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WHO Chief Praises Uganda’s Ebola Response as Border Cases Remain Contained

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World Health Organization Director-General Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has praised Uganda’s “prompt and capable” response to the ongoing Ebola outbreak, expressing confidence that the situation can be brought under control through continued regional collaboration.

Dr. Tedros arrived in Uganda on Monday, 8th June 2026, fresh from a high-stakes assessment tour in the neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), which is currently battling a larger outbreak of the rare Bundibugyo strain of the virus.

In a statement posted on X, Dr. Tedros noted that rigorous screening protocols established at Uganda’s borders have been instrumental in detecting and managing cases flowing from the DRC epicentre.

“The country’s surveillance, testing, and case management systems are doing steady work,” Dr. Tedros wrote, adding that WHO and the Africa Centres for Disease Control and Prevention are actively supporting the government-led response.

According to a weekend situation report from Uganda’s Ministry of Health, the country had registered a cumulative total of 19 confirmed Ebola cases as of 6th June 2026. Crucially, health officials reported zero new cases in their latest specific update, signalling that containment measures are yielding positive results.

Of the 19 recorded cases, 14 were imported from the DRC, while five are Ugandan nationals. The ministry reported that 13 patients are currently receiving medical care in active admissions, and four individuals have been successfully discharged.

Two deaths have been registered so far, both falling under the category of imported cases from the DRC.

The relatively low number of locally transmitted cases suggests that Uganda’s border screening protocols are functioning as intended. Travellers entering from the DRC are being tested, and those found infected are being isolated before they can spread the virus to local communities.

Despite the complex cross-border dynamics, Uganda’s Ministry of Health has reassured the public that the outbreak remains tightly managed and the country is safe.

Dr. Tedros echoed this optimism while extending condolences to the families of the deceased.

“The key to ending the regional threat relies on swift leadership, partnership, and cross-border trust,” he said.

The DRC is battling a larger outbreak of the Bundibugyo strain, a less common variant of the Ebola virus. While Uganda has managed to limit imported cases, the situation in eastern DRC remains fluid, and continued vigilance at the border will be essential.

The WHO chief’s back-to-back visits to both countries underscore the importance of coordinated regional action. Ebola knows no borders, and an outbreak in one country quickly becomes a concern for its neighbours.

With zero new cases reported in the latest update, Uganda’s health authorities will be hoping to maintain that trend. The focus now shifts to monitoring the 13 active admissions, ensuring that all contacts of confirmed cases are traced and isolated, and maintaining border screening protocols.

The successful discharge of four patients offers a measure of hope, demonstrating that with proper medical care, recovery is possible.

For now, the Ministry of Health has urged the public to remain calm but vigilant, reporting any suspected cases to health authorities immediately.

Ex-Chief Justice David Maraga Arrested in Nairobi National Park Protest

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Former Chief Justice David Maraga was arrested on Monday while protesting plans to excise 76 acres of the Nairobi National Park for construction and the relocation of the city’s animal orphanage.

Maraga, who has also declared interest in the presidency, was among a group of protesters who occupied a section of Lang’ata Road near the Bomas of Kenya when plain-clothed officers rounded them up and took them into custody.

Activist Njeri Mwangi told Citizen TV that Maraga was arrested alongside eight others and taken to Lang’ata police station.

“We know they plan to use 76 acres to build a parking space, and it should not happen because there was no public participation,” Mwangi said. “We came here to stop the action. This is the only park in the capital city, and we are against it.”

The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) had announced plans to hive off 76 acres of the Nairobi National Park as part of a Ksh.41.9 billion expansion project for the Bomas of Kenya, which includes the relocation of the 62-year-old animal orphanage.

The total overhaul of the popular Bomas of Kenya and the construction of a new international meetings, conferences, and exhibitions centre, dubbed the Bomas International Convention Centre (BICC), has been touted as one of the Kenya Kwanza government’s flagship projects.

Protesters argue that the park is a national heritage site and should not be used for construction. They also claim that the public was not adequately consulted before the decision was made.

Maraga was later released from police custody, but he refused to leave the station until the other eight activists still being held were also freed.

Details of the exact charges facing the protesters were not immediately clear, with Mwangi stating that the group did not know what offence they had committed.

“I have been informed they have taken him to Lang’ata police station,” she said earlier. “Nine people have been arrested, and we do not know their offence.”

The arrest comes as the Bomas International Convention Complex project is already under scrutiny from members of the National Assembly’s Tourism and Wildlife Committee. Legislators have questioned the Ksh.42 billion price tag, describing the figure as exorbitant and too high compared to other similar facilities in the region.

