A ray of hope for demoralized members of Kigarama People’s SACCO as Pre-AGMs commence

BUHWEJU – Kigarama People’s SACCO are holding pre-Annual General Meeting (AGM) in preparation for the 2021/2021 AGM due in December,2021.

According to Grace Rukumbagaza, the SACCO Chairman said, the exercise covers 6 SACCO branches and will elect 200 delegates to participate in the 2020/2021 AGM as per the SACCO bylaws.

During their first meeting in Karungu branch in Buhweju district, Rukumbagaza confirmed that 30 delegates were democratically elected instead of handpicked as some members had earlier alleged.

“It’s good that we have all witnessed how members have successfully elected their representatives not handpicked as some members had earlier alleged because you can’t hand pick all these able-bodied gentlemen and women,” said Rukumbagaza.

During his speech, Rukumbagaza also disclosed that Kigarama People’s SACCO is doing well as the board committee managed to buy a double cabin vehicle and also installed mobile banking systems to ease the banking services.

“During this Covid-19 pandemic, we spent a lot on hiring means of transport but now we have bought a car at Shs 140million, bought a house for Butare branch at Shs 60million and also used Shs 60million to complete our mobile money banking system which I want to launch today,” said Rukumbagaza.

He further added that members’ savings are secure and the SACCO is running on a share capital of Shs3.4 billion.

He also pledged that he SACCO will start giving out new loans to members effective January 2022, a time when the President promised to lift Covid19 lockdown.

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Tea Farmers lose billions of shillings

Mbarara – Tea Farmers in Buhweju are stranded with their produce following the failure of Igara-Buhweju tea factory to buy out all the available green leaves.

Igara-Buhweju tea, the only establishment in the area has a consumption capacity of only ten (10) tons every day, yet the farmers’ production is in the excess of 25 tones.

This leaves an excess of at least 15 tons of already harvested tea going to waste, causing considerable losses to the farmers.

Boniface Kanyantore, a tea grower in Bunyaruguru says, the losses are immense and this may affect their livelihood.

“We may be forced to change and switch to production of other crops. Igara factory has not helped us, because they told us to produce and they buy, but look at the waste we have,” he told theCooperator news.

Igara Tea factory was constructed in 2010, with an estimated consumption capacity of at least 10 tons per day, with a projection of at least 5-7 tons of production from the farmers.

The number of farmers enrolling into tea production has since grown beyond the projection, creating an over flow of the produce to the factory.

The Chairperson of Igara-Buhweju tea factory, Julian Amutuhaire attributes the challenge to the unstable electricity supply that unexpectedly stopped production.

“The challenge is basically due to power. Electricity here is so unreliable. The farmers are apparently producing more than what the factory can process,” Amutuhaire says.

A technician at Igara Tea, who preferred anonymity told theCooperator that, the factory requires investment in excess of Shs 4bn to create expansion and increased consumption and thus productivity.

“Management would need at least Shs300m to have this increase, although we can also work on a piece mill basis, which would require small amounts of money over time,” he intimated.

Mzee Gedeon Mugabo, a tea grower who owns 12 acres of tea in Nyakishana says, the wasted tea is so much that many think otherwise about the crop.

“We are now thinking about other options. We may want to go back to banana production because the pain in tea has become too much,” he says.

The areas most affected include; Nyakashaka TC, Engaju, Nyakashaka rural, Bureere Nyakishana and Buhweju

The District Commercial Officer, Buhweju Ian Atamba says, the amount of the green leaves produced in the area would require at least 4-5 different factories to consume the produce, and sustain the farmers.

“The number of farmers has really increased, that we need about 4 or 5 factories to consume all this tea,” he said.

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“The district needs at least four factories that will accept green leaf tea from the farmers,” he said.

The Chairman Buhweju District, Atuhaire Deo says, the Council wrote to the Ministry of Agriculture regarding the excessive production of tea and the capacity of Igara Tea factory, but have since not received a formal response.

“We are hopeful that we shall have a solution from the ministry to mitigate these losses,” he added.

Farmers, who spoke to this reporter had collected heaps of the green leaves that was drying up at the farmland, while more produce had dried up at the collection center.

In July 2021, the factory cut the price of the green leaves from the farmers by Shs 50 making Shs 400 per kilogram. It was reported that the cut was due to the Covid 19 effects to the factory which had put the factory into a hard business positioning.

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Governance row over Kabushaho Seed School before construction is complete

BUSHENYI – Residents and stakeholders in Bumbaire sub-county, Igara East, Bushenyi district are in a heated disagreement over the governance of the newly obtained Kabushaho Seed School project even before construction is complete.

