New Quezon Memorial Circle tennis courts, skatepark open to public

The Quezon City Government opened public tennis courts and a new competition-standard skatepark located inside the Quezon Memorial Circle.

The Quezon City Government has officially opened a new competition-standard skatepark and public tennis courts at the Quezon Memorial Circle, expanding free and accessible spaces for sports, recreation and community engagement.

The skatepark in particular, catering to both beginners and professionals, marks a major investment in the city’s youth development, active lifestyles and inclusive public infrastructure.

Meanwhile, two lawn tennis courts take up a 1,198 square-meter space complete with fencing and proper lighting.

According to Quezon City Mayor Joy Belmonte, the project reflects the city’s commitment to building safer, more inclusive, and future-ready public spaces where communities can thrive.

“We want our young people to have safe, high-quality spaces where they can stay active, express themselves, develop their talents, and build meaningful connections with others,” said Belmonte. “This skatepark is more than just a sports facility – it is a public space designed for community, creativity, and opportunity.”

E-Sports International developed the design of the 3,758-square-meter skatepark in collaboration with Filipino skateboarders.

The area features a street course equipped with rails, stairs, ledges and technical elements, as well as a park-style bowl for advanced skating and high-performance runs.

Beginner-friendly areas, highlighted by a casual practice bowl, will be separated from the advanced sections for safer circulation.

Only skateboards and inline skates will be allowed inside the facility. The use of helmets will be mandatory while wearing elbow pads, knee pads, and wrist guards are strongly encouraged.

High-strength concrete was used for the skateable surfaces to deliver durability, rider safety and world-class riding quality.

Also within the space are a 260-seat spectator bleacher area. PWD-accessible ramps, an upgraded drainage system, and lighting systems for safe evening operations.

Facility users must complete and sign waiver before entering. Schedules, guidelines and applicable fees will be announced through the Quezon City Government’s official social media pages.

Llover to bank on ‘tapang at tibay’ vs older foe in pivotal title eliminator

Bravery and fortitude.

Rising boxing star Kenneth Llover may be facing off against a tough undefeated opponent in perhaps the biggest match of his young career, but his coach Carl Penalosa sees advantages for his ward.

Llover (17-0 win-loss record, with 12 knockouts,) will face Michael Angeletti (14-0, with eight KOs) in an eliminator for the International Boxing Federation bantamweight title next month in Japan.

It will be a clash of styles, as the aggressive Llover takes on the more methodical Angeletti in a 12-round war.

Penalosa told Philstar.com just two words to describe the advantage of the pride of General Trias, Cavite.

‘Tapang at tibay,’ he said Thursday.

Llover has won his previous five bouts via knockout, and Penalosa said they are already preparing to make it six.

‘Handang-handa na kami. Yung preparation namin, ginagawa namin lahat para sa laban na ito,’ Penalosa said.

The veteran coach, though, stressed that it will be a difficult matchup for them.

‘Yung kalaban namin, magaling. Mahirap kalabanin. Magalaw. Yung game plan namin, paano namin siya papasukin? Anong gagawin namin?’ he said.

He added that the difference in experience between the 23-year-old Llover and the 29-year-old American will be ‘big’.

‘Yan ang game plan namin. Suntukan talaga kami. Pasukin namin kami nang pasukin. Wala kaming ibang paraan.’

For his part, Llover said that he will go for broke against Angeletti.

Sara Duterte blames Marcos admin for rising debt, unemployment

Vice President Sara Duterte has asserted that the Philippine government’s debt reached P18.49 trillion and the unemployment rate remained at 5 percent in March because the entire administration is not working, especially President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

‘As expected, because the entire administration is not working, especially the Presiden,’ Duterte, speaking in a mix of Filipino and English, said in an interview in The Hague, Netherlands, on Thursday, May 7 (Netherlands time), when asked about her reaction to the recent recorded debt and employment rates in the Philippines.

On Wednesday, the Bureau of the Treasury reported that the Philippine government’s outstanding debt swelled to P18.49 trillion in March, nearly 2 percent higher than the P18.16 trillion debt recorded in February.

The Philippine Statistics Authority, meanwhile, recorded a flat 5 percent unemployment rate in March, slightly lower than the 5.1 percent recorded in February.

According to Duterte, Marcos should focus on his job as the president to address those issues and must ignore ordinary citizens criticizing him on social media.

