Man Sentenced to 8 Years for Defiling 12 Year Old Girl
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- Written by Daphne Ndahagire
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A man in Masaka district has been sentenced to up to 8 years in jail for defiling a 12-year-old girl.
Magezi is said to have found the girl, whose identity was not revealed, picking firewood and decided to defile her. After the deed was done, he gave her sh1, 000 and warned her not to tell anyone.
However, after several days, the girl felt pain and discomfort in her private parts and decided to confide in her mother who took the matter to police.
A medical examiner found out that indeed the girl’s private parts had been tampered with pinning Magezi of the defilement.
According to the judge, Justice Kibuuka Musoke, cases of defilement are not taken seriously by the community and the law which has seen an increase in the cases.
The law saw the crime reduced from rape to defilement.
Source: Uganda Picks
Daniel Craig: I want to quit 007 Sky Fall
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- Written by Daphne Ndahagire
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007 Daniel Craig has revealed he is desperate to hand in his licence to thrill — but film bosses won’t let him.

Craig’s third Bond movie Skyfall is breaking box office records, but the 44-year-old Brit says he has had enough.
He added: “I’ve been trying to get out of this from the very moment I got into it.
“But they won’t let me go, and I’ve agreed to do a couple more.
“But let’s see how this one does, because business is business and if the s*** goes down, I’ve got a contract that somebody will happily wipe their ass with.”
Source: The Sun
Minister, lawmakers fail LDC exams
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- Written by Cliff Lule
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A minister and three legislators are among 691 lawyers who failed the pre-entry examination of the Law Development Centre, denting their chances of pursuing the post grade law diploma that qualifies them to become High Court advocates.
These include: State Minister in-charge of Luweero Rose Namayanja, former East Africa Legislative Assembly member Lydia Wanyoto, MPs Theodere Ssekikubo (Lwemiyaga County) and Barnabas Tinkasimire (Buyaga West).
According to the results released by the Law Council on Friday, of the 1,096 law graduates who sat the exams, only 405 (36 per cent) passed. This year’s lot has registered the poorest performance ever since pre-entry exams were introduced at LDC in 2010. For instance, of the 756 and 789 students who sat the same exams in 2010/11 and 2011/12 academic years, 433 and 366 failed respectively- implying that only 323 and 423 passed in both academic years .
A source at the Law Council who preferred anonymity because he is not authorised to speak on behalf of the council, told Sunday Monitor that those who excelled were able to explain common legal concepts as well as solving basic law issues.
“These failures are worrying but we have nothing to do because we want quality lawyers. Those who don’t know the basics, what legal profession will they practice after 11 months at LDC? ” a source asked yesterday.
Uganda Christian University produced the highest number of those who failed the exams – contributing 37 per cent of the total failures, followed by Makerere (22per cent), Islamic University in Uganda( 18 per cent ) Kampala International University(12 per cent), Nkumba University (5per cent), Uganda Pentecostal University (2per cent) and other foreign universities (4 per cent).
The examinations, the third second in LDC’s history were conducted by the Law Council on August 22 as a measure to weed out sub-standard students who have in the past been blamed for the massive failures at the Centre.
To qualify for the Bar Course, students are required to pass written examinations to test their knowledge of the core university law courses. The new guidelines were set by the Law Council. The core law courses include: Legal Methods, Constitutional Law, Torts, Criminal Law, Law of Contract, Evidence and Criminal and Civil Procedure. LDC Secretary Joyce Welikhe said in a statement yesterday that successive candidates will start their academic programme on September 24.
Source: monitor
British producer arrested over play about gay man
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- Written by Cliff Lule
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Uganda on Thursday arrested a British theatre producer for staging a play in Kampala about a gay man despite a temporary ban by the country's media authorities, a police spokesman said.Producer David Cecil was sent to prison until a bail hearing on Monday after being charged in a Kampala court, an AFP reporter said.
"There are two charges preferred against him, one of disobeying lawful orders contrary to the penal code and another of staging the play which was still under review," Ibin Ssenkumbi, a spokesman for the Kampala police, told AFP.
The groundbreaking play -- titled "The River and The Mountain" -- was performed at several venues around Kampala last month despite an injunction by Uganda's media council, the government media authority, which had placed a temporary ban on the play pending review of the script.
The play examines the plight of a man who comes out as homosexual and the motivations of Uganda's vociferous anti-gay lobby.
Written by British playwright Beau Hopkins, it was directed and performed by Ugandans.
Although legislators have said the bill could be changed, in its current form, anyone caught engaging in homosexual acts for the second time, or engaging in gay sex where one partner is a minor or has HIV, would be sentenced to death.
