAP) being undertaken regarding the refinery will not guarantee justice because of the Minister’s failure to put in place formal regulations for the assessment and payment of compensation as required by section 20 of the Land Acquisition Act Cap 226. Instead, the RAP will present biased conclusions of consultants and government which will impact on the communities negatively.
 
  1. It is unconstitutional for the developers of the refinery to tell the local communities not to plant perennial crops in the proposed refinery land before payment of compensation to the affected people. This is affecting the capacity of household heads to sustain their families
  2. The participants further observed that the current section 71, and schedules 6 and 7 of the Public Finance Bill 2012 that gives 93% and 7% of the royalties to the central government and districts respectively falls below the standards of equity and justice as required by article 26 of the Constitution.
  3. Section 71 of the above bill is a distortion of the culture established by the Mining Act of 2003 which provides the sharing of the royalties in the order of 80% to central government, 17% to producing districts and 3% to land owners.
  4. The oil bills 2012 also don’t provide for a land owner an option to lease where he or she fails to agree with options of compensation or resettlement. Leasing land will enable the land owners to continue getting rent throughout the oil production period and recover the land after oil exhaustion.
  5. The oil bills don’t provide for compensation to include value added by the discovery of oil on the land. This is a violation of Article 26 of the Constitution.
  6. More so, all the current oil bills do not recognize our Kingdom as the owner of Bunyoro Kitara land and this is a disrespect of our culture contrary to Uganda’s Constitution.
  7. Local community engagements in the legislative processes and resettlement action plans regarding oil have been very weak and sometimes lacking completely. It is only NGOs/CBOs that are helping the communities to get some information. To make it worse, the few engagements facilitated by the government are conducted in English that is foreign to majority villagers.
  8. There is little access to information regarding the positive and negative impacts of the refinery and pipelines planed to be constructed from different oil wells to the refinery by all stakeholders for the purposes of effective public participation.
  9. There is a culture of poor implementation of laws and policies and this is already affecting natural resources such as rivers and river banks, lakes and lake shores, forest and game reserves/parks, grazing and agricultural lands, fishing communities and others. If this trend continues, our communities will suffer the oil curse.
  10. Corruption is failing all developments at all levels and all will not be different. The government should first solve the problem of corruption before commencing oil production.
  11. We salute parliament for making good laws. However, it should use her oversight powers to ensure that such laws are implemented to benefit the constituencies.
  12. In all Africa’s oil producing countries, oil has turned respective Presidents into worst dictators. It is therefore necessary that the powers of the president be reduced by parliament.
 