‘That’s why I said, when you’re President, you don’t care what ordinary citizens say. Will you still chase those on social media, on Facebook, who are airing their grievances, their anger. No more,’ she said.

‘What you should be doing is focusing on your work. And when you don’t focus on your work, that’s what happens, unemployment increases, we borrow more and more,’ the Vice President said.

‘Sensitive, insecure, afraid’

In the interview, Duterte was also asked about the government’s action regarding former broadcaster Jay Sonza and Vlogger Jeffrey Luces Celiz or ‘Ka Eric Celiz,’ who were charged with unlawful publication and cyberlibel for allegedly spreading Marcos’ fake medical record.

The vice president emphasized that ‘those kinds of people who are affected by the opinions of ordinary citizens are sensitive, insecure, and afraid.’

‘When you are president, it doesn’t matter what the citizens attack you with. Because that is part of your job. What you should focus on is how you can make the country peaceful and prosperous. That is what you should focus on,’ she said.

The INQUIRER reached out to Malacañang regarding Duterte’s remarks but has yet to respond as of posting time.

Meanwhile, Duterte, who recently announced her presidential bid for the 2028 elections, said that if elected as the country’s leader, she would adopt the transportation system she observed in the Netherlands for the Philippines.

Duterte is currently in The Hague to visit her father, former President Rodrigo Duterte who is detained at the International Criminal Court’s detention center over his ongoing ‘crimes against humanity’ case related to his administration’s bloody war against illegal drugs.

The vice president has been granted travel authority by Malacañang and will be out of the country from April 23 to May 15 to visit the Netherlands, South Korea, Belgium, Germany, and the United Kingdom.

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Her travel overseas coincides with the time when the House committee on justice is about to conclude hearings on her impeachment case.

OIL PRICE WATCH as of May 8, 2026

Motorists are hopeful that next week there will be another round of fuel price rollbacks after global oil prices plunged on easing tensions between the United States and Iran.

International oil markets fell sharply after US President Donald Trump said a possible deal with Iran was ‘very possible,’ easing fears of a wider conflict in the Middle East that could disrupt oil supply.

The sharp drop in global crude prices boosted expectations that local oil firms could implement another reduction in pump prices should the trend continue over the next few trading days.

Below are the prevailing fuel prices monitored and gathered by the INQUIRER team as of Friday, May 8, 2026.

The tax house built 22 years after

AT a ceremony attended by the leadership of the National Assembly and state governors, among others, on April 14, President Bola Tinubu inaugurated the new headquarters of the Nigeria Revenue Service (NRS), formerly the Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS), in Abuja. Speaking during the unveiling of the new office located in the Central Business District (CBD) of the city, a move described as marking a significant milestone in the ongoing reform of Nigeria’s revenue administration framework superintended by the NRS chairman, Dr Zacch Adedeji, Tinubu said his administration’s reforms were aimed at ending revenue leakages, adding that no serious country could ‘achieve lasting prosperity on a weak and fragmented revenue system.’ He said: ‘We must not only collect revenue; we must build trust.’ On his part, the NRS boss said that the new headquarters represented institutional stability, operational efficiency, and renewed commitment to public service excellence. According to him, it showed that the government’s reforms were producing visible results.

The story of the new NRS building is indeed remarkable. It was built after 22 years of delay. For years, successive administrations spoke of the need to deliver a central, purpose-built headquarters for the revenue agency, but only under the leadership of the new NRS boss has the imposing edifice with 16 floors and three towers boasting green areas, a modern library, a digital museum, a restaurant,, among other facilities, emerged. According to reports, the edifice can accommodate up to 3,000 staff members. The project completed in 30 months is powered by CNG, taking it completely off the national grid and potentially saving approximately N8.2bn annually while posing no threat to the environment.

Against the backdrop of the litany of abandoned projects that dot both the Abuja and the larger Nigerian landscape, the construction of the NRS headquarters is indeed significant. Although there is no officially agreed figure for the total cost of abandoned federal projects in the country, the summations by government panels and professional bodies over the years were quite scary. In 2011, a Presidential Committee on Abandoned Projects reportedly identified 11,886 abandoned federal projects across Nigeria. In 2021, the Nigerian Institute of Quantity Surveyors quoted the same figure, putting the cost at over ?20 trillion. Among others, the National Library Headquarters, originally awarded for ?8.59 billion in 2006, with estimated completion costs later rising toward ?100 billion, is still only a dream. The Abuja Millenium Tower conceived in 2005 remains an unfinished project. According to experts, the Federal Secretariat Complex would be worth over ?12 trillion today if fully functional.