The committee’s inquiries have added a political dimension to the land dispute, with lawmakers demanding answers on how the project’s cost was justified and whether proper procedures were followed.

Nairobi National Park is one of the most unusual wildlife parks in the world, located just minutes from the central business district of a major capital city. It is home to lions, giraffes, rhinos, zebras, and a wide variety of bird species, with the city’s skyline visible from within the park.

The park is a major tourist attraction and a source of pride for many Kenyans. Any attempt to reduce its size has historically faced strong public opposition. The current plan to hives off 76 acres for the Bomas expansion and the relocation of the animal orphanage has reignited those concerns.

The animal orphanage, which has operated for 62 years, serves as a rehabilitation and education centre for injured and abandoned wildlife. Its proposed relocation has added another layer of controversy to the project.

As of Monday evening, the eight other activists arrested alongside Maraga remained in police custody. Maraga had reportedly refused to leave the station until they were released. Police have not issued an official statement on the arrests or the charges, if any, that the protesters face.

The broader dispute over the Bomas expansion project and the excision of land from the national park is expected to continue, with legislators vowing to scrutinise the project further and activists promising to keep up their opposition.

For Maraga, the arrest adds another chapter to his post-judicial career, which has seen him become an increasingly vocal figure on issues of governance and public interest.

THE PHONE IN HER HAND – How Digital Financial Services Are Quietly Reshaping Economic Power for Women Across Africa

By HiPipo Money

For generations, millions of African women managed household economies without fully controlling financial systems around them.

They sold produce in markets. Ran small businesses. Managed food budgets. Paid school fees. Supported families. Built informal savings groups. Yet despite carrying enormous economic responsibility, many remained excluded from formal financial infrastructure.

Banks were often too far away. Account requirements were too rigid. Minimum balances felt unrealistic. Documentation was difficult. Travel costs were high.

For many women, finance remained physical, not digital.

Then mobile money arrived. And quietly, one of the most important shifts in women’s economic empowerment began unfolding across Africa.

Today, millions of women use digital financial services to save small amounts, receive remittances, run microbusinesses, and manage household resources directly through mobile phones. The transformation may appear simple on the surface, but its implications are profound.

Because financial control changes power.

Historically, traditional banking systems struggled to serve low-income women effectively. Many women operated in informal economies where income arrived in small and irregular amounts. Conventional banking models built around salaries, formal employment, and larger transactions often failed to match those realities.

Mobile money adapted differently.

It allowed women to deposit daily earnings, market proceeds, transport income, and micro-savings directly into digital wallets. For many, this became the first practical savings infrastructure they could consistently access.

The ability to store even small amounts securely matters enormously in low-income environments. A woman no longer needed to keep all cash physically at home, where it could easily be spent, requested by others, misplaced, or stolen.

A mobile wallet created something many women had never fully possessed before:

Private financial space. That privacy became quietly transformative.

In many households, women historically managed money collectively while still lacking independent control over major financial decisions. Digital accounts allowed some women to separate business money from household expenses, savings, and emergency reserves more effectively.

That separation increased resilience.

A market vendor could preserve inventory capital digitally. A mother could gradually save for school fees. A trader could build emergency reserves without needing large lump sums.

The phone became more than a payment tool. It became a personal financial management system. Remittances amplified this transformation even further.

Across Africa, millions of women receive support from relatives abroad, urban family members, spouses working remotely, or diaspora communities. Historically, receiving money could involve long travel distances, insecure cash pickups, or dependence on intermediaries.

Mobile money changed the experience dramatically. Funds could arrive directly into a woman’s phone within minutes.

This mattered deeply because direct access improves financial control. A woman receiving money digitally often gains greater ability to decide how resources are used, when emergencies are handled, and how household priorities are managed.

The impact reaches far beyond convenience.

Food security improves. Healthcare access stabilises. Children remain in school more consistently. Small businesses recover faster after shocks.

Remittances become more effective when women can receive and manage them directly.

The timing of this digital shift was also important. As inflation, drought, food insecurity, and economic instability affected parts of Africa over recent years, digital financial services increasingly became household resilience infrastructure.

Women managing families under pressure often relied heavily on mobile money to:

  • receive emergency support,
  • purchase food,
  • coordinate healthcare spending,
  • and sustain small businesses during difficult periods.

In many communities, mobile money quietly became part of the financial operating system of survival itself.

There is also another important shift happening beneath the surface.

Digital transactions create visibility.

Historically, many women participated actively in commerce while remaining financially invisible to lenders, insurers, marketplaces, and formal institutions. They traded daily yet lacked formal financial records capable of proving economic activity.

