30 years of Kiev friendship

 
St Sophia’s Cathedral
The interior is the most astounding aspect of Kyiv’s oldest standing church. Many of the mosaics and frescoes are original, dating back to 1017–31, when the cathedral was built to celebrate Prince Yaroslav’s victory in protecting Kyiv from the Pechenegs (tribal raiders). While equally attractive, the building’s gold domes and 76m-tall wedding-cake bell tower are 18th-century baroque additions. It’s well worth climbing the bell tower for a bird’s-eye view of the cathedral and 360-degree panoramas of Kyiv.
Named after the great Hagia Sofia in Istanbul, St Sophia’s Byzantine architecture announced the new religious and political authority of Kyiv. It was a centre of learning and culture, housing the first school and library in Kyivan Rus. Adjacent to the Royal Palace, it was also where coronations and other royal ceremonies were staged, treaties signed and foreign dignitaries received.
Each mosaic and fresco had its allotted position according to Byzantine decorative schemes, turning the church into a giant 3D symbol of the Orthodox world order. There are explanations in English of individual mosaics, but the one that immediately strikes you is the 6m-high Virgin Orans dominating the central apse. The Virgin Orans is a peculiarly Orthodox concept of the Virgin as a symbol of the earthly church interceding for the salvation of humanity. Having survived this long, this particular Orans is now thought indestructible by Orthodox believers. (Unesco was slightly less certain, adding the cathedral to its protective World Heritage list in 1990.)
Less obvious, but worth seeking out, are two secular group portraits of Yaroslav and family, one on either side of the central nave. Prince Yaroslav himself was buried here, but his remains are believed to have been smuggled into the US by a collaborationist priest, who left Kyiv with the retreating German army during WWII. The Ukrainian government is engaged in negotiations about their return. The prince’s empty tomb can be found on the ground floor, in the far-left corner from the main entrance.
Other highlights of the cathedral include the cast-iron tile floors, which date from the 18th century; an awesome model depicting Kyiv at the time of the Kyivan Rus; and art galleries upstairs containing ancient icons and fragments of original frescoes rescued from nearby St Michael’s Golden-Domed Monastery before the Soviets demolished it in 1937.
Additional museums on the cathedral grounds are of little interest. Just before the bell tower lies the ornate tomb of Kyiv Patriarch Volodymyr Romanyuk. Religious disputes prevented him from being buried within the complex.
In front of the cathedral complex on pl Sofiyska is a statue of Cossack hero Bohdan Khmelnytsky.
Rodina Mat

As you journey into Kyiv from the airport, at some point this giant statue of a female warrior will loom up on the horizon and make you wonder, ‘What the hell is that?’ Well, it’s Rodina Mat – literally ‘Nation’s Mother’. Inaugurated by Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev in 1981, it was the second and last Nation’s Mother monument erected in the USSR. Today it houses the excellent Great Patriotic War Museum in its base, and has a pair of viewing platforms. The top platform is all the way up at the top of her shield at 91m, but it’s subject to weather-related closures and long lines, as the elevator can only accommodate two visitors at at time. There’s a lower platform at 36.6m, served by a separate, larger elevator.

Although initially designed by the same artist as the iconic Rodina Mat in Volgograd, this version completely lacked its sister’s appeal and became a subject of ridicule, especially when the communist authorities reduced the size of the sword so that it doesn’t rise over the cupolas of Kyevo-Pecherska Lavra. Even if you don’t like such Soviet pomposity, don’t say too much; you’d be taking on a titanium woman carrying 12 tonnes of shield and sword.

The grounds around Rodina Mat are popular for strolling and contain a number of intriguing relics of the communist era, including an eternal flame in memory of WWII victims; various old tanks, helicopters and anti-aircraft guns; and a veritable garden of Soviet realist sculpture in and around the underpass leading towards the Lavra.

Rodina Mat is an easy stroll from the Lavra, or take bus 24 or trolleybus 38 from the stop opposite Arsenalna metro.

