{UAH} M7 smoking WEED and is he senile..
What a Fuck is M7 talking about..
chaka j
How many vehicles did Uganda have in 1986? The figure was 27,210 vehicles in 1987 as compared to 657,378 in 2018. How many piki-pikis did Uganda have in 1986? The figure was 4,187. How many phones, some of which could be used to co-ordinate crime, did we have in 1986? The figure was 28,000 land lines.
How many vehicles does Uganda have today? How many piki-pikis? How many telephones (mobile)? The respective figures for today are: motor-vehicles – 657,378; motor-bicycles – 1,063,922 and mobile phones – 24 million. Of course, we knew that these items were growing in number: However, we did not anticipate that evil minded people would want to kutokooza (Runyankore — for something bad like a fly falling into one's food or drink) this success story, to turn something good into an instrument for killing Ugandans.
Rural areas important too
However, even if we had known, we could not easily have dealt with all the challenges at the same time. By, for instance, concentrating on the electricity, the roads, the schools and the health centres, the wider society of Uganda has been able to see that transformation is possible.
Would that have been the case if we had only concentrated on infrastructure and the security of the towns and forgotten the countryside? It would have been bad planning. The people in the countryside would not have known what development and modernisation are about.
However, since every corner of the country has seen signs of development (tarmac roads, electricity, new schools, new health centres, mobile phones, etc.), we can now intensify our work in the towns, not only in terms of more urban roads, garbage collection, improved sewerage, etc., but also in terms of security infrastructure and cleanliness of the cities and towns.
As usual, we always start with security. Hence, my address to Parliament on the 20th of June. The 10 elements of that speech are being implemented expeditiously. They are:
1. Fingerprinting all the guns in Uganda.
2. Require every motor vehicle and every pikipiki to have electronic number plates installed at the cost of the owner or inserted in the engine.
3. Ban the practice of people zooming along our roads with jacket hoods to hide their identity. We need helmets with illuminating numbers both in front and at the back.
4. Installation of cameras on the town roads and streets and also along the highways.
5. Having a modern forensic laboratory.
6. Speed of response and how quickly we arrive at the crime scene.
7. Controlling the use of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAVs); there are technical means of neutralising UAVs. The Defence Committee has authorised 30 UAVs, 131 UAVs have put in their applications and 500 have been impounded.
8. Misuse of social media — criminals use social media to threaten violence and to spread lies.
9. We shall acquire more scanners under the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) to look into all the containers entering and leaving Uganda, so that the under-declarers of imports stop cheating URA and criminals who infiltrate guns hidden as cargo are apprehended or deterred.
10. A small army with a large number of officers, non-commissioned officers (NCOs) and technical crews and also with enough equipment, but backed by a large Reserve Force. We had to undertake these measures to modernise our security infrastructure because the short-sighted and their malicious accomplices thought that they could use our relaxed lifestyle — the transnight dances, the transnight prayer sessions, the chaotic driving on the roads, etc., to undermine Uganda's fast development.
Hence, our response as was recapitulated above and as was elaborated in my speech in Parliament. In the meantime, using even the old methods, during the intervening months while the new systems are being put in place, we can still defeat these terrorists. It is laborious, but possible. What should we do in the interim?
1. First and foremost, vigilance (oburindaara) by noting and reporting any new persons, motorcycles or cars that hover around your area or you notice following you. The killings of the sheikhs, Kagezi, Kiggundu, Abiriga and, recently, Kirumira were, obviously, done by people who were either following them or waiting for them. A limited degree of vigilance would have exposed them before the act.
2. Quick co-ordination with the Police. Each Police station or post should have a number that is known to the public in the area that every member of the public with a phone can ring when they see anything suspicious. This number should not be the number of the OC (officer in charge) of the station because that officer may be in meetings where they switch off their phone. It should be for the Police personnel on duty at the Police station so that the reaction is instant. That is how the Police and the wananchi killed the notorious Kiddawalime that had been part of the gang that killed five people on New Year's Day, 2018, in the Masaka area.
3. Efficient co-ordination within the Police force using radios rather than the slow methods of using the unprofessional mobile phones. The radios alert everybody to be on the lookout for the fugitive motorcycle or car, rather than a mobile phone that communicates with one person at a time. It should be the public to use the mobile phones not the Police, while communicating among themselves.
4. The deployment of the Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) or the Reserve units, as stated in my address of last week (September 9), in the Wakiso-Kampala area or any other area where they may be needed.
5. There has been serious internal criticism of the intelligence staff that have been neglecting information from the public, unjustifiably labelling information sources as intelligence peddlers or not concluding investigations.
6. The purge of the criminal and corrupt elements that had infiltrated the Police is continuing. The incidents of crime that have been happening expose these elements. The apprehension of those criminal elements, illuminates more the evil elements involved. The Police force is being cleaned of them.
7. The private citizens that are able should continue to install cameras in their homes or business premises. All these will help. By the end of nine months from today, most of the elements of the smart and safe city will be in place.
We can, then, scale down the reliance on human intelligence and human observation because the technical (the machine) means will be in place. I am annoyed and pained by these unnecessary deaths of Ugandans, but I am confident because we have the capacity to respond. We were able to respond and win when we had less means.
Our means are much greater today. I encourage investors to assemble the cameras here, so as to have more local content. The pigs that have doomed their future by shedding the blood of innocent Ugandans, have only themselves to blame for their eternal damnation. With the new teams of investigations, even the old cases of murders are being exposed as to who the killers were. It says, in the Book of Luke: Chapter 12:2-3: "There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed or hidden that will not be made known.