Digital payments begin changing that reality. Every transaction creates data. Every payment builds financial history. Every digital interaction gradually strengthens economic visibility. This matters because visibility affects opportunity.

A woman with transaction history may eventually gain access to:

  • credit,
  • insurance,
  • merchant platforms,
  • digital commerce ecosystems,
  • and broader formal financial services.

Financial inclusion therefore becomes more than access to payments. It becomes access to recognition. Women entrepreneurs are among the biggest beneficiaries of this shift.

Across Africa, millions of women operate small retail businesses, tailoring shops, food enterprises, farming activities, transport services, and informal trade networks. Digital financial services help these businesses receive payments faster, reduce cash risk, separate finances, and transact remotely.

Even simple mobile payments can improve operational stability significantly for businesses operating on very small margins.

The changes may appear incremental individually. But at continental scale, they become transformational. Yet despite the progress, important barriers remain.

Millions of women still face challenges linked to:

  • smartphone affordability,
  • digital literacy,
  • fraud risks,
  • weak connectivity,
  • and identity-documentation requirements.

Some women still rely on assistance to use digital accounts confidently. Others remain vulnerable to scams or limited control over phone access itself.

This means inclusion remains uneven.

The next phase of progress depends not only on expanding access, but deepening confident usage.

Women must be able to:

  • transact independently,
  • protect accounts securely,
  • understand digital systems,
  • and use financial tools confidently.

Without confidence, participation remains fragile.

This is why women-focused FinTech ecosystems are becoming increasingly important. Across Africa, more platforms now target women entrepreneurs, savings groups, micro-merchants, and low-income users through simplified onboarding, mobile-first design, interoperable payments, and financial literacy support.

The shift reflects growing recognition that women are not a “secondary market” within Africa’s digital economy. They are central economic actors. There is also a larger macroeconomic story emerging quietly beneath the surface.

Africa’s future growth depends heavily on increasing participation in formal economic systems. Women already drive enormous portions of:

  • household spending,
  • informal trade,
  • agriculture,
  • caregiving economies,
  • and microenterprise activity.

When digital financial services empower women more effectively, productivity gains ripple across entire economies.

This is why women’s financial inclusion is increasingly viewed not only as social policy, but economic strategy.

For HiPipo Money, the rise of digital financial services for women represents one of the most important transformations shaping Africa’s future.

The continent’s mobile money revolution did more than digitise transactions.

It redistributed access.

This aligns strongly with broader conversations around women’s empowerment, financial inclusion, digital literacy, interoperable payments, FinTech innovation, and inclusive growth championed through ecosystems such as Women in FinTech, Include Everyone, the Digital Impact Awards Africa (DIAA), and wider digital transformation movements across Africa.

Because ultimately, digital finance is not only about technology.

It is about control.

A woman saving privately for the first time.

A mother receiving support directly into her phone.

A trader managing inventory digitally.

A rural entrepreneur building financial history.

A household becoming more resilient through a simple device in someone’s hand.

Most people see mobile money as a payments story.

But for millions of African women, it became something much larger.

A quiet redistribution of economic power itself.

The Grandfather Who No Longer Goes to Bed Early Out of Fear

A #100DaysofSolar Human Impact Story from Kamengo, Mpigi District, Uganda

For Yiga Martia, nights once felt like something to survive rather than live through.

At 55 years old, the farmer from Kamengo, Mpigi District carries the responsibility of raising abandoned grandchildren, stepping into the role of caregiver, protector, and provider when the children needed someone most.

But before Solar M7 arrived, darkness made that responsibility painfully difficult.

Inside the home, the nights were filled with accidents, frustration, and fear. Martia often stumbled in the darkness, leaving him with bruises, scars, and constant physical pain. Every movement after sunset felt risky, especially while trying to care for the children depending on him.

Eventually, he began laying his bed very early each evening.

Not because he was tired.

But because darkness itself had become dangerous.

For Martia, the nights no longer represented rest.

They represented limitation. Fear. And the feeling that life had to stop when the sun disappeared.

Then Solar M7 arrived. And suddenly, the evenings inside his home began to change.

Today, reliable solar light fills the house after sunset, allowing Martia and the children to move safely and comfortably through the night. The fear of falling has reduced. The home feels calmer. And the evenings no longer end in frustration and anxiety.

For the first time in a long while, nighttime feels peaceful again.

“Before Solar M7, darkness made life difficult because moving around at night often caused injuries,” Martia shared during his interview. “Now the home feels safe, and I no longer fear the night the way I once did.”

According to Doreen Nanfuka, caregivers supporting vulnerable children often face enormous physical and emotional pressure when homes remain unsafe after dark.

