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Residents of Hoima city have tasked newly elected leaders to prioritise issues affecting development and service delivery across the city.
Vicente Nyegenya, a resident of Rusembe cell in Hoima West Division, said residents expect the recently elected leaders to urgently address the persistent water crisis.
The call was made during a thanksgiving and victory party organised by the People’s Front for Freedom’s (PFF) Asinansi Nyakato, the Hoima city woman Member of Parliament, who was elected on February 7, 2026. The event was held at the PFF offices at Duhaga roundabout in Hoima city.
Nyegenya noted that piped water has not reached most parts of the city, yet borehole and shallow well construction had been halted, leaving residents to rely on unsafe water sources.
“We are in the city but it is like we are in rural areas, several place areas including my cell we have no piped water, water is serious challenge in the city, for some of us with capacity to buy tanks, we harvest water from our house, but when it is dry season like this one accessing safe and clean water is nightmare, so we hope that the elected new leaders will address this challenge,” he said.
Nicolas Tumusiime, a resident of Kiduma and a vendor at Hoima Central Market, said vendors want the new leadership to address the challenge of street vending.
Independent Hoima city Mayor-elect, Edward Isingoma (centre), with his wife on right, arrives at Nyakato's thanksgiving party.
He explained that despite the existence of a city market, street vendors continue to operate freely along major streets, disadvantaging those trading from within the market.
Another resident, James Murungi, said the new leaders should prioritise sanitation, noting that many houses in the city lack proper sanitary facilities. He added that uncollected garbage remains a major challenge that requires urgent attention.
William Musiguzi, the chairperson of vendors operating on pavements and walkways along the Duhaga Roundabout roads in Hoima West Division, demanded that the new leaders identify land and construct a market where vendors can be relocated.
He said more than 400 vendors are currently operating along the Duhaga roadside in an unfavourable environment.
Musiguzi noted that the vendors have been operating along the roadside for the past five years after they were evicted from the market where they previously worked. He said businessman Francis Kabambe evicted them after Hoima city allegedly failed to clear rent arrears.