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PARLIAMENT DECRIES SITUATION IN TROUBLED NORTH
July 7, 2004 - (IRIN) Some Ugandan parliamentarians
broke down in tears last week as they watched video footage of the
situation in the troubled northern region.
The video, shown by a team of MPs who had just concluded
an assessment of the situation in the region, captured images of
malnourished children, sick people with little access to medical
services, bodies of camp residents who had succumbed to curable
diseases, children sleeping in the open on shop verandas, and deplorable
water and sanitation conditions.
According to the MPs, the humanitarian situation
in the war-affected regions of Uganda has "expanded and deepened",
but the long-term consequences of the crisis are "incomprehensible"
owing to its duration, extent and the way it is being managed.
The MPs said the government's involvement in efforts
to alleviate the situation was minimal, and therefore required strengthening,
"both as an obligation, and a confidence-building measure".
They called on the government "not to hide behind the work
of humanitarian agencies".
In Pader and Kitgum districts, local people told
the MPs that "their government" was the World Food Programme
(WFP), while in Karamoja, "Oxfam is more known than government
ministries". Among the children, "their leaders are UNICEF
[UN Children's Fund] and World Vision", according to the MPs'
63- page report.
The miniscule role performed by the government in
the crisis was symptomatic of the inadequate resources allocated
to conflict areas, the MPs said. The resource inadequacies are compounded
by an estimated net economic cost of the conflict in the Acholi
districts of Gulu, Kitgum and Pader, over the past 16 years, which
is estimated at over US $1.33 billion, according to the MPs.
HEALTH
The plight of the people in northern Uganda where
the war between the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) and the Uganda
People's Defence Forces has raged for 18 years, was best illustrated
by the health indicators in the region, the report said.
Death and disease rates were high. The top 10 health
problems in camps where the displaced people lived were malaria
(47 percent), acute respiratory infection (17 percent), diarrhoea
(9 percent), measles, malnutrition (5 percent), worm infestation
(11 percent), trauma, eye infections, HIV and TB (11 percent). HIV/AIDS
infection was 16 percent in Gulu compared to the national average
of 6 percent, the report noted.
According to the MPs, in spite of the pressures
and the numbers of patients, health centres were severely understaffed.
Medical workers posted to the region were reluctant to report to
their stations because of insecurity. Giving Soroti as an example,
the report said the hospital had not received its newly appointed
medical officers six months after they had been posted there.
"Many of the units operated below their normal
staff ceiling, while the few staff on site were overstretched,"
the report said.
Most of the referral hospitals in the war-affected
districts also lacked ambulances, despite the pressures arising
from ambushes, massacres and massive displacement. The blood banks
and equipment for emergency handling at referral centres, were in
need of repair.
Some of the health centres lacked surgical gloves,
and the few health workers there improvised by using polythene bags
to help mothers deliver babies. There was also an apparent drug
resistance to the anti-malarial chloroquine - the most widely used
drug among the displaced.
Levels of malnutrition among infants were reported
to be "shockingly high". Giving the example of Lira District,
the MPs said up to 30 percent of the infants there were found to
be malnourished.
"The overcrowding in Lira, Soroti and Gulu,
Lacor and Kalongo hospitals demands immediate redress. Wards need
to be expanded in the short and long run. In the short term, tents
should be provided as patient wards," the report said. "Efficient
mobile clinics should be set up in all large camps to provide services,
increase access, reduce risks and manage emergency."
"The committee was not able to find any camp
with a mobile clinic in the whole of Lang'o and Teso regions,"
the report said.
TRAUMATISED AND MAIMED
Trauma was a widespread phenomenon in the regions
visited, and the MPs suggested the setting up of counselling centres
in sub-counties, saying that almost the entire population was traumatised.
"The entire population, including the leaders
of Lang'o, Teso and Acholi, is traumatised as a result of war, rape,
defilement, death of dear ones and total disruption of life. The
risk of mental breakdown is so high. The resilience of the human
spirit is on the verge of a breakdown," the report said.
The visible signs of the war were more vividly represented
by the number of people who had been maimed by landmines, ambushes,
burns and gunshots. In Soroti town alone, up to 564 displaced people
had been disabled by the war when the MPs visited the town in February.
"Specific interventions should be made to rehabilitate
the disabled where possible. There is need to aid mobility, vision
and interventions to be spread over the entire region as the need
has increased by the day," the MPs said.
SCARCITY OF FOOD
According to the report, the WFP was the source
of food for the majority of the internally displaced persons (IDPs),
who, the MPs said, numbered about 2 million. But WFP could only
provide part of the food needs. "It should be understood that
IDPs have no other coping mechanisms since they are not able to
get food anywhere else. It is imperative that the government of
Uganda provides the balance," the report said.
