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Former Kampala Capital City Authority (KCCA) Executive Director, Dorothy Kisaka, has urged women in Busoga to save and establish profit-making businesses, which she said will guarantee their security and secure their future.
She gave the advice while meeting a cross-section of women under the Neyendeire Development Initiatives (NDI) group at Buweera village in Buwenge town council, Jinja district, on Monday (November 03).
Kisaka, whom many describe as the champion of NDI, delivered a rallying cry that rang clear across the community, especially women who attended the meeting.
“Every woman, every homestead must have a savings box. Over 2,000 homes in Busoga already do. Save before you spend, invest in your children, and turn your kitchen into a classroom of wealth,” Kisaka said with applause heard in the background.
Flanked by district captains/chairpersons wearing bright Neyendeire T-shirts, Kisaka outlined the project’s four pillars, which include: A home that fears the Lord, health first, daily savings, and strategic thinking.
“This is not a hand-out, it is a hand-up. Approach your LC1, join your village cluster, and borrow against your own discipline. Loans start at 500,000 shillings and grow with every repaid cycle,” she stated.
She added that “Busoga will rise when its women refuse to be left behind. Find your Neyendeire captain tonight. Open your savings box tomorrow. By Christmas, let every homestead echo with the sound of coins building tomorrow’s university fees.”
One of the founding members of NDI, Milly Gabula, revealed that since 2015, the revolving fund has touched 50,000 people in the region.
"Women now run poultry units, mushroom sheds, and roadside vegetable stalls – all seeded by micro-loans and weekly peer training.
Every Thursday, they sit under a tree. They weigh their savings, share hygiene tips, and role-play how to say ‘no’ to a drunken fist. Domestic violence drops when a woman’s purse is heavier than her fear,” Gabula said, pointing to the shade overhead.

Women in a happy mood during their meeting with Dorothy Kisaka (not in picture) at Buweera village in Jinja district on Monday.