Kyevo-Pecherska Lavra

Tourists and Orthodox pilgrims alike flock to the Lavra, set on 28 hectares of grassy hills above the Dnipro River in Pechersk. It’s easy to see why tourists come: the monastery’s cluster of gold-domed churches is a feast for the eyes, the hoard of Scythian gold rivals that of the Hermitage, and the underground labyrinths lined with mummified monks are exotic and intriguing. For pilgrims, the rationale is much simpler: to them, this is the holiest ground in the country.

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Summer Vacation in Germany 2016

Germany, officially Federal Republic of Germany, German Deutschland or Bundesrepublik Deutschland, country of north-central Europe, traversing the continent’s main physical divisions, from the outer ranges of the Alps northward across the varied landscape of the Central German Uplands and then across the North German Plain.

One of Europe’s largest countries, Germany encompasses a wide variety of landscapes: the tall, sheer mountains of the south; the sandy, rolling plains of the north; the forested hills of the urbanized west; and the plains of the agricultural east. At the spiritual heart of the country is the magnificent east-central city of Berlin, which rose phoenixlike from the ashes of World War II and now, after decades of partition, is the capital of a reunified Germany, and the Rhine River, which flows northward from Switzerland and is celebrated in visual art, literature, folklore, and song. Along its banks and those of its principal tributaries—among them the Neckar, Main, Moselle, and Ruhr—stand hundreds of medieval castles, churches, picturesque villages, market towns, and centres of learning and culture, including Heidelberg, the site of one of Europe’s oldest universities (founded in 1386), and Mainz, historically one of Europe’s most important publishing centres. All are centrepieces of Germany’s thriving tourist economy, which brings millions of visitors to the country each year, drawn by its natural beauty, history, culture, and cuisine (including its renowned wines and beers).

 
GermanyEncyclopædia Britannica, Inc.

The Third Reich disintegrated in 1945, brought down by the Allied armies of the United States, the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union, France, and other countries. The victorious powers divided Germany into four zones of occupation and later into two countries: the Federal Republic of Germany (West Germany) and the German Democratic Republic (East Germany), separated for more than 40 years by a long boundary. In East Germany this boundary was, until the fall of its communist government in 1989, marked by defenses designed to prevent escape. The 185 square miles (480 square km) of the “island” of West Berlin were similarly ringed from 1961 to 1989 by the Berlin Wall running through the city and by a heavily guarded wire-mesh fence in the areas abutting the East German countryside. Although Berlin was a flashpoint between the United States and the Soviet Union during the Cold War, the city declined in national and international significance until 1989–90, when a popular and peaceful uprising toppled the East German government and soon after restored a united Berlin as the capital of a reunified Germany.

Since World War II, Germany has made great efforts to both commemorate the victims and redress the crimes of the Holocaust, providing strong material and political support for the state of Israel and actively prosecuting hate crimes and the propagation of neo-Nazi doctrine; the latter became an issue in the 1990s with the rise in Germany of anti-immigrant skinhead groups and the availability of Hitler’s Mein Kampf over the Internet. Clearly, modern Germany struggles to balance its national interests with those of an influx of political and economic refugees from far afield, especially North Africa, Turkey, and South Asia, an influx that has fueled ethnic tensions and swelled the ranks of nationalist political parties, particularly in eastern Germany, where unemployment was double that of the west. Tensions became especially acute in the second decade of the 21st century, when more than one million migrants entered Germany in the wake of the revolutions of the Arab Spring and the Syrian Civil War.

The constitution of the republic, adopted in 1949 by West Germany, created a federal system that gives significant government powers to its constituent Länder (states). Before unification there were 11 West German Länder (including West Berlin, which had the special status of a Land without voting rights), but, with the accession of East Germany, there are now 16 Länder in the unified republic. The largest of the states is Bavaria (Bayern), the richest is Baden-Württemberg, and the most populous is North Rhine–Westphalia (Nordrhein-Westfalen).

Matters of national importance, such as defense and foreign affairs, are reserved to the federal government. At both the state and federal levels, parliamentary democracy prevails. The Federal Republic has been a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) since 1955 and was a founding member of the European Economic Community (see European Union). During the four decades of partition, the Federal Republic concluded a number of agreements with the Soviet Union and East Germany, which it supported to some extent economically in return for various concessions with regard to humanitarian matters and access to Berlin. West Germany’s rapid economic recovery in the 1950s (Wirtschaftswunder, or “economic miracle”) brought it into a leading position among the world’s economic powers, a position that it has maintained.

