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Step into one of the rooms in Kampala and it is likely to be plastered with bright photos of stars, lovingly glued onto the walls, from Michael Jackson and Tardieu Schmidt to footballer Cristiano Ronaldo.
The young people are pretty relaxed and move slowly in this area of the Ugandan capital. But the mood suddenly changes as a crowd of children clad in red sweaters bursts through the gate. They change into their sportswear. I did not come here as a dancer. I only got inspired when I joined this group and realized my dream. Muhammad and half a dozen others head to a field and start singing and performing acrobatics for one of their dances that will later be recorded and uploaded onto Instagram.
The year-old is one of the once-underprivileged children selected from the streets of Kampala by Moses Butindo to join an organization he founded over a decade ago called Hyperkidsafrica, or Hyperkids. Muhammad had no father and his mother was penniless.
He slept in tunnels or on shop verandahs. Now, the children are housed far more comfortably in a residential house in a suburb south of Kampala, thanks to the hope given to them by Moses, 26, himself a former street child. Wearing a T-shirt with large green and black stripes, Muhammad is eager to be photographed posing and gesturing with fingers, his good natured smile spreading from ear to ear.
Moses says the boy is the best "performing artist" of the whole group. Kapiripiriti is a household name in central Uganda and many other children are eager to watch him perform in parks and other entertainment centres.