Public discussion of homosexuality -- including by rights groups -- would be punished by up to seven years in jail
Source: monitor
HIV/AIDS bell tolls
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- Written by Cliff Lule
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The delay in reforming a critical Bill in parliament may render AIDS drugs in Uganda illegal
We no longer fear AIDS. Eddagala gyelili e Mulago (drugs are available at Mulago Hospital),” says Ssenkindu Moses, 32, who tells me he has had three sexual partners in the last one month and did not use condoms with any of them.
Many Ugandans take AIDS treatment for granted. This ‘ARV complacency’ has been partly blamed for the recent spike in new HIV infections. Uganda’s HIV prevalence rates have risen from 6.7% in 2005 to the current 7.3%.
Because most antiretroviral treatment (ART) in Uganda has been funded by the American taxpayer, with PEPFAR paying for as much 85% of all AIDS treatment costs in Uganda, you would regard financial sustainability as the challenge to continued access to treatment in Uganda. But you would be mistaken.
According to Dennis Kibira, Medicines Advisor at HEPS, a local NGO, 90% of AIDS drugs in Uganda are generic drugs.
A generic drug is an identical copy of a branded one that is usually developed and manufactured by innovator pharmaceutical giants such as Pfizer and Norvatis.
Pharmaceutical giants invest millions of dollars in developing and marketing new drugs, costs which generic drug manufacturers don’t incur and hence branded drugs are many times the cost of generics.
“Unless the Ugandan parliament revises and re-introduces the Industrial Properties Bill (2009), the permission to manufacture cheap generic ARV drugs will cease in 2016 with thousands affected since Quality Chemicals manufactures generic Aids drug,’’ said Moses Mulumba, Executive Director of CEHURD, a health rights advocacy NGO.
India which supplies most of Uganda’s AIDS drugs, has developed a thriving generics industry, leading to it being dubbed “the pharmacy of the developed world” for the low cost of its generic drugs, especially antiretrovirals, some of which cost as little as a tenth of the brand price.
For developing countries such as India, the ban on manufacture of generic Aids drugs came into force in 2005 under the TRIPS agreement of the WTO whereas a similar ban on poorer developing countries such as Uganda will take effect in 2016 unless the Ugandan parliament revises the industrial properties bill (2009) which would, inter alia provide for extension of this deadline.
According to the WHO, ‘Developing countries are failing to make full use of flexibilities built into the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) to overcome patent barriers and, in turn, allow them to acquire the medicines they need for high priority diseases, in particular, HIV/Aids.
With the expiry of the TRIPS grace period, the alternative in Uganda would be to buy these drugs much more expensively from the original western manufacturers.
At the moment, passing the Industrial Properties Bill (2009) in Uganda, after amending it to take full advantage of the ‘flexibilities’ in the TRIPS agreement would, inter alia, extend the grace period for manufacturing generic Aids drugs remains the best hope for the thousands on Aids treatment in Uganda.
In November last year, a consortium of NGOs led by CEHURD took out a half page newspaper appeal to Kahinda Otafiire, the Justice minister to seek his support in revising the bill before it is passed by parliament.
“The bill left our desk. We did our part. It is now before parliament, specifically before the legal affairs committee” sources within the Ministry of Justice said.
However, the Bill which was brought before the committee in 2009 has not been enacted since and the Bill lapsed with the 8th parliament. The Industrial Properties Bill (2009) has now been inherited by the current parliament. The Ministry of Justice, however, indicated that a Bill should not spend more than 45 days before a committee of parliament.
“As stakeholders, we are waiting for the public hearing on this bill. However, since April this year when the Expert Report on this bill was released by Ministry of Trade, there have been no engagements on this Bill by the 9th Parliament,” says Mariam Akiror of HEPS-Uganda.
“Laws take time to enact as you have to follow so many procedures including the draft being presented before cabinet and even formulating policy and objectives and parliament has many priorities,” says a Uganda Law Reform commission official. However, ‘big pharma’ interests are always a part of the story.
Mariam Akiror of HEPS Uganda insists that the Bill as it is would do more harm than good and even suggests that the status quo is preferable as ‘big pharma’ would be hard-pressed to enforce their patents in the current legal regime. In the current Bill, government would need the consent of a patent holder before making a generic drug yet the TRIPS flexibilities permit poor countries to make a copy without permission on account of a public health emergency.
Charles Birungi of UNDP(Uganda) insists that the current Bill is about “enforcement of certain types of intellectual property rights” which are private rights enjoyed mainly by western pharmaceutical giants. Revising the Bill would be a boost for Ugandan pharmaceutical industries such as Quality chemicals as it would legalize their production of generics.
“There are few priorities before parliament which should take precedence over our very lives as Ugandans. If I was an MP, this bill would be the most important item on the agenda because it affects millions of Ugandans. Look at how many Ugandans are getting infected every day and how many will need these drugs?” asks a dejected Gertrude Namusisi, 42, who is living positively with HIV/AIDS.
Source: Independent