Much of Germany’s post-World War II success has been the result of the renowned industriousness and self-sacrifice of its people, about which novelist Günter Grass, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1999, remarked, “To be a German is to make the impossible possible.” He added, more critically,

For in our country everything is geared to growth. We’re never satisfied. For us enough is never enough. We always want more. If it’s on paper, we convert it into reality. Even in our dreams we’re productive.

This devotion to hard work has combined with a public demeanour—which is at once reserved and assertive—to produce a stereotype of the German people as aloof and distant. Yet Germans prize both their private friendships and their friendly relations with neighbours and visitors, place a high value on leisure and culture, and enjoy the benefits of life in a liberal democracy that has become ever more integrated with and central to a united Europe.

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Summer Vacation in Italy 2016

Rome Great Squares (Le Piazze)
Piazza del Campidoglio (on the Capitol Hill) houses the city council; Piazza Venezia square represents the ‘heart of the city’; Piazza Navona displays the spectacular Baroque triumphant architecture; Piazza di Spagna is a masterpiece of the XVIII century with its famous Spanish steps and, last but not least, St Peter’s Square is the majestic access to St Peter’s Basilica, the centre of Christianity. Rome’s squares are one of the main attractions of the Italian Capital, some of which are world famous. Not only are the squares beautiful and full of character, they hold a wealth of historical significance. The majority of squares are nestled with cafes and restaurants. Le Piazze are perfect places to eat, drink and be merry!
St Peter’s Square
St Peter’s Square leads up to the majestic St Peter’s Basilica, which is in the heart of The Vatican City and the centre of Christianity. Thousands of tourists fill the holy square daily and hover in their hopes of catching a glimpse of Papa Francesco.

Piazza di Spagna
Piazza di Spagna is a masterpiece of the XVIII century. It’s gem is the world famous Spanish steps, with the Trinita dei Monti church situated at the top of the steps. If you are planning a visit during the Spring or Summer months then well done you! During this period, the steps are decorated with lovely blossoms, a beautiful picturesque site and a sight for sore eyes!

Piazza Navona 
Piazza Navona centre piece displays the spectacular Baroque triumphant architecture, encompassing The Fountain of Four Rivers. Arch-rivals; Bernini and Borromini, during the period of Baroque Rome, confronted each other to create the epitome of the seventeenth century..

Piazza del Campidoglio 
Piazza del Campidoglio was designed by the ever-so talented Michelangelo, merely to impress a king. And wow it certainly is impressive!

The square issituated on the Capitol Hill andis the headquarters’ of the Italian Government. The Capitoline museums are based here and are definitely worth a visit. The famous statue of the She-wolf with her twins (Romulus and Remus) can also been seen here.

Piazza Venezia
Piazza Venezia represents the ‘heart of the city’. The grandiose monument of Victor Emanuel II was commissioned by the dictator Mussolini. Impressive during the Mussolini era, however not so much appreciated by many locals of today, due to the over-sized dimensions, it is seen as ‘over the top’ and ‘overwhelming’ for many Italians. This monument faces the main shopping street, Via Del Corso, which leads all the way up to Piazza Del Popolo, another square that is equally as fabulous!

Piazza del Popolo 
Piazza del Popolo holds several masterpieces inside its Church of Santa Maria del Popolo, including; Caravaggio, Raffaello, Bernini, Carracci, and many more. During the Summer, concerts are held here as well as other music festivals.

Stop for a moment and stand in the centre of the square facing Via Del Corso. Look straight ahead and you will see the grand white monument of Vittorio Emanuele II. Turn left and look up: you will see Villa Borghese Park; climb up the hill and you will experience one of the best views Rome has to offer.

