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2026 elections: Electoral Commission to give out 13,000 jobs

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As the country gears up for the 2026 General Election, the Electoral
Commission (EC) has announced more than 13,000 job slots.

Mr Julius Mucunguzi, the EC spokesperson, yesterday said the planned
recruitment aims to beef up the Commission’s manpower as they start
implementing major activities on the 2025/2026 electoral roadmap.
“The major activities on the electoral road map are done at the lowest level
and yet the Commission does not have the manpower to reach there and
that’s why we are doing these temporary recruitments to support us in most of
these exercises,” he said.
The Commission, he said, would in January next year kick off the major
activities on the road map, including updating the national voter’s register,
followed by its display which all need enough manpower for the countrywide
wide.


Requirements
EC, a government agency that conducts public elections and referenda, asked
suitable candidates for the 13,017 job slots to submit their applications to the
District Election Administrators (DEA) of their areas no later than November

The candidates must among others be qualified with proven integrity and
initiative, results-oriented, able to work in teams under minimum supervision,
and have excellent client care.
The applicants are required to possess a valid National Identity card or
National Identification Number (NIN), a comprehensive curriculum vitae
(CV), academic certificates or testimonials, with two referees and daytime
telephone contact. They are to submit a handwritten or typed application
clearly indicating the position applied for.

“A short list of candidates to appear for interviews will be pinned at the office
of the DEA in your district. The date for conducting interviews will be
communicated to you through the office of the DEA and through
announcements on local radio stations. Successful candidates will be
informed through the same office and will be issued with appointment
letters,” the advert read in part.

Applicants for the Sub-county Election Officer, with 2,300 slots, must possess
Uganda Advanced Certificate of Education (UACE) or its equivalent, should
have high moral character and proven integrity, be resident in the Sub-county
for at least three (3) years, be a registered voter, have considerable knowledge
of the electoral process in Uganda, have a crime-free record; and should also
have experience in handling public affairs.
Responsibilities
The sub-county election officers are to handle 13 responsibilities, including
administering all electoral activities, conducting voter education, issuing out
voter location slips, updating the voters register, assisting in mobilizing people
to turn up and participate in electoral activities, conducting nominations,
campaigns, and polling day activities, and make election activity reports to the
Returning Officer.

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Featured

Worry as Lake Albert eats up villages in Pakwach

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At Kal landing site in Panyimur Sub County in the West Nile district of Pakwach, a young woman wades through fast running water in what used to be a dry land.

On her head, she is carrying a yellow jerry can full of water that she has fetched from Lake Albert, this water will be used at home for cooking, bathing and drinking.

This is the fate of the majority of people who reside in the villages of Panyimur, Dei, Pakwach town council and parts of Wadelai.

The rising water from Lake Albert is slowly but steadily eating up their homes, and in some areas the water has climbed a kilometer into the mainland destroying hundreds of homesteads, three schools, markets and safe water drinking points such as boreholes.

In Panyimur Sub County alone, over 150 homesteads are affected but the district leadership says the rising water on Lake Albert and River Nile is affecting people who stay in a stretch of over 80 kilometers

“It’s a stretch of about 85 kilometers, and then about one kilometer inwards, they are all affected,” says the LC5 chairperson Steen Robert Omito.

He adds that three schools have been submerged.

“We have Ocayo Primary (school) that got submerged completely”.

The two other schools that have been submerged are Owere and Wangkado primary.

The  problem of the rising water levels on Lake Albert is affecting more than just education,

Michael Bithum a fisherman at Kal landing site stands hands akimbo as he points to a faraway distance in the lake where his house used to stand.

“My house was about 800 meters from here, the water came slowly from around 2019 and destroyed everything, and I had to shift up in the hills” he recounts.

The Pakwach district leadership led by the woman Member of Parliament Jane Pacuto are concerned that the office of the Prime Minister is not paying attention to a disaster that has taken five years and it is getting worse.

Pacuto says “I am passionately appealing to the government, these are your people, come and buy us land and we move away from this threatening flood.”

According to her, the water has risen 700 meters above the buffer zone, and the people have nowhere to go.