“When households gain reliable light, it improves safety, confidence, and emotional wellbeing for both caregivers and children,” Doreen explained. “It helps families feel protected and stable again.”

Innocent Kawooya says stories like Martia’s reveal how energy access restores dignity and resilience for families carrying heavy responsibilities.

“Reliable light helps people continue caring for loved ones without fear and unnecessary risk,” he noted. “It creates safer homes and stronger families.”

Today, nights inside Martia’s home no longer feel ruled by danger. The children move safely. The house feels calm. And in a home where darkness once left a grandfather bruised and exhausted, Solar M7 is now helping restore something deeply important.

Safety. Strength. And the confidence to keep standing for the family depending on him.

Watch the full story of Yiga Martia from Kamengo, Mpigi District, Uganda across our platforms:

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#100DaysofSolar #SolarM7 #IncludeEveryone #EnergyAccess #HumanImpact #Mpigi #Uganda #CleanEnergy #HiPipo

Can Cheap Loans Fix Uganda’s Clean Energy Problem? Equity Bank Bets on Green Financing

For years, clean energy technologies have remained out of reach for most Ugandans. Not because they are unavailable, but because the upfront costs are too high. Equity Bank Uganda is now betting that affordable financing can close that gap.

The lender has rolled out a series of green financing products aimed at households, schools, farmers, and small businesses, offering longer repayment periods and working directly with renewable energy suppliers to reduce barriers to access.

But whether this marks a genuine shift or simply good marketing remains to be seen.

Uganda faces a familiar energy paradox. While the country has abundant renewable resources, millions of households still rely on charcoal, firewood, and kerosene. The reasons are not complicated. Solar home systems and improved cookstoves require significant upfront investment, often running into hundreds of dollars, beyond the reach of many rural families.

Government tax waivers on solar products have helped, but they have not solved the core problem. Traditional bank loans come with short repayment periods, typically twelve months, which make monthly installments unaffordable for the very people who need clean energy the most.

Virginia Semakula, Equity Bank’s Energy, Environment and Climate Change Pillar Head, acknowledged this reality in a recent interview.

“Many Ugandans want solar systems, clean cookstoves, and renewable energy solutions, but the initial costs remain too high for households and small businesses,” she said.

She argued that a twenty-four-month repayment structure works much better for most customers, allowing them to spread the cost without taking on unmanageable debt.

The bank has introduced two main products: Equi-Green Loans and Green Enterprise Financing. Under the model, Equity works directly with renewable energy suppliers who install the technologies while the bank provides financing to end users.

A more interesting component is Results-Based Financing (RBF), a model where incentives are only paid after projects are independently verified and proven to be working. Equity has implemented RBF programs in partnership with organizations such as GIZ-NDEF.

“Results-Based Financing is not about promises,” Semakula said. “The systems must first be installed, operational, and verified by an independent third party before incentives are paid out.”

In theory, this approach reduces risk for both the lender and the customer. In practice, it depends heavily on the quality of verification and the willingness of development partners to keep funding.

Equity Bank says the impact has already been visible. Households in rural communities have shifted from charcoal and kerosene to cleaner cooking systems, reducing fuel costs and indoor pollution. Businesses including salons, retail shops, and agro-processors are using solar energy to extend operating hours. Schools in off-grid districts such as Alebtong have installed solar systems, enabling students to study at night.

“In some schools, electricity access changed everything,” Semakula said. “Students could study longer, enrollment increased, and schools even recorded improved academic performance.”

The bank also claims that its RBF programs have demonstrated strong repayment rates, challenging the perception that renewable energy financing is too risky.

“There has always been fear that customers may not repay or that the technologies may fail, but the results are showing otherwise,” Semakula said.

Missing from the bank’s announcement are independent figures. Equity did not disclose how many loans it has disbursed, what the default rates are, or how many households have actually benefited. Without transparent data, it is difficult to assess whether green financing is scaling or simply being piloted.

There is also the question of interest rates. Equity did not specify what rates it charges on its green loans. If rates remain high, longer repayment periods alone may not solve the affordability problem.

Additionally, many financial institutions in Uganda still consider renewable energy financing risky. Equity says its data proves otherwise, but it has not released that data for public scrutiny.

Equity has announced a series of public awareness initiatives during Energy Month, including “Green Friday” campaigns where customers can interact with renewable energy technologies through demonstrations and exhibitions. The bank also plans to onboard more renewable energy companies into its ecosystem to increase customer choice and improve pricing competitiveness.

Financial literacy programs are also being expanded to educate Ugandans on how to select, finance, and effectively use clean energy technologies.

