Hard-to-Reach Buganti S/C Comes Alive as Khalayi Peace Unveils Her Development Agenda

Buganti Sub-County came alive as Hon. Khalayi Peace continued her community mobilisation tour deep in the hard-to-reach areas of Namisindwa. Despite the rough terrain, poor road network, and distant villages, hundreds of residents gathered with excitement and hope, eager to interact with the woman they proudly call “our own.”

As she arrived, the community welcomed her with songs, ululations, and heartfelt testimonies, describing her as the long-awaited leader who understands their struggles.

The people of Buganti pledged full support for her, affirming that this time they want to vote for someone who understands their daily challenges. However, they also voiced one major concern:

“Please, don’t abandon us like those who came before you. They used our votes, disappeared for five years, and returned only when they needed us again.”

They assured her that they would stand with her all the way to victory:

“This time we are voting for our own to lead Namisindwa. We know you, we trust you, and we are ready to walk with you.”

In her heartfelt response, She thanked the people of Buganti for the overwhelming support during the primaries, reminding them that their votes, unity, and love are what made her victorious.

She emphasized teamwork as a pillar of her leadership

“We shall work together. With your local leaders, opinion leaders, and the youth, I will ensure every concern is followed up and addressed. Teamwork is the key to delivering real results.”

She passionately highlighted the key issues in her manifesto—issues directly affecting Buganti:

  1. Health Centres

She promised to push for:

Upgrading understaffed health centres

Ensuring availability of essential drugs

Improving maternal health services

Attracting more medical workers to area

  1. Roads

She reassured residents that she will champion:

Opening and maintaining community access roads

Lobbying for grading of main roads that connect Buganti to health centres and trading centres

  1. Water and Electricity

She promised to advocate for:

Expansion of safe water sources (boreholes, gravity flow schemes)

Extension of rural electrification to trading centres, schools, and churches

She stressed that these are not promises for political excitement, but commitments written in her manifesto for the people of Namisindwa.

She reminded the people that she is not the kind of politician who begins working in the fifth year to seek re-election:

“Give me the mandate, and I will dedicate my first six months to action, not politics. I will not wait for the end of the term. I am coming to work from day one.”

This statement ignited cheers from the crowd, many shouting:

“This is the leader we have been waiting for!”

As she concluded her address, she rallied all categories of people—women, youth, elders, boda riders, farmers, and community leaders—to endure, stay firm, and remain united until voting day:

“Endure every challenge, stand strong, and let us walk together until 15th January. Your vote is your power—let us use it wisely.”

She also requested the residents to cast an overwhelming vote for H.E. Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, stressing the importance of working with a President who has a strong development record:

“I need a President of action—someone who will support my efforts to bring development, improve our roads, water, electricity, and health services. For Namisindwa, there is no better partner in development than President Museveni.”

And with energy and conviction, she closed with a powerful rallying line:

“Time is now. Imbuka ni iyino

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