By PAUL TAJUBA
In Summary
From government and NGOs to students, different
stakeholders came up with innovations that are expected to better lives
of Ugandans.
Kampala-Earlier this month,
Makerere University College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
(CAES) announced the release of two new soybean varieties, making a
total of six commercial varieties recommended for production by farmers
in Uganda.
According to a statement on the CAES website, the
new varieties; Maksoy 4N and Maksoy 5N, were developed through
conventional plant breeding. Previously the university had released
Namsoy 4N, Maksoy 1N (2004), Maksoy 2N (2008) and Maksoy 3N (2010).
The strains are disease-resistant and
high-yielding, features that are being pursued relentlessly by
innovators around the country involved in developing different concepts,
machines or tools. Makerere University, together with the other
institutions of learning, seems to have taken to their role as the
expected hubs for innovation, thereby coming up with different projects.
Riding on the government’s encouragement of
sciences right from secondary school, the turn-around that would see the
country’s technological development could be happening in these nascent
efforts that are documented everyday.
Different government and non-governmental
organisations have come up with innovations that are expected to better
Ugandans lives. These range from social, economic and technological
undertakings. The Daily Monitor looks at some innovations and inventions
that have made an impact in 2013, assessing their impact on the local
person.
Mobile Telephones for Improved Safe Water Access
(M4W): The M4W project gives information on water and sanitation to
stakeholders to carry out inspections basing on the set guidelines of
the Ministry of Water and Environment.
Millions of Ugandans lack clean water, especially
those in rural areas and by this innovation, local communities can get
information easily on how to treat water and protect water sources from
contamination.
MensPreg: This innovation created by students
Joyce Nambalirwa and Daniel Dut (International Health Sciences
University) is meant to help women understand their fertility and in so
doing, lead to good decisions in family planning.
It predicts ovulation days, safe days, possible
conception and delivery days. The innovators believe they will have
achieved success if it reaches its primary audiences in reduction of
public embarrassment and abortion.
Uganda Content Portal: The Unicef-inspired
innovation has been described as “a multi-media source of information
that bridges the digital divide between those who have access to the
Internet and those who do not”. The platform has got documents,
educational videos, images, audio clips and games on various topics like
health, education, livelihoods, culture, news, rights, and safety. It
features most indigenous Ugandan languages as well as English, French
and Swahili.
Uganda Guide App: Dubbed Uganda’s first tourism
mobile application, this internet application offers a user complete
background information on Uganda, listings of attractions and things to
do, personalised digital maps, complete travel directory with tour
operators, taxis, hotels, safari lodges, embassies, banks, forex bureaus
and a host of smart mini apps.
Luunda Lite: This is an android-based mobile
application that targets users involved in the agricultural sector,
specifically poultry farming. It was developed by Busitema University
students William Luyinda, Ibrahim Ssekabembe and Martin Katumba. The
application guides the farmers of how to start up and handle their
poultry as they move to different stages, according to a statement on
their web page.
Mobile health: mHealth, RapidFTR and mTRAC can be
used to monitor medicine supply, information flow from the local people
to the government, quality and safety of schools without top officials
from the ministries necessarily going to the ground. The simple
technologies, which use mobile phone SMS, help in planning and also in
identifying health centres hit by drug shortages, misconduct of health
workers or teachers’ absenteeism in schools.
Crop disease monitoring: Makerere University
students also developed a system for smartphones, which can test cassava
leaves for mosaic disease automatically. Uganda has struggled to
control cassava diseases, which majority of Ugandans use as their staple
food, especially during the dry seasons and now that foreign investors
are showing interest in adding value to the crop, this innovation that
seeks to control the spread is critical.
AgroMarketDay: Created by Lisa Katusiime and Isaac
Omiat of Makerere University. Uganda being a predominately agricultural
country, inventions of this kind that detail agriculture markets for
peasants and farmers are key to transforming the economy. Rural peasants
have for long been cut off from available urban markets due to lack of
information.
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