Tag Archives: kenya

Let’s Celebrate the Flooding of Kampala


Kampala, the City I was born and raised in has morphed over the decades into the muddled investment destination that it boasts of today. A city where sanity took a backstep paving the way for insanity to reign.

Despite being managed by seemingly qualified individuals enjoying all sorts of benefits that accompany their job titles, you see a city that is daily heading towards higher levels of lunacy.

When one looks at the 1974 Kampala Masterplan that Hon. Moses Ali signed off during the regime of the much ostracized leader, Field Marshal Idi Amin Dada, you realise that all subsequent technocrats needed to do was follow that plan and improve upon it as opposed to subconsciously taking us back to the stone age era.

Roads like the Northern Bypass were catered for in that plan. The Kawempe and Kiruddu Hospitals were also envisaged in that plan and many other settlement considerations for both industrial and housing of citizens.

Then come the era where cash-rich but largely unintelligent humanoids came up and chose to take advantage of the gluttonous appetite of our technocrats and spiced up by clueless politicians ganged up to grab / sell off anything called land in the city forgetting that there is a reason certain settlements were not allowed in some areas.

These very insensible individuals also looked on as slums grew organically and probably profiteered from the same. All because they wanted to make hay while the sun was shining forgetting that the nature of hay being made was bound to be poisonous to the community.

The city becomes a traveler’s nightmare whenever it rains simply because green zones were doled out to investors to build factories while expecting the water to find its own way.

The beauty of all this is that you cannot cheat nature. It will patiently keep knocking until you cave in eventually.

Flood at Namboole – Northern Bypass

The same technocrats guide the clueless political class to dispossess peasants of farmland in the East and Northern parts of Uganda under the guise of protecting wetlands while keeping a blind eye upon the abuse of the same resource in the urban areas.

Just look at the Kyambogo-Kinawataka area, Bwaise, Kalerwe, Opposite Seeta High where a so called Man of God drained the swamp and has set up a church and another Man of God also is busy encroaching on another green zone as you approach Seeta town from Kampala. To see so called Spirit filled individuals partaking of this abuse of nature angers me so much because they are abusing the authority God gave us through Adam.

Genesis 1:31 says, “Then God saw everything that he had made, and indeed it was very good…”

Genesis 2:15, “Then the Lord God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to tend and keep it.”

This is why I am happy every other day when I see the floods running riot in the city. I scream with joy. Why?

  1. It clearly shows the incompetence of our technocrats who have focused more on enriching themselves at the expense of society’s progress.
  2. It shows the denseness of our political class that is meant to be the watchdog for our society.
  3. It shows the inconsiderateness of the so called investors who only mind about making money with little regard to how it is made.
  4. It shows how emptyheaded most of our so-called elites are who choose to even build their homes in wetlands simply because the land has been got on the cheap.

With so much glee, I would like to make an addendum to the aforementioned reasons;

  1. The floods render the cars of those inward looking elites useless as many cannot navigate through the flood waters and muddy roads of the high end slums they live in.
  2. These floods cover the potholes of Kampala hence seemingly sanitizing the outlook of the city roads that temporarily look flat.
  3. The floods help KCCA to clean garbage and dusty roads hence removing the need to import dustbins as planned by the Government as well as reduce on the cost of paying garbage collectors and street cleaners.
  4. These floods bring swimming closer to the people. Many now have a chance to learn how to swim. The hard way though!!!
  5. These floods promote local tourism. Whenever cars get stuck, people gather to watch the ongoing activity as a few super heros volunteer to save the clueless inward looking mugagga seated inside.
  6. They give mechanics alot of business as numerous individuals have to take their cars for repair replacing significant car parts like engines as a result, while those flooded home owners have to call in repair guys for their electricals etc.

Now I know, someone will quickly remind me of how other cities are flooding world over. However, let us face it, even before the current El-Nino, we have always been facing similar issues with our city Kampala.

I celebrate the uplifting of cluelessness in Uganda’s Capital City, Kampala. Like body tissues, it is undergoing autolysis through self destruction.

God Bless Kampala

God Bless Uganda

James Wire

Banning Uganda’s Maize, a sign of poorly managed progress


Uganda is a renowned agricultural nation that has made its mark in food production in Eastern Africa. On 5th March 2021, Kenya slapped a ban on the importation of Maize from Uganda as an addition to the list of chicken, meat and egg imports that had been stopped earlier in January 2021.

There is alot of noise being made over this move by our neighbour and this has led to alot of gossip, as social media has lately turned out to be. The Key questions to ask are:

Is it a good move by Kenya?

I don’t think so because it seems a rushed decision that was not given time to properly get addressed. However, this conclusion is based on the limited information available to the public over this matter. I know that there have been times when Government of Uganda officials have been engaged by trade partners over exports and the decision makers chose to merely keep mum until disaster struck. A few years back, the EU was pushed to put a blockade on the export of Pepper from Uganda and upon analysis, there had been no response from senior officials of the Ministry of Agriculture to the concerns raised.

Are there genuine concerns?

