Matek 2

By the way Museveni did not only survive Chong Gwok, there was another UNLA Lt 
Col Kilama who found him in Luwero and shot him, luckily this time around 
Museveni took a bullet in a leg and that is why he got scared of Luwero and he 
ran out of the war to Sweden. When he was sworn into power Kilama was arrested 
near Magamaga taken to Luzira and killed.

There are those that have done a national duty just failed to get the man.

Em
Toronto

 The Mulindwas Communication Group
"With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
            Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
"avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Matek Opoko 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [email protected] ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2007 7:39 PM
  Subject: [Ugandacom] Re: Is Mulago only for baganda? MATEK


  Charles!
  You have not yet seen craziness.....as far as I am concerned, the only 
mistake the UPC made was NOT to deal with your type firmly and resolutely.

   Museveni should have been dealt with at Kereka road block when "chong Gwok" 
arrested him.

  Cardinal Nsubuga too should have been dealt with...as was kabaka Mutebi when 
he was conducting his clandestine rendezvous with Museveni in Luwero!!!

  This actions taken , perhaps the Republic would not have gone through 21 
years of suffering in Northern and eastern Uganda!!!

  Well guess what Obote was lenient ... wait till you get a real sob in that 
chair!!!



  Matek

  Charles Kibuka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


     
    The problem wih you Matek is that you always write things with out thinking 
them through a little. I'm of the view that you sould have read my email a 
little more carefully before replying. I said that UPC created the demand for 
Museveni because they presided over a governement that failed to control its 
soldiers. Even as bad as Museveni is, his solders are not killing as many 
Ugandans out of the operational theater as Obote's did. Your right, the Baganda 
supported Museveni during the bush war, but only because they had no 
alternative. UPC was killed them like flies, therefore the blame lies squarely 
on them, why can't you people really see your mistakes and take responsibility? 
With regard to Mulago, I think you have completly lost it here. I'm sure you 
read todays new vision story of mothers dieing while giving birth. If you did 
not, then read here below and tell me if the names mentioned there belong to 
only baganda. In fact the nurse taking care of these women who are not baganda 
judging by their names, is a Muganda her self. This is effecting every body. To 
help you out a little, I have highlighted the names out for you. I don't 
understand why you're playing this tribal card in such a terible situation. 
     
    JN

     
          Death in Mulago Hospital 
          Friday, 27th July, 2007  E-mail article    Print article 
         
                  
                Women sit in the labour ward corridor at Mulago
               
          Babies die because mothers wait too long for caesarean 

          By Harriet Onyalla 

          DAVID died. He was just a day old. This chubby baby, who weighed 
5.5kg at birth, bled to death because his umbilical cord had been cut 'badly'. 

          In fact, David was named after the shepherd boy in the Bible long 
after his little heart stopped beating. The Alur culture demanded that either 
way, he be named. 

          Every two hours, a baby dies at Mulago Hospital's maternity ward as a 
result of birth-related complications. Hospital records indicate that on 
average, nine babies die from birth-related complications every day, nine 
little souls like David. This means, about 270 babies die every month. 

          "Some days, over 15 babies die," a hospital source, who spoke on 
condition of anonymity, says. 

          David's only day in this world went terribly wrong. "We spent the 
whole day at the hospital but nobody cared," his father, Clinton Oketcha, 
narrates. "The baby was bleeding. The baby really cried. Then a nurse helped us 
and put him on oxygen but she said we should pray because the machine was not 
working properly." 

          Oketcha will forever be haunted by the blank face of the doctor to 
whom he turned in desperation. "He just looked at me and walked away," he says 
as a slight tremor creeps into his deep voice. 

          Mulago Hospital, Ward 5C, Sunday 9:00am: The air in the corridor of 
the labour ward seems to stand still. Over 20 women in labour are sitting or 
lying on the floor. "Musawo nyamba, nfaa!" (Doctor, help I am dying), one woman 
wails. 

          She is kneeling on all fours. She jerks forward, then crawls rapidly 
back. Groaning in pain, she puts her elbows on the cold, stained marble floor, 
rising swiftly. The white blouse she is wearing slides over her shoulder, 
leaving her naked. 

          "The baby is coming," another woman, swaying in pain next to her, 
shouts. A third expecting mother sits calmly next to them, a stream of waterish 
blood running from under her skirts towards the middle of the corridor. The 
woman opposite her tries to move away from the blood running towards her. She 
stands up, looks around, then slowly shakes her head and sits down again as her 
wrapper gets soaked. There is no other place to sit. The corridor is packed to 
capacity. 

          According to Dr. Samuel Kalisoke, the in-charge of Mulago's 
gynaecology and obstetrics department, about 70 mothers are admitted and 60 
deliver every day, yet the place was meant to cater for only 20. Some give 
birth in the corridors. "We are delivering three times the number we are 
supposed to handle," he says. 

          "Most of these mothers are referred from other hospitals when their 
condition is already critical. In fact, many babies are born with the skin 
already peeling off, meaning that they died 24 hours earlier." 

          On average, one third of the mothers received at Mulago need to 
deliver by caesarean section. The operation theatre, which has only one bed, 
handles an average of 18 mothers a day. 

          The doctors work day and night but hardly manage to cater for the 
influx. A proper operation, including preparations, takes two hours. Some have 
to wait for a day to find a slot. 

          "Many times we have 21 emergency operations," says nurse Rose Violet 
Nakayiza. "Babies end up being born stressed or dead because the mothers waited 
too long for the caesarean operation. Imagine you have 15 patients waiting for 
an emergency operation, all of them in a critical condition. Whom do you 
operate and whom do you leave out?" 

