This guy is coming for that MP seat with a full plan and some serious accusations. Samuel Eninu, an independent trying to take Soroti County from the current MP Patrick Aeku, laid out his whole platform at a school gathering, promising big changes in schools, roads, healthcare, and family incomes while telling people to guard their votes.
His main thing is fixing education first. Eninu said he will push the government to hire more teachers for public schools and get official scholarships for smart kids who cannot afford them. He even pledged his own money to send the county's best student to Soroti University every year. To make money easier, he wants to boost those local village savings groups so families can get fair loans for farms or shops instead of using shady lenders. He also called out the terrible roads and spotty water supply as stuff that holds the economy back, promising to fight for better maintenance and make sure clinics actually have medicine.
The rally had a heavy vibe about not getting cheated again. Eninu pointed to messed-up election results from a few years back and the recent ruling party primaries, telling the crowd that the power is theirs this time. He got backing from other local candidates like Vincent Enomu, who called him a chosen leader, and even some ruling party supporters like George William Eumu, who told members to vote for people who actually care. Other residents, like Michael Ecuru, blamed the sitting MP for botching past primary elections. A local official, James Oriokot, used the moment to ask all candidates to keep things peaceful and avoid violence. The whole campaign is selling Eninu as a practical, unifying guy focused on actually doing stuff, not just talking.
His main thing is fixing education first. Eninu said he will push the government to hire more teachers for public schools and get official scholarships for smart kids who cannot afford them. He even pledged his own money to send the county's best student to Soroti University every year. To make money easier, he wants to boost those local village savings groups so families can get fair loans for farms or shops instead of using shady lenders. He also called out the terrible roads and spotty water supply as stuff that holds the economy back, promising to fight for better maintenance and make sure clinics actually have medicine.
The rally had a heavy vibe about not getting cheated again. Eninu pointed to messed-up election results from a few years back and the recent ruling party primaries, telling the crowd that the power is theirs this time. He got backing from other local candidates like Vincent Enomu, who called him a chosen leader, and even some ruling party supporters like George William Eumu, who told members to vote for people who actually care. Other residents, like Michael Ecuru, blamed the sitting MP for botching past primary elections. A local official, James Oriokot, used the moment to ask all candidates to keep things peaceful and avoid violence. The whole campaign is selling Eninu as a practical, unifying guy focused on actually doing stuff, not just talking.