What you have spoken in the dark will be heard in the daylight and what you have whispered in the inner rooms will be proclaimed from the housetops." Be confident and vigilant. We are going to have safe and smart towns and cities, just as we have been able to create a network of good roads and electricity lines in the country side.
I thank you.
How many vehicles does Uganda have today? How many piki-pikis? How many telephones (mobile)? The respective figures for today are: motor-vehicles – 657,378; motor-bicycles – 1,063,922 and mobile phones – 24 million. Of course, we knew that these items were growing in number: However, we did not anticipate that evil minded people would want to kutokooza (Runyankore — for something bad like a fly falling into one's food or drink) this success story, to turn something good into an instrument for killing Ugandans.
Rural areas important too
However, even if we had known, we could not easily have dealt with all the challenges at the same time. By, for instance, concentrating on the electricity, the roads, the schools and the health centres, the wider society of Uganda has been able to see that transformation is possible.
Would that have been the case if we had only concentrated on infrastructure and the security of the towns and forgotten the countryside? It would have been bad planning. The people in the countryside would not have known what development and modernisation are about.
However, since every corner of the country has seen signs of development (tarmac roads, electricity, new schools, new health centres, mobile phones, etc.), we can now intensify our work in the towns, not only in terms of more urban roads, garbage collection, improved sewerage, etc., but also in terms of security infrastructure and cleanliness of the cities and towns.
As usual, we always start with security. Hence, my address to Parliament on the 20th of June. The 10 elements of that speech are being implemented expeditiously. They are:
1. Fingerprinting all the guns in Uganda.
2. Require every motor vehicle and every pikipiki to have electronic number plates installed at the cost of the owner or inserted in the engine.
3. Ban the practice of people zooming along our roads with jacket hoods to hide their identity. We need helmets with illuminating numbers both in front and at the back.
4. Installation of cameras on the town roads and streets and also along the highways.
5. Having a modern forensic laboratory.
6. Speed of response and how quickly we arrive at the crime scene.
7. Controlling the use of unmanned aerial vehicle (UAVs); there are technical means of neutralising UAVs. The Defence Committee has authorised 30 UAVs, 131 UAVs have put in their applications and 500 have been impounded.
8. Misuse of social media — criminals use social media to threaten violence and to spread lies.
9. We shall acquire more scanners under the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA) to look into all the containers entering and leaving Uganda, so that the under-declarers of imports stop cheating URA and criminals who infiltrate guns hidden as cargo are apprehended or deterred.
10. A small army with a large number of officers, non-commissioned officers (NCOs) and technical crews and also with enough equipment, but backed by a large Reserve Force. We had to undertake these measures to modernise our security infrastructure because the short-sighted and their malicious accomplices thought that they could use our relaxed lifestyle — the transnight dances, the transnight prayer sessions, the chaotic driving on the roads, etc., to undermine Uganda's fast development.
Hence, our response as was recapitulated above and as was elaborated in my speech in Parliament. In the meantime, using even the old methods, during the intervening months while the new systems are being put in place, we can still defeat these terrorists. It is laborious, but possible. What should we do in the interim?
1. First and foremost, vigilance (oburindaara) by noting and reporting any new persons, motorcycles or cars that hover around your area or you notice following you. The killings of the sheikhs, Kagezi, Kiggundu, Abiriga and, recently, Kirumira were, obviously, done by people who were either following them or waiting for them. A limited degree of vigilance would have exposed them before the act.
2. Quick co-ordination with the Police. Each Police station or post should have a number that is known to the public in the area that every member of the public with a phone can ring when they see anything suspicious. This number should not be the number of the OC (officer in charge) of the station because that officer may be in meetings where they switch off their phone. It should be for the Police personnel on duty at the Police station so that the reaction is instant. That is how the Police and the wananchi killed the notorious Kiddawalime that had been part of the gang that killed five people on New Year's Day, 2018, in the Masaka area.
3. Efficient co-ordination within the Police force using radios rather than the slow methods of using the unprofessional mobile phones. The radios alert everybody to be on the lookout for the fugitive motorcycle or car, rather than a mobile phone that communicates with one person at a time. It should be the public to use the mobile phones not the Police, while communicating among themselves.
4. The deployment of the Uganda People's Defence Force (UPDF) or the Reserve units, as stated in my address of last week (September 9), in the Wakiso-Kampala area or any other area where they may be needed.
5. There has been serious internal criticism of the intelligence staff that have been neglecting information from the public, unjustifiably labelling information sources as intelligence peddlers or not concluding investigations.
6. The purge of the criminal and corrupt elements that had infiltrated the Police is continuing. The incidents of crime that have been happening expose these elements. The apprehension of those criminal elements, illuminates more the evil elements involved. The Police force is being cleaned of them.
7. The private citizens that are able should continue to install cameras in their homes or business premises. All these will help. By the end of nine months from today, most of the elements of the smart and safe city will be in place.
We can, then, scale down the reliance on human intelligence and human observation because the technical (the machine) means will be in place. I am annoyed and pained by these unnecessary deaths of Ugandans, but I am confident because we have the capacity to respond. We were able to respond and win when we had less means.
Our means are much greater today. I encourage investors to assemble the cameras here, so as to have more local content. The pigs that have doomed their future by shedding the blood of innocent Ugandans, have only themselves to blame for their eternal damnation. With the new teams of investigations, even the old cases of murders are being exposed as to who the killers were. It says, in the Book of Luke: Chapter 12:2-3: "There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed or hidden that will not be made known.
What you have spoken in the dark will be heard in the daylight and what you have whispered in the inner rooms will be proclaimed from the housetops." Be confident and vigilant. We are going to have safe and smart towns and cities, just as we have been able to create a network of good roads and electricity lines in the country side.
I thank you.
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