What's Hot

    Cranes keep World Cup dream alive with confident win over Somalia

    September 10, 2025

    Double Victory for Buyende’s Namulondo as Tribunal Upholds NRM Win

    September 10, 2025

    Kamuli LC5 race heats up as four candidates cleared, NUP hopeful disqualified

    September 7, 2025
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Busoga TodayBusoga Today
    Subscribe
    Thursday, September 11
    • National
    • Kyabazinga
    • Features
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Africa
    • World
    • Sports
    • Others
      • Columnists
      • Community
      • Development
      • Districts
      • Education
      • Trends
      • Relationships
      • Society
    Busoga TodayBusoga Today
    Home » BKYC Rolls Out Career-Guidance and Menstrual-Hygiene Drive in Kaliro
    Education

    BKYC Rolls Out Career-Guidance and Menstrual-Hygiene Drive in Kaliro

    Simon MbagoBy Simon MbagoJuly 20, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Kakira

    The Busoga Kingdom Youth Council (BKYC) on Friday, July 18, 2024, inaugurated a region-wide Career Guidance and Inclusive Menstrual Hygiene Initiative (CGIMH) at Namwiwa Secondary School, pledging to keep Busoga’s learners in class and equipped for life after graduation.

    Led by council chairperson Yafesi Bairukireki, the youthful delegation swept into Kaliro District with a two-pronged agenda: help students chart realistic career paths and remove the menstrual-health hurdles that routinely force girls out of school.

    “Education must be more than chalk and exams; it must protect dignity and unlock opportunity,” Mr Bairukireki told an assembly of some 650 students packed into the school courtyard.

    The one-day programme blended pep-talks on subject selection and goal-setting with a hands-on workshop where girls stitched their own reusable sanitary pads—an exercise intended to slash monthly absenteeism

    Headteacher Waiswa Alamanzani hailed the Kingdom’s decision to dispatch youths to evangelise education to their peers.

    “We had long searched for partners willing to speak to learners in a language they trust,” he said. “The Kyabazinga’s call to keep children in school will echo loudly in this region.”

    Yet Mr Waiswa pulled no punches about infrastructure. With just two permanent classroom blocks, dozens of pupils take lessons beneath mango trees.

    Paul Munanha, BKYC speaker, responded that each outreach now includes a symbolic tree-planting ceremony: “We are executing the Kyabazinga’s twin agenda—green Busoga and educated Busoga.”

    Prince Job Mugoya from Bukooli chiefdom framed the initiative as a cultural mission as well as a social one.

    “His Majesty graduated this year; that act alone preaches louder than speeches. We are here to amplify his example.”

    Fellow council member Moreen Nakirima urged parents to buy cloth and needles so daughters can keep making pads at home: “Self-sufficiency is cheaper than emergency trips to the trading centre.”

    Senior Two student Anitah Namwebya received three packets of pads, enough for two months.

    “I feared missing class whenever periods came. Now I’m covered—and I can sew more,” she said, brandishing her first homemade sample.

    Freshman Michael Igaga left the session vowing renewed commitment: “They showed me success starts with respecting myself, parents and teachers. From today, school is my first priority.”

    BKYC plans to replicate the model across Busoga’s 11 districts, targeting both primary and tertiary institutions. Funding is largely voluntary, though the council says talks are under way with NGOs for supplies in hard-to-reach sub-counties.

    “We will not rest until every learner—boy or girl—can attend school without shame or uncertainty,” Mr Bairukireki declared as the team boarded their van for the 80-kilometre trip back to Jinja.

    ColorRun
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Simon Mbago
    • Website

    Related Posts

    UHTTI staff trained in competence based teaching

    August 6, 2025

    Kyabazinga takes on Chancellor role at Lubega Institute of Nursing and Health professionals

    May 31, 2025

    Concerns rise over politicization at Kigandalo secondary school

    March 19, 2025

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Editors Picks
    Latest Posts

    Subscribe to News

    Get the latest news right to your inbox

    Advertisement
    Kakira

    BUSOGAtoday, hosted on www.busogatoiday.com is published by the BusogaToday Media & Publications Ltd, and aims to establish it as a community media platform that combines both legacy and modern digital media tools to deliver.

    Facebook Twitter Instagram YouTube LinkedIn

    Subscribe to our newsletter

    Get the latest news right in your inbox.

    © 2025 All rights reserved by Busoga Today. Designed by John Ssenkeezi.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.