Roman basilicas and churches
Within Rome there are about 19 basilicas to be found, 3 of which are patriarchal: St Peter’s Basilica – the world’s largest basilica of Christianity; St John in Lateran (San Giovanni Laterano) – former seat of the bishop’s residence and the most ancient church in the world, Santa Maria Maggiore…

Colosseum
The hugest structure of its type in ancient Rome, the elliptical-shaped Colosseum, took about ten years to build. It was once the epi-centre of ancient Rome entertainment, where the gladiatorial and animal combats were held and fought for their survival.

Roman Forum
During ancient Rome, the central area and administrative and corporate heart of Rome.

Pantheon
One of the most impressive buildings of the Imperial Rome is the Pantheon. Originally dedicated as a temple to “all the gods”.. A remarkable architectural feature, it remains the world’s largest unreinforced dome.

Vatican city 

Vatican is the smallest state in the world, based in Rome in Italy. The papal residence, was built over the tomb of Saint Peter. The Vatican’s position as a sovereign state within a state was quaranteed by the Lateran Treaty of 1929, marked by the building of a new road, the Via della Conciliazione. This leads from huge St Peter’s basilica to Castel Sant’ Angelo, a monument to a far grimmer past. Inside the Vatican city we can find 11 Vatican Museums with the restored Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel, and Vatican Gardens, an enchanted place, a system of large and small gardens, fountain, fish pool and enclousure for rabbits. They date back to medieval times when vineyards and orchards extended to the north of the Apostolic Palace.

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Visit Nalanda University in Japan

The main goals of Nava Nalanda Mahavihara are to develop an institute similar to that of the old Viharas, where teachers and students lived together devoting themselves to studies and higher academic pursuits for the promotion of higher studies and research in Pali language and literature and Buddhism through Tibetan, Sanskrit, Chinese, Mongolian, Japanese and other Asian languages
The library is housed in a two-story building known as the Library Building, which contains sixteen research cubicles with two large rooms on either side. Presently, the library includes over 52,500 books, important journals and a rare manuscript collection. To develop the library donations and purchases were made from the Late Rash Bihari Mukherjee, from Hoogly, West Bengal.
The The The significance that we have assigned to our ‘Heritage’ is growing each year and organizing cultural events will enable people to access their local, regional and national heritage while maintaining healthy exchanges of information about preserving and promoting art. The success of these initiatives have been instrumental in the development of a detailed. As Nava Nalanda Mahavihara is primarily a research institute, emphasis has been given to research and publication projects from the beginning. The Mahavihara undertakes long and short term projects. Short-term projects include doctoral student research, and publication of research volumes and monographs by staff members and research scholars.

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Visit Kubo temple in Japan

The Royal Grand Hall of Buddhism, the Head Temple of Nenbutsushu Buddhist
The Main Hall
The upper part of the hall has six-stepped intermediate bracket complexes, the first of its kind in the history of Japanese architecture, and the lower part has four-stepped intermediate bracket complexes, both incorporating fan rafters. It is 51.5 meters high, comparable to an 18-story building. There are used as many as 124,000 of the biggest roof tiles in the world. The onigawaras, demon-faced ridge-end tiles, rising on the waves of roof tiles, are registered in the Guinness World Records. Their infuriated expression helps sentient beings to sweep away their desires and bring about pure and innocent minds.
In front of the hall, the largest Stone Lanterns in the world, which have been registered in the Guinness World Records, stand high on both sides, welcoming worshippers. They symbolize the Dharma torch that ceaselessly illuminates and guides sentient beings to the Buddhist way.
Under the eaves, among the upper multi-stepped intermediate bracket complexes, 80 sculptures of Sakyamuni Tathagata are attached, encouraging all sentient beings in all directions to save others. Adorned below are 88 carved dragons, and on the frog-leg struts among the lower multi-stepped intermediate bracket complexes, there are 104 carved dragons on the outside and 104 life-sized sculptures of flying celestial beings on the inside. Over 100,000 gold plates decorate the entire Main Hall brightly, manifesting the brilliance of the Pure Land.
Inside the hall, there stands the magnificent doubly-gilded Golden Shrine with six-stepped intermediate bracket complexes. The shrine houses the image of Amida Triad, the principal image of the temple, carved by Mr. She Guo Ping, a living national treasure of China. The image shines in brilliant gold as if the Buddha illuminates the world with sparkling light of compassion.
On both sides of the Golden Shrine, one can see the sculptures of the 25 bodhisattvas flying airily to follow Amida Buddha. They look as if they were guiding sentient beings to the Pure Land. The interior walls of the hall are covered with the extensive paintings on gilded screens. The colorful pictures of phoenixes and auspicious clouds as well as lotus flowers underneath painted by the master artist Mr. Masahiko Misaka are suggestive of the exquisite scenery of the Pure Land. It will take longer than one can possibly spend to appreciate all the works. Each work, harmonizing with others, praises the exquisite Pure Land. Every visitor will be struck with awe and feel reverence for the Buddha.