The stakeholders are disagreeing over what they call illegal appointment of the members of the Board of Governors (BOG) and teachers at the Church of Uganda, West Ankole diocese founded school.

This comes at a time when the government has revamped the seed school by handing over new classroom blocks, a science laboratory and modern toilets worth Shs 2 billion.

This is part of the campaign by the government to improve the quality of education in seed schools since the beginning of the year 2020.

Similar projects were extended to districts of Buhweju, Sheema, Rubirizi and Mbarara among others that have benefited from the school program.

The disagreements have raged on with the most recent development being a petition written to the Bishop of West Ankole Diocese, Rt. Rev Johnson Twinomujuni by stakeholders, who are against the proposed appointment of any of the former board members on the new board.

The charged group has also cited loopholes in staff appointments, calling for action from higher authorities.

According to the petition seen by theCooperator, the petitioners hold that the six-member board comprises of individuals whose integrity does not measure up to the required standard and should therefore be barred from being appointed to manage the school.

“These individuals lack the requisite integrity and engaged in unethical conduct regarding the affairs of Kabushaho Seed Secondary School when they were board members before the government took over the school as a seed school and the same unethical behaviour continued during the selection of the teaching and non-teaching staff,” the petition dated 18th August 2021 reads in part.

The petitioners accuse the outgoing acting headteacher, Mr Edison Tugume of submitting his name for appointment when he is on the payroll of another government school, Karungu Seed Secondary School in Buhweju district.

Our investigative desk understands that the stakeholders have previously complained to the Ministry of Education and Sports about the selection of teaching and non-teaching staffs at the school.

They have also copied Col. Edith Nakalema, the head of the Anti-Corruption Unit asking her to investigate cases of corruption and abuse of office at the school.

According to Mr. David Kakama, the Bumbaire sub-county councillor and chairperson of Education and Social Services Committee, Bushenyi district, a committee from the district carried out investigations and found that most of the applicants submitted to the ministry for interviews and later appointments were relatives of the headteacher.

We could, however, not verify the authenticity of this allegation.

“Some of the staff members are his siblings while others are wives to the siblings. The district committee even visited the school to make more investigations and the headteacher himself admitted that they were his relatives, but said they had initially been at the school,” said Mr Kakama.

“The appointment of these people from the previous board contravenes the law because they have served beyond the recommended time. They should have served three years and left for others to do the work. Also, that very board was taken to court because it made appointments when it’s time had expired already. So, it is illegal having them come back to work. The government and the diocese, which is the foundation body that even provided land for the school to be built, should in the public interest pave way for selection of new members,” Mr. Kakama said.

When contacted, Mr Edison noted that the complainants have other hidden motives aimed at tarnishing his name and that of the school.

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On staff recruitment, Mr Tugume said that the recruitment exercise was guided by the policy.

“We followed the recruitment policy which required that we appoint staff that have been on the school. Besides that, we have not had any parent or teacher complaining. Those individuals are just tarnishing our name,” he explained.

Call for action

Given the flow of events at Kabushaho, the stakeholders want the outgoing board replaced with other people who will serve interests of the school and community, not “championing their own” individual interests.

“Instead of having people who want to front their interests, why doesn’t the church or diocese nominate other members who have the school at heart without having to take bribes. We have good people who can come in and do the work effectively. That board should be replaced in public interest,” Mr Kakama noted.

Rev Bernard Mushabe, the Education Secretary, West Ankole Diocese, who said he was yet to know about the petition, treated the matter as unfortunate saying that they thought the school was progressing well.

“I am getting the news of the petition from you because they did not give me a copy. It would be better for me to first get enough information and give a comment. But it would be unfortunate that after we have obtained such a benefit, there are some people complaining. In the beginning, the Kabushaho issue had many people with different interests, who we thought were good,” he said.

Background

Located in Kabushaho cell, Bumbaire sub-county, Bushenyi district, Kabushaho Seed Secondary School was founded as a pure girls’ school by West Ankole Diocese in 1985. It suffered the politics of the time and collapsed, but got a provisional license to run as a community school in 2010.

In 2017, after the government of Uganda took over the school and turned it into a government seed school in the area, West Ankole Diocese, which was also the lawful proprietor of the land offered approximately five acres for construction of Shs 2.3 billion structures comprising of two class room blocks, ICT block, administration block, library, science laboratory, three staff houses, and a playground.

It was agreed through the Memorandum of Understanding(MOU) that the government of Uganda shall be responsible for all the administrative roles of the school and it shall be managed and run-in accordance with the laws of Uganda regarding government schools.

The school has an enrolment of 302 students and 25 teaching and non- teaching staff.

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