Robert Onenkwung a resident of Panyimur has been left perplexed as to where the water has come from, while Fred Mungu a resident of Pakwach town council blames nature for their suffering.

“I am surprised, you cannot compete with nature really, nature has its own ways” he says.

The rise in the water levels has been ongoing since 2019.

The  plight of the people here is calling for the intervention of the office of the prime minister.

But the director of mobilization in the ruling National Resistance Movement party Rose Mary Sseninde Nansubuga has visited the area, and with the 2026 general elections closing in she says the relevant government departments have to act fast

“Maybe give them land where they can shift (because) if they don’t do that they will be swallowed”, she adds that a report about the disaster will be forwarded to President Yoweri Museveni .

“And our chairman who is also the President of the Republic of Uganda, I am sure he has got some information, but we need to time and again remind government about some of these issues.”

The rise in the water levels on Lake Albert and river Nile is similar to the same phenomenon happening on Lake Victoria, Lake Kyoga as a result of climate change and destructive human activities such as deforestation, and encroachment on wetlands.

As for the case of Pakwach district, the same phenomena is believed to have happened between 1962, to 1963, but back then the water receded after a few months.

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News

SFC soldier shoots three dead in Agago

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The UPDF  together with Police have kicked off investigations into circumstances under which a soldier shot three people dead and injured two others.

According to the UPDF fifth infantry division spokesperson, Capt Edrin Mawanda, the incident happened  around midnight on Sunday when Private Bonny Ameny escaped from his place of work at Lokum detach and went to  Ngora East  village, Ngora Parish, Paimol sub county, Agago District where he shot five people.

“Preliminary information indicates that Pte Amenoy Bonny, 45 had misunderstandings with his wife one Angom Betty who escaped from him. It’s further alleged that he went on a shooting rampage as he was looking for the man who could have taken her,” Capt Mawanda said.

He identified the deceased as Apiyo Sunday, 21, Akidi Santino, 47 and Ajalo Florence, 16 whose bodies have been taken to  Dr.Amberossoli Memorial Hospital Kalongo for postmortem while the injured including Kidega Charles Kumakech, 47 and Apiyo Janet 20 have been taken to  Dr Amberossoli Memorial Hospital Kalongo for further management.

“The UPDF leadership in the region regrets and condemns such an incident of misconduct and remains committed to pursuing the soldier who is still at large for prosecution at the scene of crime and justice.”

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World

King Charles heckled by lawmaker at Australian parliament

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Indigenous senator Lidia Thorpe shouted anti-colonial slogans at King Charles during his visit to the Australian parliament on Monday, shocking assembled lawmakers and other dignitaries.

“Give us our land back! Give us what you stole from us!” Thorpe screamed in an almost minute-long diatribe, after the 75-year-old king’s speech.

“This is not your land, you are not my king,” the independent lawmaker said, decrying what she described as a “genocide” of Indigenous Australians by European settlers.

Australia was a British colony for more than 100 years, during which time thousands of Aboriginal Australians were killed and entire communities displaced.

The country gained de facto independence in 1901, but has never become a fully fledged republic. King Charles is the current head of state.

Charles is on a nine-day jaunt through Australia and Samoa, the first major foreign tour since his life-changing cancer diagnosis earlier this year.

Thorpe is known for her attention-grabbing political stunts and fierce opposition to the monarchy.

When she was sworn into office in 2022, Thorpe raised her right fist as she begrudgingly swore to serve Queen Elisabeth II, who was then Australia’s head of state.

“I sovereign, Lidia Thorpe, do solemnly and sincerely swear that I will be faithful and I bear true allegiance to the colonising Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II,” she said before being rebuked by a Senate official.

“Senator Thorpe, Senator Thorpe, you are required to recite the oath as printed on the card,” said the chamber’s president Sue Lines.

In 1999, Australians narrowly voted against removing the queen, amid a row over whether her replacement would be chosen by members of parliament, not the public.

In 2023 Australians overwhelmingly rejected measures to recognise Indigenous Australians in the constitution and to create an Indigenous consultative assembly.

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