There is, of course, the Ajaokuta Steel Complex, one of Nigeria’s most notorious industrial projects. It is not exactly cheering news that the Lagos-Ibadan expressway remains uncompleted after about 20 years. The story is the same regarding the East-West Road, highlighting the criminal lethargy and indifference underlying governmental activities in the country. When Nigerians question these travesties, issues of policy discontinuity, corruption and contract fraud, poor budget releases, weak project monitoring, inflated contracts, and legal disputes with contractors, among others, inevitably surface.

If the Federal Government is guilty of abandoning projects, so are the states, which have not covered themselves in glory. In February this year, the BudgIT service delivery monitoring platform, Tracka, uncovered widespread cases of abandoned and fraudulently delivered public projects across several states, putting the losses in the range of N24bn. Against this backdrop, the coming on board of the NRS headquarters is a commendable development. At this very moment, many of the MDAs are tenants in rented accommodation costing taxpayers a fortune. In this regard, it is remarkable that the NRS building has not been allowed to continue wasting away. We commend the effort and recommend its replication across the ministries, departments and agencies. By ensuring that the project was completed within 30 months, the Adedeji leadership demonstrated what can be achieved with disciplined resolve.

However, while it may be true that a significant number of federal buildings went to waste because of poor budgetary releases, it is also true that many, if not all of them, are an exact picture of the kind of leadership they have had over the years. In the case of the NRS, it would be quite interesting to see what previous leaderships did with governmental releases. The NRS headquarters would not be standing today if the current leadership, which is credited with closing tax loopholes, expanding the tax net, improving compliance via technology and increasing non-oil revenue, helping to reduce Nigeria’s dependence on crude oil earnings, had decided to continue with the practice of using rented accommodation. If money was released for the project in the past but frittered away, it would be quite remiss of the government not to uncover the perpetrators of such heists. Nigerians deserve to have value for their money, and those who play ping-pong with public funds deserve to be thrown into jail. The Federal Government has a bounden duty to ensure that other abandoned projects are completed. It must probe the handling of funds allocated to them over the years.

Benue: The quiet reset to bring peace

FOR a state long defined by its struggles with insecurity and political division, Benue is beginning to chart a different course. At the heart of this shift is a decisive reconciliation effort led by Secretary to the Government of the Federation, Senator George Akume, whose intervention has brought warring political factions to the same table. Beyond the politics, the move signals something deeper, a recognition that lasting development in Benue must be built first on peace, unity, and a shared sense of purpose. Chiemelie Ezeobi reports. Benue has long carried the weight of a state blessed with fertile land and industrious people, yet burdened by recurring security challenges and deep political fractures. For years, communities have lived between hope and hesitation, as cycles of violence and political discord affected the pace of development and strained the social fabric of the society. In such a climate, the promise of prosperity has often felt just out of reach. Roads can be built, investments can be attracted, and policies can be drafted, but without peace, progress struggles to take root. It is within this fragile context that a new chapter is beginning to unfold as one shaped not by confrontation, but by reconciliation.

Across Benue, from Makurdi to the rural farming communities that form the backbone of its economy, the impact of instability has been deeply felt. Farmers, who should be focused on cultivating crops, have at times been forced to abandon their lands. Families have had to rebuild lives disrupted by conflict. And within the political space, divisions have often mirrored, and sometimes magnified, the tensions on the ground. The internal crisis within the All Progressives Congress (APC) in the state only added another layer of uncertainty. What began as disagreements following the 2023 general elections gradually evolved into a full-blown factional struggle, splitting loyalties and weakening cohesion within the ruling party. Governor Hyacinth Alia found himself at the centre of this storm, navigating resistance from powerful blocs over control of party structures and appointments. On one side stood a camp led by Austin Agada; on the other, a faction under former state chairman Ben Omakolo aligned with the governor. The situation deteriorated further in March 2026 when parallel congresses produced rival party executives, deepening divisions and raising concerns about the party’s future in the state. For many observers, it was a dangerous trajectory, one that risked not only political instability but also the broader goal of restoring peace and economic confidence in Benue.

