The quiet town of Jinja, commonly known as the source of the Nile, has become home to a new attraction, which keeps increasing in popularity.
Launched in 2015, the Nyege Nyege festival has become a buzzword in East Africa. For four days and three nights, the lakeside town of 75,000 people is lit throughout. Crowds from Kampala and Nairobi descend on the hotels in town, while increasingly desperate walk-in guests start fretting, as they find one place after the other fully booked. The poolside bars are bustling with colourful shirts and trousers, and sunglasses, come sun come rain.

The 2019 Nyege Nyege festival, Jinja, Uganda [Photo by Havar]
The venue is the Nile Discovery Beach, a 6-acre forest at the western riverbank of the Nile. Immediately after crossing the new Source of the Nile Bridge westwards, festival-goers are supposed to turn right, onto a dirt road so rough, it is debatable whether it has potholes or manholes. The festival area is cordoned off by a heavily armed police presence. Trucks block the last few hundred meters of the road, and the stroll from there to the entrance feels almost like walking through a police parade.

The 2019 Nyege Nyege festival, Jinja, Uganda [Photo by Havar]
Behind the barriers, the festival area is a myriad of vivid outfits, flashy sunglasses, bunny ears, neon glasses and other festival gear. If you are not bringing your own, then there are enough vendors ready to sell them to you.
The five stages are on fire from dusk till dawn, featuring some of the best and the latest of electronic and modern African music by more than 200 artists from 30 countries.

Performance at the 2019 Nyege Nyege festival, Jinja, Uganda [Photo by Havar]

The 2019 Nyege Nyege festival, Jinja, Uganda [Photo by Havar]
Vendors crowd all areas, offering local art, African-style festival shirts and dresses, and Ugandan street food such as the famous ‘Rolex’ (a pancake wrapped around a fried egg, usually with meat and vegetables), and ‘muchomo’ (barbecued meat on a stick).

Ugandan Rolex, East African breakfast wraps rolled with a vegan omelette inside -[Photo by KO Rasoi]

The 2019 Nyege Nyege festival, Jinja, Uganda [Photo by Havar]
You wanna know how the 2019 Nyege Nyege festival in Jinja, Uganda, went down? Here is what you missed!
Read more: https://t.co/aS2dutMc8j#SeeAfricaToday #NyegeNyege2019 #nyegenyegefestival #Uganda pic.twitter.com/3MtIvm4dqc— See Africa Today (@SeeAfricaToday) September 12, 2019
For a country working hard to build tourism as a pillar of its economy, events like this are key. As Nyege Nyege grows into an international tourist attraction, it also helps diversify the image of the region and the continent. We need more events and attractions which go beyond the classic African tourism narrative of safari lodges, tribal dancers and beaches with palm trees. Uganda should not only cherish the MTN Nyege Nyege Festival but promote it to the world

The 2019 Nyege Nyege festival, Jinja, Uganda [Photo by Havar]
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