The bank’s long-term vision is ambitious. It wants to make renewable energy financing as accessible and common as school fees or boda boda loans.

“Our vision is a Uganda where every household and business can access clean energy without taking on unmanageable debt,” Semakula said.

Uganda’s clean energy transition will not happen on goodwill alone. It requires affordable financing, reliable technology, and consumer confidence. Equity Bank is positioning itself at the centre of that transition, but its claims need independent verification.

If the bank’s model works, it could unlock hundreds of millions of dollars in renewable energy investments and provide a template for other lenders. If it does not, it will join a long list of well-intentioned green finance initiatives that failed to scale.

Christian Eriksen Collapses on Pitch Again: Denmark Friendly Abandoned Six Years After Cardiac Arrest

Christian Eriksen collapsed on the pitch during Denmark’s friendly against Ukraine on Sunday, triggering immediate medical intervention and the abandonment of the match, almost six years after his cardiac arrest at Euro 2020.

The incident occurred midway through the second half when the 34-year-old midfielder clutched his chest and fell to the ground. Medical personnel rushed to his aid as players from both sides formed a protective huddle around him. Distressing scenes unfolded as several of Eriksen’s teammates broke down in tears.

A statement from the Danish Football Association later confirmed that Eriksen was conscious and in stable condition. “Christian Eriksen is conscious and doing well in the circumstances. The match has been called off,” the statement read.

A message displayed on the big screen inside the stadium in Odense echoed the update: “The match is over. Christian Eriksen is in good condition under the circumstances.” Fans responded by singing Eriksen’s name and applauding as he received treatment.

Around ten minutes after the collapse, Danish national team doctor Morten Boesen widely credited with saving Eriksen’s life during the Euro 2020 incident provided a more detailed update.

“Christian is doing well and walked off the pitch himself,” Boesen said. “As I see it, the pacemaker responded as it should. He was briefly unconscious, but regained consciousness very quickly, and we were quickly in contact with him.”

Boesen added that Eriksen would undergo further examination at a hospital to determine the cause of the incident. “He asked me to send his regards to all the players and tell them that he was OK.”

Eriksen, who now plays for German club Wolfsburg after leaving Manchester United last year, received treatment for approximately ten minutes before receiving a standing ovation as he made his way off the pitch. His wife, Sabrina, accompanied him to the hospital.

Former Denmark striker Nicklas Bendtner, covering the match as a pundit on Danish television, fought back tears as he processed the incident.

“These are horrible pictures, and it completely overshadows the rest of the evening,” Bendtner said. “My thoughts are with the family and the children. This is the second time it has happened, and as Christian’s friend also… it’s really terrible.”

Players from both sides accompanied Eriksen to a waiting ambulance while holding up a privacy screen around him. After the match was abandoned, the teams gathered in a huddle and walked around the stadium to thank the fans who had stayed.

Sunday’s collapse echoed the terrifying events of 12th June 2021, when Eriksen suffered a cardiac arrest during Denmark’s Euro 2020 match against Finland. On that occasion, his heart stopped for approximately five minutes, and he received CPR on the pitch before being stabilized in hospital. Eriksen later revealed that he had “died for five minutes.”

Following that incident, he was fitted with an Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillator (ICD), a type of pacemaker and made an incredible return to professional football just eight months later, first with Brentford and later with Manchester United.

Doctor Boesen suggested on Sunday that the same device may have saved Eriksen’s life once again.

Sunday’s match was Eriksen’s 151st cap for Denmark. The friendly had been arranged after both Denmark and Ukraine lost in the World Cup play-offs in March, missing out on this summer’s tournament. Denmark was leading 2-1 at the time of the abandonment.

Messages of support poured in from across the football community.

Eriksen’s current club, Wolfsburg, posted: “We’re thinking of you, Christian. According to the Danish Football Association, Christian is conscious and doing well given the circumstances. He has been taken to Odense University Hospital, where further examinations will follow. We are in close contact with the Danish Football Association and are following further developments. All the best and a speedy recovery, Christian.”

Tottenham Hotspur, one of Eriksen’s former clubs, added: “Our thoughts are with Christian Eriksen and his family. Wishing you a full and speedy recovery, Christian. We’re all with you.”

Ashley Young, who played alongside Eriksen at Inter Milan, shared a simple message: “I hope you’re OK, bro. Sending prayers and best wishes to you and your family.”

Eriksen will remain under observation at Odense University Hospital, where doctors will conduct further tests to establish what caused Sunday’s collapse. The Danish FA has confirmed that it remains in close contact with the player and his medical team.

For now, the football world holds its breath and sends its best wishes for a player who has already defied fate once, and who now faces another uncertain wait.