          Apart from lack of space and equipment, the maternity wing suffers 
from acute lack of staff. There are between eight and 12 staff members for the 
five wards at any one time, according to Dr. Kalisoke. These include nurses, 
midwives and doctors. 

          "In the labour suite, there are only three staff to cater for over 60 
mothers a day, yet there should be 24," he says. 

          Mulago is Uganda's national referral hospital. It has become the only 
place where mothers around Kampala go to give birth. Most health centres around 
the city shun women who are about to give birth because they lack the operation 
facilities in case the delivery goes wrong. 

          Many private clinics only give antenatal care and refer the mother to 
Mulago when the labour pain starts. 

          "Some refer the women when it is too late", explains nurse Nakayiza. 
"They don't tell the women what the problem is or even notify us of the 
condition of the patient and the reason for referral. Many times, the baby is 
already dead in the womb. And when they come when we have a lot of work, it is 
difficult to give them the attention they need. So the lives of the mothers are 
also at risk." 

          Another problem, she says, is ignorance and poverty. 

          "Some mothers arrive here after labouring at home for days. "Others 
don't have transport and are brought in by neighbours when it is very late. 
Many times we are just helpless."
         



--------------------------------------------------------------------------
      Date: Sat, 28 Jul 2007 06:48:40 -0700
      From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
      Subject: RE: Baganda Can Clip Mu7's Wings? YES WE CAN KASIM.
      To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]
      CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]

      Charles you write  quote "They UPC imporsed this monster called Museveni 
on the people of Uganda and must suffer the consequences for ever."...
      The UPC never imposed as you state "Monster Museveni " on the people of 
Uganda... rather it is you fellows bana ba Gundi..who carnived with Museveni to 
create chaos in Uganda..and you are now suffering the consequencies of your 
stupidity... let Museveni take all the land...let him import more balalos to  
take over this your so called baganda land..

      And as far as stating that "UPC is suffering"..which cave have you been 
in my friend..those suffering are you kinsmen at Mulago hospital.... who must 
be treated by third rated medical assistants because the doctors are busy 
attending to their clinics.... or there are simply no medicine to offer to the 
sick....that is unless you have "kitu kidogo"...Suffer you sorry behind!!!

      Matek

      Charles Kibuka <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

         
        Well Kasim, the war to change that mindset is on now. We're educating 
the baganda and banyoro about the consequences of supporting Museveni. Some of 
us are in advanced stages of preparations to permanently camp on the ground 
back home for a very long time to see this through. You should remember how 
Museveni gained this support in Buganda. That is how UPC comes into the picture 
again, because had they controlled those unruly soldiers and stopped the 
killings of baganda, then Museveni would have been irrelevant. Had UPC not 
attacked Bulange and caused the death of the people's king, there wouldn't have 
been a need for Museveni. They UPC imporsed this monster called Museveni on the 
people of Uganda and must suffer the consequences for ever.
         
        UPC is to blame because they created the demand for an alternative and 
Museveni offered it at the time. But now Museveni is no longer a protector, but 
rather the trouble causer in buganda. You can see for your self now that he is 
planning to import more balalo into buganda. The grand plan is to make sure 
that the entire buganda is totally colonised by people he thinks he might need 
in the future when the going gets tough. These are the same people that brought 
him into power in the first place you know. Coalitions are being formed slowly 
but surely and we're making a slow but sure progress, so your Museveni can not 
intimidate us with those guns that you're talking about. Alliances, will be 
formed on this very forum, and every where else and we shall use our 
constitutional rights to arm our ignorant people with information and knowledge 
and that will work against Museveni. 
         
        Where there is a will, there is a way.
         
        JN 


         


----------------------------------------------------------------------
          Date: Fri, 27 Jul 2007 22:02:46 -0700
          From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
          Subject: Re: Baganda Can Clip Mu7's Wings.
          To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
          CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]


          That is day dreaming. Museveni has more support in Buganda than he 
has in  Western Uganda. Of the four million Baganda, only about 1.5 million 
support the removal of Mu7.The rest still support him,especially those in rural 
areas. 

          You cannot kick out a millitary man with only demonstrations. Tear 
gas alone,before even he gets out his guns,will send you away. Government is, 
to a great extent, insurmountable.

          Kassim.

          Edward Mulindwa <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
            Paul Mivumba

            Then we make Dr Kiiza Besigye the next president with Museveni as a 
Prime Minister and Kayinerugaba as a Minister of Defence, Janet Museveni as an 
ambassador in UK as Winnie Byanyima will be posted in New York as a 
representative to the UN, all that works out if Besigye moves faster than Konny 
taking over for if Konny takes over, Winnie is history.

            Next question?

            Em
            Toronto

             The Mulindwas Communication Group
            "With Yoweri Museveni, Uganda is in anarchy"
                        Groupe de communication Mulindwas 
            "avec Yoweri Museveni, l'Ouganda est dans l'anarchie"

              ----- Original Message ----- 
              From: Jean Paul Mivumba 
              To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
              Sent: Friday, July 27, 2007 5:29 PM
              Subject: Re: Baganda Can Clip Mu7's Wings.


              After you have kicked M7 out, then what?


              On 7/27/07, David Basobokwe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 
                Fellows,
                We are talking too much about how to remove Mu7 from the 
Presidency. I just landed on an idea. 
                If we organised all the Baganda and their associates, would we 
not kick this Mu7 out l;ike we kicked him out of Mabira? Some one on this forum 
said the baganda are the biggest tribe in Uganda. Folks, this is the most 
effective method. 

                David


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