It was against this backdrop that the Secretary to the Government of the Federation and Leader of the North Central, Senator George Akume, stepped in. In a move widely seen as both strategic and statesmanlike, Akume convened a widely representative stakeholders’ meeting aimed at ending the long-running crisis. But beyond the political calculations, his intervention carried something more fundamental, an understanding that unity at the top often shapes stability on the ground. The high-level meeting, held on Sunday, brought together all warring factions and ultimately led to a reconciliation between Governor Alia and his political adversaries. Years of intra-party conflict within the APC in Benue were, at least for now, brought to a close. Those familiar with the process describe Akume’s approach as measured and inclusive. Rather than impose a solution, he created a platform for dialogue, allowing grievances to be aired while steadily guiding stakeholders toward common ground. His role as a long-standing figure in Benue politics and a respected voice across the Middle Belt proved crucial in building trust among the divided camps.

While the reconciliation has clear political implications, its significance goes beyond party unity. For Benue, peace is not just a political achievement; it is an economic necessity. The state’s vast agricultural potential has often been cited as a key driver of growth, yet insecurity and instability have limited its full realisation. Investors are cautious where uncertainty persists, and communities cannot thrive where divisions dominate. By restoring cohesion within the ruling party, Akume’s intervention is expected to create a more stable environment for governance. With fewer internal distractions, the government can refocus on policies that drive development, from improving rural infrastructure to supporting farmers and attracting investment. (See the rest on www.tribuneonlineng.com)

Olubunmi, a societal analyst, writes in from Benue State

As part of the reconciliation framework, Akume proposed the adoption of automatic tickets for elected officials, including Governor Alia and members of the National and State Assemblies. The move is seen as both a peace incentive and a strategic effort to reduce internal competition, thereby stabilising the party structure and allowing leaders to concentrate on governance.

Party insiders suggest that the initiative is also aligned with broader efforts to strengthen the APC ahead of the 2027 general elections and support the re-election of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu. However, within Benue, its immediate impact is likely to be felt in the form of reduced political tension and a renewed focus on delivering results.

For ordinary residents, political agreements are often judged not by the statements issued in meeting rooms, but by the changes they bring to daily life. In communities that have experienced both insecurity and political neglect, the hope is that this newfound unity will translate into tangible improvements like safer environments, better access to farmlands, and a government that can act decisively without being held back by internal disputes. There is also a psychological dimension to peace. When leaders set aside differences and work together, it sends a powerful signal to the wider society. It suggests that cooperation is possible, even after prolonged conflict, and that shared interests can outweigh personal ambitions. Observers note that Akume’s ‘fatherly posture’ throughout the reconciliation process marked by restraint, patience, and a willingness to listen, played a significant role in calming tensions. In a political landscape often characterised by rivalry, such an approach stood out.

With the peace deal now in place, attention is turning to its durability. Political agreements can be fragile, particularly in environments where mistrust has taken root over time. Maintaining unity will require continued dialogue, mutual respect, and a commitment from all parties to prioritise the collective good. Yet there is cautious optimism as many stakeholders view the reconciliation as a turning point and an opportunity to reset not just the APC in Benue, but the broader trajectory of the state. If sustained, the peace could create the conditions needed for long-term stability and growth. For Senator George Akume, the development reinforces his standing as more than a federal appointee. It underscores his role as a stabilising force and elder statesman within the Middle Belt, someone capable of bridging divides and steering complex negotiations toward resolution. For Benue, the implications are even more profound as after years of navigating uncertainty, the state is being offered a chance to rebuild on a foundation of unity. The road ahead may still be challenging, but the message is clear: prosperity begins with peace, and peace, when carefully built and genuinely sustained, has the power to transform not just politics, but lives.

Agara: APC assures of level playing field

Former Deputy Governor of Nasarawa State and immediate past Director General of the National Directorate of Employment, Silas Agara, has formally notified of his intention to contest the Nasarawa North Senatorial seat in 2027.

Agara made the announcement on Wednesday during a visit to the Nasarawa State APC secretariat in Lafia, where he met with the party’s state leadership to seek support and formally present his aspiration.

Describing the move as a ‘Christian missionary journey’ aimed at contributing to the growth of the state, particularly his Nasarawa North Senatorial District, Agara said he resigned from his federal appointment to heed the call of his people.

