Skills, investment portal could help those fleeing xenophobia

Here is the weird transition that nobody is talking about
July 1, 2026

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Skills, investment portal could help those fleeing xenophobia

Anti immigration protestors in South Africa. Photo: @SABCNews

Just like that, we are already in the second half of 2026.

Six months to the end of the year. Time really flies fast even when you may not be having a great time. The year kicked off with presidential and parliamentary elections in Uganda and a war in Iran that disrupted global economies. Skyrocketing fuel prices mean a tough economy for ordinary people.

As if that wasn’t enough, an Ebola outbreak was declared in Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and a few cases in Uganda. Some countries reacted by banning Ugandans from entering their countries. Businesses and opportunities were lost. Covid-19 taught people that travels can easily be disrupted.

Yet if you live in Kampala, you won’t tell there is any Ebola outbreak. Life as far as Ebola is concerned is normal. Anyway, a new government is now in place. More ministers than Uganda has ever had and a few acting ones, holding more than one docket. They have promised an economy that jumps from $50-60 billion to a $500 billion one annually.

Government says it will do a lot of stuff to achieve this. Sometimes though, government is government. We pray to be alive to enjoy this. The end of the first half of the year in Uganda means the start of a new financial year. As you may notice, your fuel pump prices are going up as the government has increased the tax it charges on each litre of fuel.

The fuel prices have been high already due to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz due to the war in Iran, now they will even be higher. Time to implement some austerity measures at home. Life is for the brave, not so? You probably made some resolutions at the beginning of 2026. Hope you have already achieved them or you are halfway there.

If you haven’t started on them, you can still adjust a few things. A clip on social media shows somebody whose goal this year was to buy a car but has easily added the letters p, e and t at the end of car to mean carpet. That is what he will buy. The car is out of reach now but the carpet shouldn’t be. Creative way of achieving some resolutions.

Whatever resolutions you may have made, starting a new life in South Africa may have to be reconsidered. Ordinary South Africans unable to find jobs have turned to other Africans who migrated there accusing them of depriving them of their apartheid inheritance. Some people have already lost their lives and/ or properties.

The government of Uganda is reportedly making plans to evacuate Ugandans facing xenophobic attacks in South Africa. Hundreds have registered already, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. They have had enough of it. I hope the government of Uganda will have a plan for them upon arrival from the country that once had leaders like Nelson Mandela.

Have the impending returnees gained any skills that can help Uganda drive the economy to the promised land of $500 billion a year? Do they have some capital they would like to deploy? Those who have some needed skills could be linked to those who need them.

A digital portal could be designed where they register indicating the skills and expertise they possess so those who need them could easily find them. Those looking for businesses to invest in could also do the same.

Matching businesses with the skills and even capital is a necessity to grow the economy. The portal would of course not be for only those returning from South Africa but for all people to ensure inclusivity. I think some recently returned from Iran and there always many returning from other countries as well.

Millions of others are here in Uganda. They have some skills, but they don’t know how to reach those who need them. Many others have the required capital businesses need to scale but don’t know how to invest.

That is how they fall to charlatans promising abnormal returns on investment. Of course, investing in other people’s business would require some sort of public oversight so that people don’t lose their money easily after investing but it shouldn’t be as difficult as going to heaven or listing on the stock exchange.

A standard legal agreement or registration of this investment with a public entity like the Capital Markets Authority or Uganda Registrations Services Bureau could help.

djjuuko@gmail.com

The writer is a communication and visibility consultant.

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