The MPs also learnt of the existence of camps which
had not been "gazetted" by government, and had therefore
been categorised as either nonexistent or illegal. Such camps were
not receiving food, they said. Giving the example of Pader District,
they said eight IDP camps whose existence had been communicated
to the government in January had not received any relief aid.
WATER AND SANITATION CRISIS
The deeper one goes the harder the situation, according
to the MPs. Water provision to IDP camps outside towns and in more
remote areas was deplorable.
"Water for domestic use was insufficient; bathing
and brushing of teeth was unheard of. The IDPs were observably dirty
due to lack of water. Eight women were killed in Anyara camp of
Lira District while looking for water," the report said. "IDPs
on the islands used water from the [Kyoga] lake, which lake also
served as a toilet."
The MPs said overcrowding in camps had compounded
the sanitation and hygiene management crisis, with refuse disposal
becoming difficult and a foul smell pervading everything.
"Latrines are full and overflowing in most
camps. Where mobile toilets have been distributed, these are inadequate,
in some cases not installed and sometimes feared by some would-be
users," they said.
In Otuboi camp in Kaberamaido District, which accommodates
15,663 IDPs, only 10 pit latrines were found.
WOMEN AND CHILDREN
In its war, the LRA has mainly targeted children
whom they seek to transform into fighters, sex slaves or porters.
According to the MPs, over 8,000 children have been abducted in
the last 12 months.
"The pain caused by this cycle of being kidnapped
to becoming a fighter is the most horrifying aspect of the war,"
the MPs said. "In 1995, one girl from Aboke was abducted. Before
her abduction, she was a good girl going about her school life.
Recently, she was killed as a fighter with LRA," they said.
"It is clear that the children are trapped in a war that has
denied them all the basic services required for a healthy upbringing,"
they added.
Many women have been traumatised by the violence,
having thus been denied what they most need in their lives: to bring
up their children in an acceptable manner. They also lack access
to basic requirements like sanitary towels, sometimes having to
resort to using leaves as substitutes, according to the report.
EDUCATION
The effects of the LRA insurgency on the education
sector were enormous due to massive internal displacement of learners,
parents, teachers and the disruption of economic activities, the
report said.
In several districts, education facilities and staff
had been overstretched to accommodate displaced children. According
to the report, both teachers and children had died or been abducted.
Returnee children had been traumatised and rendered unable to concentrate,
while former abductee teachers were too traumatised to be immediately
productive.
The MPs said schools had been vandalised, with desks,
books and other instructional materials destroyed. High dropout
rates and increased child labour had in turn increased absenteeism.
"There is a serious human resource development threat in northern
and eastern [Uganda] as a result of the insurgency," they noted.
In Amuria District, for example, primary one and
primary two classes had up to 2,000 and 1,200 pupils respectively.
In the Amen learning centre in Soroti District, the teacher operated
through the window because there was no space for him inside the
classroom, the MPs said.
In Palabek, Kitgum District, a number of classes
studied under the same mango tree, and lacked educational materials
and uniforms. Teachers who lived in camps had no blackboards, chalk
and textbooks for reference, while school management committees
were in disarray.
"Absence of food both at home and school rendered
learning impossible. The pupils were visibly thin and hungry. In
Katakwi, Kaberamaido, Lira, Pader and Soroti districts, there was
no school-feeding programme. Somehow the starving children were
expected to learn," the report said.
RESETTLEMENT AND THE WAY FORWARD
According to the MPs, the Ugandan government should
give more support to the amnesty commission set up to handle returnees
and which had so far resettled over 5,000. The commission, said
the MPs, had a backlog of about 8,000 cases.
"The proposed amendment to the Amnesty Act
should take into consideration the issue of child combatants. And
above all else, the amendment should maintain top LRA leaders as
beneficiaries of amnesty should they choose to seek pardon,"
according to the report.
The MPs said they wanted Uganda's national planning
and budgeting to adequately reflect the needs of "over two
million people directly affected by the conflict". They added:
"As of now, the budget process has continued as though all
else is normal in the Acholi, Lango and Teso subregions."
They urged the government to vigorously pursue all
efforts to end the war through peaceful negotiations. "For
a long time, the LRA conflict has been downplayed and efforts to
end it have not been concerted. All available avenues need to be
exhausted in a bid to save the suffering population.
A national reconciliation programme should be urgently
put in place to address all underlying grievances among Ugandans,"
the MPs' report said.
It called on the international community to facilitate
the reconciliation programme, saying that issues of constitutionalism
and good governance needed to be pursued consistently and patriotically
so as to avert creating a disgruntled class vulnerable to being
tempted to opt for rebellion as a way of redress.
During the debate of the report in parliament, MPs
asked the government to reconsider a resolution passed earlier by
parliament seeking to declare northern Uganda a disaster area. This,
they said, would attract more funding and give the area priority.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200407070001.html
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