In the early hours of Wednesday morning (7 June 2023) Kato Lubwama, a well-known comedian and former member of parliament for Uganda, was declared dead. The...
Police in the northern Ugandan city of Lira are looking into the circumstances surrounding a man’s reported suicide in a Hindu temple where he was working...
On Tuesday, people in the Kayanja parish Nyakiyumbu Sub County Kasese district found the body of a man who had allegedly drowned in a fish pond....
The former senior presidential press secretary, Tamale Mirundi has shocked Ugandans after disclosing his capability in producing children and marrying wives. Tamale Mirundi who was on...
Hajjat Kulthum, M.D. Nabunya Gumisiriza became upset when filing a complaint against Bad Black at the Central Police Station (CPS) for insulting her and the husband....
By Gad Masereka A toddler was sentenced to life imprisonment in North Korea after the child’s family was found in possession of a Bible, according to a new...
Sudan’s military chief has ordered the freezing of all bank accounts belonging to a rival paramilitary force. The two sides have battled for weeks across Sudan,...
Around 9,700 individuals have left Sudan so far, according to UN officials who just returned from a border hamlet in the Central African Republic, and they...
The National Unity Platform (NUP) has urged the government to stop enforcing laws in a selective manner and make sure that everyone involved in the iron...
Prof John Ntambirweki, the vice chancellor and founder of Uganda Pentecostal University in Fort Portal, western Uganda, has died. Ntambirweki died on Wednesday at Kampala’s Le Memorial Hospital. He’s been sick for a long time, and he even missed the university’s graduation ceremony last month, when a new chancellor was inaugurated. He established Uganda Pentecostal University as the Grotius School of Law and Professional Studies in 2001 and has served as vice chancellor ever since. The Grotius School of Law was renamed Uganda Pentecostal University after being approved by the National Council for Higher Education (NCHE) in 2005. Ntambirweki is a former senior professor at Makerere University and the former head of the law department at Uganda Christian University. In addition, he has worked as a consultant with Ntambirweki Kandeebe and Company Advocates. As a worldwide legal researcher, he has provided legal counsel to government agencies in several African nations as well as international organizations. He was also the chairman of the Advocates Coalition for Development and Environment (ACODE) board of trustees.