Uganda struggles to feed more than 1.7 million refugees as international support dwindles
UNB
Publish: 31 Oct 2024, 01:44 PM
RWAMWANJA, Uganda, Oct 31 (AP/UNB) - For months, Agnes Bulaba, a Congolese
refugee in Uganda, has had to get by without the food rations she once depended
on. Her children scavenge among local communities for whatever they can find to
eat.
"As a woman who's not
married, life is hard," Bulaba told The Associated Press. Some locals
"keep throwing stones at us, but we just want to feed our kids and buy
them some clothes," said the mother of six, who often works as a prostitute
to fend for her family.
Uganda is home to more than
1.7 million refugees, the largest refugee-hosting country in Africa, according
to the United Nations refugee agency. Despite being renowned for welcoming
those fleeing neighboring violence, Ugandan officials and humanitarians say
dwindling international support coupled with high numbers of refugees have put
much pressure on host communities.
Approximately 10,000 new
arrivals enter Uganda each month, according to U.N. figures. Some have recently
fled the war in Sudan, but most are from neighboring South Sudan and Congo.
Bulaba is among tens of
thousands in Rwamwanja, a refugee settlement in southwestern Uganda. As in
other settlements across the east African country, refugees there are given
small plots of land to cultivate as they are slowly weaned off total dependence
on humanitarian food rations.
Since 2021, as funding
consistently declined, the U.N.'s World Food Program has prioritized the most
vulnerable groups for food assistance, in food items or cash, which can be as little
as $3. After spending three months in Uganda, refugees are eligible to get 60%
rations, and the number falls by half after six months. Only new arrivals get
100% food assistance, leaving the vast majority of some 99,000 refugees in
Bulaba's settlement vulnerable to hunger and other impoverishment.
In 2017, the Ugandan
government and the U.N. held a summit in Kampala, the capital, and appealed for
$8 billion to deal with the sharp influx of refugees from South Sudan at the
time. Only $350 million was pledged.
Filippo Grandi, the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, visited Uganda last week in a trip
partly aimed to underscore the funding shortage.
The international community
"should not take Uganda's generosity and the global public good it
provides for granted," Grandi said in a statement at the end of his visit.
"Services here are overstretched. Natural resources are limited, and financial
support is not keeping pace with the needs."
He also said international
support "is urgently needed to sustain Uganda's commitment to
refugees," urging donors and humanitarian partners to "come together
with the government to address the needs of refugees and the generous
communities hosting them."
Refugees in Uganda have access
to the same hospitals as locals, and their children can attend school. While
this helps integrate them into the Ugandan community, sometimes the competition
for limited resources sparks tension. However, violence is rarely reported.
Hillary Onek, the Ugandan
government minister in charge of refugees, said during Grandi's visit that
local officials need support to help refugees become more self-reliant. Though
he said the country was "overloaded" with refugees, he cited several
training options to help refugees become self-sufficient, including carpentry,
bricklaying and metal welding.
"We are trying to be
innovative," he said. "Given the fact that funding for refugee
programs dwindled over the years, there is not enough money to meet their
demands, not even giving them enough food to eat."
Onek said the alternative is
"to survive on your own, using your skills, using whatever capacity you
have."
But Bulaba, the Congolese
refugee who has been in Uganda since 2014 after fleeing violence in her home
country with her two children, said she can't find a job. She has since had
four other children who often go barefoot and without appropriate clothing. She
misses the cash-for-food stipend she used to get.
"For us to eat, we look
for work, but there's no work," she said.
END/UNB/AP/PR