The Japanese Grand Bells
The Japanese Grand Bell, the largest of its kind in the world. A pair of Grand Bells, weighing over 50 tons each, the largest of its kind in the world, signifying the principle of yin and yang, was cast by Mr. Jiemon Oigo XII using the traditional techniques and special knowledge handed down generation after generation in Takaoka region that has been famous for casting since Edo period (1603-1867). The bells are topped with the cannons, one made in the shape of a dragon and the other a phoenix. The design of these bells is the first of its kind in the world, representing the unique Nenbutsushu style. The resonant sound of the unprecedented gigantic bells will rouse the souls of all sentient beings and reverberate out in all directions so as to extinguish their earthly desires.

 

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“Mahinda Sulagha” in Japan

Former president Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is on a visit to Japan, engaged in religious observances at the Lankaji Viharya in Sawara on Saturday. Mahinda Rajapaksa is visiting Japan on the invitation of a group of Sri Lankan expats in the country. He will remain in Japan for a period of six days. The former president and his delegation engaged in religious observances at the Lankaji Viharaya today. The Chief Sanghanayake of Japan Venerable Banagala Upathissa Thero and the Maha Sangha blessed the Former President and his delegation.

MPs including Wimal Weerawansa, Prasanna Ranatunga, Lohan Ratwatte, Rohitha Abeygunawardena Janaka Wakkumbura and Roshan Ranasinghe and the Mayor of Dehiwala Mount Lavinia are among the former president’ entourage.

ශ්‍රීලාංකික ව්‍යාපාර ආයතන හා ජපානයේ වෙසෙන සමස්ත ශ්‍රී ලාංකික ප්‍රජාවේ ඒකරාශිත්වයෙන් හා දායකත්වයෙන් ජපානයේ ටෝකියෝ නගරයේදී “මහින්ද සුළඟ” මෙම ලාංකික හමුව ඉතා සාර්ථකව සංවිධානය කර තිබුණේය. සුකුබා ශාලාව පිරි ඉතිරි සිටි ලාංකික පිරිස සියල්ලම ආසාවෙන් බලා සිටියේ හදවතෙහි ජනපති සමග ජයාරූපයකට පෙනී සිටීමටය. රැස්ව සිටි පිරිසක් එකිනෙකා තෙරපමින් පළමුව ජයාරූප ගැනීමට උත්සාහ ගැනීම නිසා රාජපක්ෂ මැතිතුමා මහත් අපහසුතාවයකට පත්වූ නමුත් එතුමා නිහතමානීව සියල්ලම සමග ජයාරූප වලට පෙනී සිටියේය. පැමිණ සිටි සියලු දෙනාම ඉල්ලා සිටියේ අද ඇතිව ඇති තත්වයෙන් රට බේරා දෙන ලෙසයි. රටේ ඉදිරි අනාගතය සාර්ථකව කිරීමට රාජපක්ෂ මැතිතුමාගේ නායකත්වය එක හෙලා බලාපොරොත්තු වෙන් එතනට එක්රොක් වී සිටියේය

Culture of fear lingers in war-traumatized Sri Lanka

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Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda

