For many years, West Nile was regarded as one of Uganda’s strongest football regions, with clubs like Onduparaka, Arua Hill and Paidha Black Angels drawing huge crowds and deep passion.
At the center of that energy was Bar Okoro Stadium in Zombo, where noise from the stands once rolled across the hills and reached communities near the DR Congo border.
Today, Paidha Black Angels are working to bring that excitement back. The club, now forty six years old, remains one of the region’s most respected sides.
Their standout moment came in the 2016/17 Uganda Cup when they reached the final against KCCA FC. They lost 2 to 0, but the run gave them national recognition and renewed pride among their supporters.

They later earned promotion to the Uganda Premier League in 2018/19, though their stay lasted only one season after a difficult campaign ended in relegation.
Now competing in the FUFA Big League, Paidha are rebuilding with young local players and a renewed focus on discipline and community support.

Despite sitting twelfth on the table with nine points, club president Kenneth Owa Chgiu says belief within the team remains strong.
He acknowledges that internal wrangles have affected many West Nile clubs in recent years, including Onduparaka and Arua Hill, but insists unity is slowly returning and the region can rise again.

Fans remain hopeful that Paidha can revive the glory days when West Nile football stood for passion, pride and huge crowds.
The coaches and players share the same ambition to return to the Premier League and bring top flight football back to Bar Okoro Stadium.
The road is challenging, but the belief is alive and West Nile is beginning to hope once more.
























