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One of the immediate planning goals is Uganda's attainment of middle-income status, with an annual per capita income of US$1,036 or higher. [7] Originally planned for 2020, [3] more realistic evaluation puts that event in the 2025 to 2030 time frame. [8]
The National Unity Platform (NUP, Swahili: Jukwaa la Umoja wa Kitaifa), [2] formerly the National Unity, Reconciliation and Development Party (NURP), is a political party in Uganda led by Robert Kyagulanyi Ssentamu (also known as Bobi Wine).
Wilberforce Kisamba Mugerwa, also Wilberforce Kisamba-Mugerwa, (5 July 1945 – 7 January 2021) was a Ugandan agricultural economist, politician and academic, who served as the chairman of the Uganda Microfinance Support Center, a government-owned company established in 2001, that manages micro credit programs in Uganda, funded by the African Development Bank, Islamic Development Bank and the ...
Uganda scores 54.7% in its quality of life for 2017. This score shows how well Uganda is doing to ensure these rights and not the numbers or percentages of people. [3] Lack of education in sub-Saharan Africa is a major determinant of extreme poverty. Uganda has made some progress in fighting illiteracy with current literacy levels at 76%. [1]
Uganda: Uganda People's Congress; United Kingdom: Labour Party (UK) Left Unity (LU) Breakthrough Party (BK) Socialist Labour Party (SLP) Northern Independence Party (Northern England) Sinn Féin (SF) (Northern Ireland) Progressive Unionist Party (PUP) (Northern Ireland) Scottish Socialist Party (SSP) (Scotland) Plaid Cymru (Wales) United States:
National Development Plan (NDP, Irish: Plean Forbartha Náisiúnta) is the title given by the Irish Government to a scheme of organised large-scale expenditure on (mainly) national infrastructure. The first five-year plan ran from 1988 to 1993, the second was a six-year plan from 1994 to 1999 and the third ran as a seven-year plan from 2000 to ...
The Forum for Democratic Change (FDC) was the leading opposition party in Uganda during the 2000s and 2010s. [3] On three consecutive occasions, during the presidential elections in 2006, 2011 and 2016, the party fielded retired Colonel Doctor Kizza Besigye, as the party's flag-bearer against the ruling National Resistance Movement's candidate, General Yoweri Kaguta Museveni.
[17] Understandably, Uganda was ranked 140th out of 176 nations on the Corruption Perceptions Index. [19] A specific scandal, which had significant international consequences and highlighted the presence of corruption in high-level government offices, was the embezzlement of $12.6 mil in donor funds from the Office of the Prime Minister in 2012.