Uganda
Blogs
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Jay’s Idle Notes
http://lehommenoir.blogspot.com/
Weblog from a Kampalan with with a taste for traveling around his country and musing on living in the capital. Jay’s photographs from his travels show scenes of daily life in the country
Victor's blog from Uganda
http://www.redcross.org.uk/blog.asp?id=66213
Victor Karamagi gave up a career as a journalist in Uganda’s capital city Kampala, to join the Ugandan Red Cross as its communications officer. His weekly blog tells of his reactions to working in Northern Uganda and documents the health and welfare of people caught up in the conflict between government and rebel forces. He is a football fan and supports both SC Villa from Kampala. and London’s Chelsea FC
I’ve left copenhagen for uganda
http://www.pernille.typepad.com/uganda/
35 year-old Pernille Bærendtsen works for The Danish Association for International Co-operation in Uganda. Her daily blog has lots of photographs and her wide-ranging thoughts on the Ugandan sugar-boycott, womens’ magazines, truck drivers and gay and lesbian rights (or the lack of them!) won her the 2006 ‘Uganda Best of Blog Awards’.
Jackfruity
http://jackfruity.blogspot.com
22 year-old Kansas-born Jackfruity has been blogging since the age of 13. She is now living in Uganda and is a mover and shaker in the Ugandan blogging community. Her regular postings cover a wide range of subjects and champion the social and political power of the blog
Country Boyi
http://dennozbug.blogspot.com
Ugandan journalist, Dennis D. Muhumuza reports on interviews he has had on his radio programmes and intersperses his impressions with stories and reflections on his roots in the Ugandan countryside and his life now, in modern Kampala. Some poetry and fabulously quirky photos (particularly of dancers and a boy with a chicken!) help to make this an idiosyncratic personal weblog
My Life in a Blog
http://sanjoyg.blogspot.com
32 year-old Sanjoy Ghosh from Austen, Texas is a conservationist and field logistician working in northern Uganda. Follow his story from being a soccer fan concerned about world poverty from his home in the US, his acceptance by Medecins sans Frontiers as a volunteer in Africa, up to his arrival and well-informed, sympathetic impressions of living in Uganda