He had served as NDE DG for about one year and seven months after assuming office in June/July 2024 – a tenure meant to last four years.

‘I’m doing so to honor the call of our people, to add value to the politics of the state, and to support the aspirations of our people,’ he told party officials. ‘For me, Silas Agara, I’m not competing with anyone for a stage. The stage is large enough for all of us to prove our worth.’

The former deputy governor stressed the need for unity and collective effort to ensure the party retains power in 2027.

Agara, who is expected to contest against Governor Sule in the APC primaries, commended the governor for providing leadership to both the party and the state, and prayed for his continued strength until the end of his tenure.

Agara’s declaration sets up a potential APC primary contest with Governor Sule, who has also purchased expression of interest and nomination forms for the same Nasarawa North Senate seat.

The Chairman of the All Progressives Congress in Nasarawa State, Aliyu Bello, assured former Deputy Governor Silas Agara of a level playing field as he seeks the party’s ticket for the Nasarawa North Senatorial seat.

The chairman commended Agara for showing respect to party structure by seeking permission before embarking on a ward-to-ward campaign tour in the Senatorial district.

ADC presents an opportunity to end broken promises – Hayatu-Deen

A Presidential aspirant on the platform of the African Democratic Congress, ADC, Mohammed Hayatu-Deen has charged Nigerians to use the ADC to finally break away from the cycle of recycled faces and broken promises that has held this country back for too long.

Hayatu-Deen made the call yesterday when the ADC Vanguard Support Group (ADC – VSG), formally endorsed his candidacy at an event in Abuja attended by more than 500 party supporters and associates.

Addressing his supporters and members of the vanguard after the endorsement, Hayatu-Deen said the ADC is not just another political party, ‘it is the vehicle through which Nigeria can finally break from the cycle of recycled faces and broken promises that has held this country back for too long.’

While promising his commitment to the Nigerian project, Hayatu-Deen asked ADC members and Nigerians to join hands with him to get the job done.

The endorsement marks the most significant digital and grassroots show of support for any aspirant in the ADC presidential race.

Speaking at the event, Convener of the support group, Comrade Abdul Abdulkadir, said the party and Nigerians need a leader like Hayatu-Deen that has shown capacity in the private sector.

Kyanja effect: Privacy, desire and who is really watching

Let’s start with what we refuse to say out loud: a Kyanja Airbnb booking is not just a booking. It is a statement of intent. The good WiFi. The tasteful linen. The kitchen you will never use because you did not go there to cook. Nobody drives to Kyanja for the fresh air.

You go to Kyanja because you need a room in a building where nobody knows you, in a suburb far from your real life.

We have all either been there, or know someone who has. The Airbnb is the modern alibi.

The discreet weekend. The story that begins with ‘I need a break from the city’ and ends with you triple-checking that your location was off the entire time. You have seen how those Airbnbs advertise… ‘comes with a Jacuzzi that massages your soul.’ And while you are deep into your soul searching, Big brother is watching.

So, when the Kyanja Airbnb scandal broke; hidden cameras, leaked videos, a Telegram group that had more subscribers than your favourite podcast; the collective gasp was less about shock and more about a very specific, very personal panic. The kind that makes you think: when exactly was I last in Kyanja?

Here is the part nobody is saying: What the hosts did [allegedly] was criminal. Installing hidden cameras in rooms people pay to be private in is a violation. The guests, whoever they are, whatever they were doing; deserved the privacy they paid for.

And yet.

The videos spread faster than any public health announcement I have ever seen in this country. From private Telegram groups to public timelines to your cousin’s WhatsApp status.

The same people posting ‘this is so wrong’ were the ones who had already watched it twice, screenshot it, and sent it to three different group chats.

Which brings me to my actual question: who is really the voyeur here?

The host who installed the cameras? Absolutely. But also, the thousands of you who downloaded, shared and debated the footage. Because someone else’s private moment was suddenly available, and availability, in this city, is permission.

There is something particularly Kampala about this. We are a city that is deeply invested in other people’s business. We decided that the right to privacy exists in theory, especially if the private thing involves desire.

