Uganda moves to jail those refusing COVID-19 vaccination

Ugandan authorities have begun plans to jail citizens who refuse the COVID-19 vaccination.
Werikhe Kafabusa, Uganda’s state minister for trade, has proposed a new law that seeks the imposition of jail terms and fines on persons who defy protocols meant to curtail the spread of infectious diseases such as COVID-19 and its variants.
According to VOA, persons found guilty of concealing infectious diseases would pay $850 or spend a year in jail.
In the same vein, school managers admitting students without any proof of vaccination and parents who shield their children from getting vaccinated may be liable to pay a fine of $1,100 or spend six months in jail. In worst cases, the offender may be asked to do both.
Uganda’s ministry of health which welcomed the development noted that the stiff measures were necessary in driving up the country’s vaccination level which was for the overall well-being of the citizens.
However, health analyst, Allana Kembabazi, criticised the proposed bill, arguing that it would only encourage vaccination fraud among Ugandans.
She believed that many persons would rather forge a vaccination card than get vaccinated.
Speaking to VOA, she said “The way they have handled the roll out has been poor. You go to a health centre they tell you, they are out today,” adding that “You take your first Pfizer dose, you have to hunt for the second. If they could address the issue with the roll out and really put in place a targeted community outreach campaign, that would be, I think, more effective. Because, when you put all these punitive sanctions, some people will just try and go ahead and forge.”
More from Peoples Gazette

Economy
Buhari regime will continue to borrow without subsidy removal: Femi Adesina
“You know how much could have been saved if the subsidy was removed and how it could have been diverted to other areas and spheres of national life.

Lagos
Fuel supply improves in Lagos: Report
The state-run Newswire said some retail outlets it monitored on Friday in the state were opened and dispensing fuel.

Economy
Ghanaians get $400 per tonne; we lose N60 billion annually: Nigerian cocoa farmers
In Ghana and Cote d’Ivoire, according to Mr Adegoke, each farmer collects $400 for each tonne of cocoa.

Economy
Kenya mulls adoption of digital currency
The country’s Central Bank cites reduction, interoperability and enhanced cross-border payments as the main drivers for the digital currency’s adoption.

World
Nigeria to help resolve security crisis between North and South Korea: Buhari
The Nigerian leader joined world leaders virtually on Friday to attend the opening of World Summit 2022.

Faith
Oluwo of Iwo demands N20 million from Governor Oyetola to marry Kano princess
Rasheed Akanbi’s request highlights how traditional institutions have been draining resources from public coffers to finance largely personal interests.

NationWide
Aregbesola calls for review of bush burning law
“Though there are naturally occurring fire incidents, most fire incidents are man-made, either accidentally, negligently or on purpose,” said Mr Aregbesola.