Recommendations
 
  1. Reduce the powers of the president regarding oil management: The new oil laws should avoid the African culture of giving a president excessive powers over the management and utilization of natural resources which they have continued to turned into tools of tyranny, oppression and exploitation against their citizens including other institutions of government such as parliament and judiciary. Parliament should retain more powers over the executive control of oil along the entire petroleum chain ie upstream, midstream and downstream.
  2. Land owners share of oil royalties: Parliament should ensure that the new oil laws guarantee the right of the land owners to get 3% oil royalties as a trade off for their land and inconvenience. This is in line with Articles 244 and 26 of the Constitution 1995 (as amended).
  3. Regulations for assessing and paying compensation: Parliament should use its oversight powers to compel government to immediately put in place regulations for the assessment and payment of compensation in line with Section 20 of the Land Acquisition Act Cap 226 in order to protect affected people from being exploited by profit minded companies and some corrupt people in government.
  4. Resettlement Action Plans (RAP): RAP should strictly be conducted in line with the Assessment and Payment of Compensation Regulations to protect the rights and interests of the affected people. This will avoid over reliance on the government valuer and districts land boards which are never independent to make reliable decisions for the affected people.
  5. In line with Article 26 of the Constituion, the communities in the proposed refinery area of Kabaale and other areas should not be stopped from using their land until full compensation is paid to them. The new oil laws should make it clear that a developer/government can only acquire a right over the owner’s land after paying full and agreed compensation to the owner.
  6. Option to lease land: the new oil laws should provide an option to land owners to lease their land to oil project developers in addition to resettlement and compensation.
  7. Oil royalties: the oil laws should at least adopt the royalty sharing under the Mining Act of 80% to central government, 17% to districts and 3% to land owners.
  8. Royalty to the Kingdom: in addition to shares to districts and land owners, the new oil laws should give a share of 12.5% to the Kingdom of Bunyoro as the overall owner of land in Bunyoro to enable the King help His people. The central government should retain 67.5% of the royalty of oil produced from the Kingdom.
  9. Value of land: the new oil laws should ensure that the compensation value includes that of discovered oil or the value of the project to be undertaken by the developer.
  10. Recognize Bunyoro Kingdom as an owner of land: the new oil laws should recognize our kingdom as an owner of land.
  11. Effective access to information: the new oil laws should allow the communities to access relevant information on projects that affect them without exceptions.
  12. Implementation of laws: parliament should use its oversight powers to ensure that laws and policies are implemented to their logical conclusions. Parliament should know that putting in place a law and fail to implement or cause implementation is a waste of time and the main challenge facing Uganda today is poor implementation of laws rather than lack of it. And Uganda cannot survive the oil curse amidst poor law implementation and enforcement. The parliament should address this through the new oil laws once and for all.
  13. Eliminate corruption: the new oil laws should provide for life imprisonment for anyone found guilty of misusing oil revenues. Even the president should not be given immunity on issues of oil transparency. Further, anyone suspected of corruption regarding oil should step aside of public office until investigations are over and is cleared of wrong doing.
  14. Ring fence transboundary resources: the new oil laws should recognize the special nature of Lake Albert, River Nile and other transboundary resources, and their importance on regional peace and survival of mankind. The laws should give these resources special protection to avoid possible degradation from oil activities that may cause cross-border wars between Uganda and her neighbors. Remember, Lake Albert shares water with R. Nile that traverses DRC, South Sudan, Sudan, Egypt, and Mediterranean Sea to world oceans. Pollution to any of these resources may cause regional and world wars.
  15. Public Hearings: The new oil laws should re-enforce the Environmental Impact Assessment Regulations of 1998 to provide for mandatory public hearings for all oil and oil related projects to stop the ongoing secretive EIA processes.
  16. Translation of EIA Reports: the oil laws should provide for mandatory translation of EIA reports into respective local languages to enable effective participation of local communities in the conservation of the environment using EIA mitigation measures.
  17. Guidelines for oil exploitation in protected areas: the oil laws should clearly provide clear guidelines for conducting oil activities in protected areas. This should go beyond the current provisions in the UWA and NEMA laws where NEMA and UWA are issuing instruments and atlases that cannot be enforced due to conflict of laws and roles among institutions. The guidelines should be included in the oil laws.
  18. Recognition of customary/communal land: the new oil laws should clarify that customary/communal land is as good as titled land under the Registration of Titles Act to ease the enjoyment of Article 137 of the Constitution.
  19. Oil Disputes Tribunal: The new oil laws should provide for oil disputes tribunal to be established at all districts in the oil region 6 months upon the coming into force of the oil laws. These tribunals should deal with all oil related disputes to allow affordable justice to the affected people.
Conclusion
In conclusion, the participants thanked the organizers for organizing the hearings thereby providing an alternative to the conventional public hearings on project issues that are never conducted by the government and her agencies, and offering local communities in the oil region an opportunity to contribute to the legislative process on oil and other related matters.
 
 
Signed,
 
 
No:
NAME

CONTACT/TELEPHONE/EMAIL

Wabyona Juliet

0782638467

Mukasa Betty

0705313687

Baryabanza Agnes

0772826710

Katusabe spacious

0789996130

Kabajaguza Mary

0782569147

Chalangat Sophie

0772923051

Nanyonga Irene



Byaruhanga Robert

0772964192

Tusingwire Benon

0775704014

Atusasire Hadija

0779152438

Kamugisha Dickens

0782407085

Kaiso community 20/08/2012

Balinda Bernard

0754764745

Muhamud John

0783772528

Uthuma-Thuwambe

0788145888

Isingoma Moses



Abdu Combe

0777453507

Perusi Kaiso



Omirambe Denis

0781330511

Aruwa Cosmas

07813330511

Moses Bingi

0772186766

Kamugisha Dickens

0782407085

Grafani

Lucy Mbumbi

0782121550

Roy Tweheyo



Beatrice Ngombe



Lukundo Hannington

0787882643

Alinganyira Damsen



Kamugisha Dickens

0782407085

Kwesiga Moses

0782807786

Tusingwire Benon

0775704014

Byaruhanga Robert

07726464192

Moses Bingi

0772186766
Hoima district

Tusingwire Benon

0775704014

Byaruhanga Robert

0772964192

Nyangoma Joseline

0772628153

Kamu John

0414816119
Kyapuloni community


Businge Sinizzin
0777473611


Ngosirwala Sudik
0775488889


Selima Kalemi



Kobusinge cossy
0783793345


Kabibi Agnes
0787054875


Musa Atube
0750755154


Isingoma Jackson
0771684274


Achurobwe Patrick
0784486922


Tayomba Tom
0779430792


Businge Abdul
0781784280


Kamugisha Dickens
0782407085

Kwataniza Womens Group


Tusingwire Benon
07775704014


Magambo Fred
0784819997



















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Accessed on Saturday 8th September, 2012 from:
Betty K
KALI