Because let’s be honest: People were not in Kyanja Airbnbs doing their taxes. They were there being human: messy and alive in ways that all of us are when we think no one is watching. And the moment that footage leaked, the conversation shifted from ‘hosts violated their guests’ to ‘what were those people doing?’ As if the doing was the scandal. As if wanting something private was carte blanche to muscle your way into their business.

I am less interested in their story than what it tells us about ourselves. We do not believe in privacy. The understanding is that you are allowed to have desires as long as you have them silently, invisibly, with no paper trail and no witnesses. The moment evidence surfaces; desire becomes the crime.

And so, we book Kyanja Airbnbs. We turn off our locations. We use the second SIM. We do everything in our power to exist: fully, privately, humanly in a city that is constitutionally incapable of minding its business.

We build elaborate systems of discretion not because we are ashamed, but because we have learned, through very clear experience, that this city will parade us when it gets the chance.

The cameras in Kyanja were not just a violation of privacy, they were a confirmation that the room you thought was yours was never really yours. The discretion you paid for was always conditional. Someone, somewhere, was always watching; always waiting to share what they saw.

The hosts should be arrested. And the rest of us should sit with the discomfort of knowing that we could be the victims. Before picking the spec in their eyes, first deal with the log in yours. Because he who has not sinned is lying!

I chose celibacy – Tazibone

If we had to send our own stars to the Met Gala, which three musicians are you sending to represent us on the red carpet?

A Pass for his eccentricity, Maurice Kirya for international appeal, and Vinka because… she is Vinka.

Is the economy doing wonderfully where you are?

Wonderfully? Tell me about how things are on your end because I had deep breaths for dinner last night.

If someone is new to Kampala, what is the first thing they need to understand about the people?

Everyone in Kampala is friendly. Just do not mistake ‘we should link up’ for an actual plan. That is just emotional decoration.

Which Ugandan celebrity is long overdue for a styling appointment with you?

Whichever celebrities know and see my brand but have not enlisted my services are clearly allergic to nice things. I would rather we keep it that way because I am quite content with my clientele.

When it comes to Ugandan music concerts, do the outfits always have to be so dramatic? We are asking for our readers.

The dramatic outfits are necessary for entertainment because sometimes the concerts are not. One thing about the female artistes though, we are tired of the shimmery bodysuit silhouette on stage. Let it rest.

What is your most random current obsession?

The coconut water hook on TikTok.

Is Kampala dala of ‘soft life’, or are we just running on vibes?

Obulamu buli soft, depending on what you choose to show the internet. I mean, all of us are thriving according to our posts on Snapchat and Instagram.

Kati, about gym wear being worn outside the gym – stylish oba just maalo?

I think the baddies have somehow managed to normalise gym wear outside. Give a Kampala BBL baddie one of those trending gym sets and you will see.

The Kampala nightlife – what are some of the unspoken rules newcomers need to know?

Pre-gaming is necessary to set the tone of the night. Bottle service will make you feel rich until morning reality sends a voice note. If the vibe is popping, nobody goes home early. Sleep is for responsible citizens.

If you had an unlimited budget and were tasked with giving our MPs a wardrobe revamp, which MP would you start with?

I would literally have to look up Ugandan MPs to know who they are and where they represent. Following politics just to track how they dress is hectic. I guess I would go in alphabetical order – up to where the budget permits me.

Apart from the price of curtains, what other tough lessons has adulting taught you?

Loans are inescapable. I am yet to hear of a fully functioning adult Ugandan without one. And then there is black tax – as an earning adult, your salary says ‘save’ while your people say ‘we are counting on you.’

What is something small that annoys you more than it should?

The pace at which people walk here drives me nuts. Everyone moves so slowly – where is the sense of urgency?

If money was not a factor at all, how would your life look different right now?

I would live like borders are optional – breakfast wherever I wake up, lunch wherever I feel like, and dinner wherever the mood takes me. Time zones would be suggestions, and my location would depend entirely on my mood.

What is your relationship with social media right now?

Just vibes and inshAllah. For my peers, it is pure performance. Take it too seriously and you are cooked.

Any tips for surviving the dating scene in Kampala?

I might not be the ideal person to ask since I chose celibacy, but from experience: date like a detective, not a poet. Never assume exclusivity because Kampala is a shared resource. And soft-launch your feelings because this city loves a plot twist.

What do you wish someone had told you about adult friendships?

Not to use the word ‘friend’ too loosely on these streets.