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The unemployment rate for young people in Uganda ages 15–24 is 83%. [13] This rate is even higher for those who have formal degrees and live in the urban area. [14] This is due to the disconnect between the degree achieved and the vocational skills needed for the jobs that are in demand for workers.
Reach a Hand, Uganda (RAHU) is a youth serving nonprofit organisation based in Uganda that focuses on youth empowerment programs with an emphasis on, Sexual Reproductive Health Rights (SRHR) and Advocacy of young people between the ages of 10–30 years including HIV/AIDS awareness and prevention, and youth livelihood promotion. [1]
The Young Achievers Awards is a national competition held annually in Uganda which selects and promotes the best practice and excellence in youth creativity. The following is the list of Young Achievers Award winners.
The footage showed police in riot gear forcing several young adults into the back of a truck as they shouted protest slogans. Footage broadcast by NTV Uganda showed about a dozen people marching ...
KAMPALA, Uganda (AP) — Six schoolchildren in Uganda’s capital have tested positive for Ebola, the health minister said Wednesday, marking The post Ebola infects 6 schoolkids in Uganda as ...
The 1950s in Uganda showed a movement towards pan-africanism and independence, supported by the multi-national student bodies of universities like Makerere College and Uganda Christian University. [1] In 1954, students founded the Tanganyika African Welfare Society at Makerere College, designed to promote Tanganyikan independence and fair ...
Through Reach A Hand Uganda, Nabimanya has created a movement of young advocates [11] with a team of 46 members and 1,755 volunteers under the Peer Educators Academy who, by the end of 2020, had helped to reach over 6,618,171 people through various project interventions and 18,205,652 through social media.
Child soldiers in Uganda are members of the Lord's Resistance Army, a rebel group that has been abducting young people since 1987 to fill out their ranks.Children and youth (both boys and girls) are usually abducted from their homes, [1] often with one or more others, and in characteristically violent ways.