The park has a variety of Flora and Fauna and it’s acknowledged to be a habitat for over 95 mammal species with about 612 species of birds. The various species in this park, has made it a unique park most liked by tourists. Geographers will say that the park has around 57 vegetation but in actual sense, it has five levels of vegetation. Namely bushy grassland, Acacia woodland, Lakeshore or swamp vegetation along with forest grassland. On the 8 day safari in Uganda, you can visit Queen Elizabeth and other parks in Uganda.The grasslands of the park settles wildlife such as Cape buffalo, Uganda kob, waterbuck, warthlog, lion, leopard, hyena, giant forest hog as well as elephants.Topis can only be discovered in Ishasha and forest primate found in Kyambura gorge in addition to Maramagambo forest.Africa has some protected areas. Therefore the park’s remarkable birdlist that to exceed that of the neighboring Virunga National Park. Among these include African skimmer, Chapins flycatcher, Pink-backed pelicans, Papyrus canary, Shoebill stork, martial eagle, black-rumped buttonquail as well as the great flamingos.

Mweya Peninsula
The peninsula is the heart of sightseeing activities with excellent accommodation in the park. The only way to enjoy your tour in this park is by touring with a ranger guide. This person helps you explore the park as well as the distant parts of the peninsula.Mweya information center organizes all the activities that tourists may want to get involved in. The most exciting aspect about this peninsular is the fact that its overlooks Katwe bay of Lake Edward.Morestill, it has a souvenir shop full of Uganda safari items that will always remind you of park

Kazinga Channel.
The Kazinga channel is about 40m long adjoining Lake Gorge to Lake Edward. It has the perfect view of the parks’ major wildlife ventures. The shores of the lake attracts a large concentration of mammals, birds as well as reptiles all year around. The animals can be viewed well by the Nile cruise or probably at the entrance of Lake Edward. The operation of the cruise run from 15.00 and 17.00, furthermore voyages run 11.00 and 13.00 depending on the demand of the tourists.

Kazinga channel has parts for instance North Kazinga as well as Kasenyi.Its acknowledged that the plains of channel are focal points for game viewing. Tracking is the only way that will enable you see all the wildlife in its nature setting for example buffalo, elephants and other animals that dwell in the grassland thickets of the Northern Kazinga close to Mweya.The most accessible spot for lions is in the eastern part of Kasenyi plains and the Kasese road where they quarry on the big inhabitants of Uganda Kobs.The most favorable time for game drives is during morning and late afternoon hours. The work of the range guide is to help you get enough information about the park and still get the most memorable experience in Africa.

The Equator and the Queen’s Pavilion
The Uganda’s Equator provides a beautiful place for photo shooting along with craft shops that can make you buy a souvenir .The Queen’s Pavilion is easily spotted by the northern entrance to the Crater Drive. In 1954 Queen Elizabeth gave a provision shelter for this site until in 1959 when a permanent pavilion was constructed for the visit of Queen Elizabeth. Renovations were made by second visit of Duke of Edinburgh in 2007 with better facilities such as coffee shop and internet facilities.

Ishasha Tree Climbing Lions
Ishasha covers an area of about 100km south of Mweya.The Park’s distant southern segment gives a genuine Africa wilderness experience. Among the inhabitants in this place include savannah woodland, Ishasha River along with Lake Edward that has a diversity of wildlife such as climbing lions, rare shoebill stork and many others.

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Meeting Sri Lankan working in Uganda

Several extinct volcanoes of a specifically violent type called the ‘explosion craters’ are found within western Uganda. these Explosion craters are called so because during the long ago days these eruptions were extremely violent and instead of piling debris just about their vents similar to a number of other volcanoes, they discharged ash in addition to rock over a far as well as wide area. in the present day, they are majorly extinct craters although a few still release sulphurous smells. Basically There are 3 major concentrations; Katwe Explosion Craters found in Queen Elizabeth National Park, the close by Bunyaraguru Crater Field on the impressive Kichwamba escarpment as well as the beautiful Ndali-Kasenda Crater Field close to Kibale National Park. Among the Katwe Explosion Craters the enormous Kyemengo Crater is absolutely the most alluring.

lake katwe

The explosion craters are purely beautiful views, offer splendid hiking in areas near within Queen Elizabeth National Park in Western Uganda. The crater lakes were actually formed somewhat recently in the light of long ago volcanic activity within Uganda which is about only 8 000 to 10 000 years back although they appear as peaceful, beautiful lakes at present. When these exploded they actually caused great damage at that time wrapping an area bigger than that Mount Vesuvius covered at Pompeii. The Explosion Craters in Ugandan reduced Lake Edward to a poisonous mess. Just as recent as 2000 – BC (when the Egyptian Pyramids in were being constructed), Fire as well as brimstone continued to erupted from the explosion craters