Yes. The concerns are there. The concern raised of Aflatoxins is very legitimate and is a reflection of the poor post harvest handling of produce in Uganda. As an Agribusiness professional, I see this nearly everywhere I go in this country. Once my company got an opportunity to supply a USAID project fortified food of Silver Fish and Groundnuts. The requirement was that the nuts should be aflatoxin free. We submitted four samples and despite trying our level best to get the best from different farmer groups, they all failed the test. However, move around the countryside in the homes of these smallholder farmers and see the kind of produce they have stored in their excuses of stores. The presence of fungi and all sorts of mould on it is a common feature. A serious nation should have concern over the health of its people and ensure that they do not get into unnecessary complications as a result of ingested food.

Is it politics at play?

I could say, Yes and No. No because there is definitely a problem with the quality of produce we churn out as a country. The causes of this are diverse and require a separate article to exhaust. However, one can not also rule out a political angle to all this. There are two lines of thought that are being peddled.

They evolve around the Kenyan Vice President Mr. William Ruto who is rumored to be the biggest importer of Maize from Uganda into Kenya. Due to his presidential ambitions, this move is viewed as a measure to cripple his finances prior to the upcoming 2022 general elections where he is likely to face off with the legendary Mr. Raila Odinga who happens to be favoured by the current president Mr. Uhuru Kenyatta.

The second line of argument is about a 500,000 Hectare farm that Mr Ruto allegedly owns in Congo (Brazzaville) that is growing maize and hence is now trying to seal off other sources of maize so he can import his from Congo and sell on the Kenyan market. This could be mere rumour, partly true or factual.

Is Uganda going wrong somewhere?

Yes. We are definitely not doing many things right. While we have brains that have studied Agriculture upto the highest possible levels manning the various institutions in this country, their output seems not to match the amount of investment put into educating them.

We have religiously preached the issue of production and over the years, farmers have responded, produced and flooded the market with various produce. Preaching production should have taken the form of a holistic approach which we didn’t. We took pride in the increasing volumes without factoring in the actual composition of what we produced.

Between the year 2000 and 2021, Uganda has experienced a steady growth in maize production annually. Source – Knoema

Qualitatively, we did not really care to make any change. The entire value chain for most products is corrupted and the perpetrators do it with a very near sighted, blind as a bat mindset. They focus on immediate gains without knowing that they are compromising on the future of the industry.

The country has failed to empower the various monitoring agencies like the Uganda National Bureau of Standards (UNBS) to effectively carry out their work nationwide without political interference. The last time the UNBS talked to various millers about the need to change the technology used to reduce on the pollution of our flours with metallic material that comes off the grinders used, there was an uproar.

When you look at our animals and fowls, they feed on the worst possible feed available. If it is silver fish, the one used is filled with all sorts of contaminants that arise due to the reckless handling with the traders claiming, “After all, this is for animals.” They forget that what these animals ingest later gets into our body systems as we eat the same animals. Life is a cycle, Garbage In Garbage Out (GIGO).

As a country, we have a very good comparative advantage when it comes to various agricultural produce that leads us to have very low cost production compared to other countries in the region and world over. However, we have simply flirted around when it comes to building export competitiveness. Our ability to compete globally in value added traded goods is very poor. Someone has been sleeping on duty. Why should Kenya alone be responsible for 90% of our exported maize? Planners been crossing their legs grinning like contented dunderheads instead of thinking about diversifying our client portfolio? Take it or leave it, we can get into markets as far as Asia with ease if only we met the basics. Just this morning I met someone that wants to purchase dried cassava in bulk for export to China and the current indications are that as long as along the way, there is no political interference or presence of unscrupulous officials, supplying the Metric Tonnes desired can very easily be achieved. It’s time for these dunderheads to earn their salaries and allowances.

Do we have focus on our agricultural growth?

As a country, the producers are so focused on Agriculture but those meant to facilitate the smooth flow of the entire industry are either grossly constrained or have chosen to press the sleep button of their brains. There is alot of research work going on at the various institutes but little reaches the end user (farmer). The time I spend on radio talking to farmers has revealed to me that either the extension officials in most of the districts are none existent, poorly equipped or clueless about the work they are expected to do.

What next?

There is need for a set of fresh eyes to scan the entire agriculture sector and help those running the show to re-align their interventions. Post harvest handling is very key if we are going to make gains in export competitiveness. One will always claim the lack of money but the resources required to address it are within our means to afford. I have found a good number of government technocrats always yearning for foreign funds before doing what they should normally be doing in their workplaces.

Instead of crying for a quick return to the Kenyan market, we need to carry out detailed soul searching in order to find out why it is so hard for us to even execute the simplest of things like fighting aflatoxins through improved post harvest handling of produce. True we shall suffer as farmers out there but this leads us to another issue and that is finding out the officials that have long slept on the job and either reprimanding them or bidding them farewell.

Improvement of local produce or various by products shall help us attract far off markets and it shall be important to maintain a strict monitoring regimen of the value chain and this could include putting in place appropriate legislation.

I however do not see this ban working for long and can confidently state here that it is setting up the unscrupulous (magendo) traders to make higher profits as they will never stop yearning for the much cheaper Ugandan maize.

James Wire

Agribusiness Consultant

Twitter – @wirejames

Email – lunghabo [at] gmail [dot] com

The Wire Perspective – http://wirejames.com