Unlike Volcanoes, Explosion Craters actually do not pile cones they merely blow ash as well as rock to distances far away. In the present day these crater are filled with water to form very breath taking lakes a number of which today have certain smells of sulphur in their waters. A number of them are actually having great spots for swimming, nature trails which can be enjoyed with frequent sights of monkeys, resident birds, as well as magnificent sights, and exceptional viewpoints.

As you stare below into any of the crater lakes in Uganda, which are bordered with grasslands, verdant forests as well as farms you will actually fail to notice that these lakes which will awe you because of their very picturesque sight were areas formed through very powerful explosions on the earth’s crust.

Katwe Crater Lakes found in Queen Elizabeth Park:

These are situated just north of the impressive Mweya Peninsula and actually are the highest elevation in this national park. Enjoy the spectacular Crater Drive that runs on 27 km which present distant sights of the stunning crater lakes while on your way. There is plenty of wildlife to see along the drive, although commonest are sights of Buffaloes plus Elephants. Watch out for Lake Kitagata a lake fed by salty hot-springs with no wildlife around but just more than beautiful can describe. Along this drive you will be rewarded with sights of the great Western Rift Valley plus its escarpments, Lake George, the Rwenzori Mountains of the Moon, the Kazinga Channel plus Lake Edward. You will also have the chance to visit the gorgeous Lake Katwe plus its long ago salt works.

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Inauguration of the President of Uganda

Uganda Becomes Independent

Yet a ‘wind of change’ was blowing through Africa in the early 1960s and Uganda became independent from Britain on 9 October 1962. The first constitution was federalist. The first president of Uganda was Mutesa, King of Buganda and the first prime minister was Milton Obote. However Milton Obote had no intention of sharing power with the president. In 1966 he staged a coup and the president fled abroad. Obote became dictator. However in January 1971 when Obote was in Singapore attending a meeting Idi Amin staged a coup.

Amin turned out to be one of the worst tyrants of the 20th century. The number of people he murdered was at least 100,000 and possible many more. Apart from those Ugandans who were shot others were tortured to death or bludgeoned to death with sledgehammers or iron bars. Amin also decided to help himself to the Ugandan Asian’s wealth. There were about 70,000 Asians in Uganda in 1972 many of them shopkeepers and businessmen. Amin gave them 90 days to leave the country. They were forced to leave most of their property behind and it was shared among Amin’s cronies.

However as a result of the loss of the Asian’s skills and the murders of many professional Ugandans the economy collapsed. Infrastructure such as roads and water supply deteriorated. In order to distract attention from the terrible economic situation in Uganda Amin decided to invade Tanzania on 30 October 1978. However the war turned into a disaster for Amin. Early in 1979 the Tanzanians invaded Uganda and Amin’s forces fled.

Unfortunately Amin was never brought to justice for his terrible crimes. He fled abroad and died in 2003. After the war elections were held and Obote became prime minister again. However the election was rigged so Obote’s opponents formed a guerrilla army to fight him. It was called the National Resistance Army and soon it controlled a large part of western Uganda.

Meanwhile Obote attempted to make himself a dictator once again. He introduced a repressive regime, imprisoning anyone who opposed him and muzzling the press. Western journalists were expelled from Uganda. However the National Resistance Army took more and more territory. Finally in 1986 they entered the capital and took over all of Uganda apart from parts of the north. Yet Obote’s supporters in the north were eventually persuaded to lay down their arms. With the return of political stability economic growth began again in Uganda and during the 1990s Uganda prospered. Many of the Asians who had fled to Britain were persuaded to return to Uganda. However Yoweri Museveni the new president refused to allow political parties until 2005.

Uganda in the 21st Century

Today Uganda is still mainly an agricultural country and its main export is coffee. Yet the economy of Uganda is growing steadily and there is every reason to be optimistic about its future. Today the population of Uganda is 39 million.

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