Karamoja's people face starvation
Written by: Peter Biro
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Women from the Matheniko clan on their way to sell firewood in Moroto.
Peter Biro/The IRC
Peter Biro/The IRC
Dark blue clouds are building up on the horizon and a cool breeze announces the midday rain. Boys tending to cattle are hurrying off to find shelter under the many acacia trees that dot the landscape. Here in Karamoja, a remote region in Uganda's northeast, rains are a blessing. But it is too little, too late. According to the UN World Food Program, over 700,000 people need urgent food relief in Karamoja. The crisis is blamed on long dry spells coupled with a population explosion, environmental degradation, rising food prices and chronic insecurity. Just before I came here to visit the programs of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) in Karamoja's Moroto district, local authorities revealed that 108 people had died of starvation in the district since January. As the rain stops we meet a group of people walking towards Moroto town, a small and muddy outpost flanked by a beautiful mountain range in the middle of the vast savannah. "There's too much sun here; our harvest has failed and we can't feed or water our cattle," says Lucia Lokuwan, an older woman wearing the traditional colourful beaded necklaces and earrings of the Karamoja clans. To mitigate the crisis, the WFP is handing out food rations, but the people here agree that it is far from enough. "We have to eat the few things we can find in the bush," Lucia says and shows me some small leaves that she keeps in a bag. People are also kept afloat by gathering firewood far away from town which they sell in the market. This normally brings in the about 2,000 Ugandan Schillings, or $1 per day. "If nobody helps us, we will perish," Lucia says with a gesture of resignation. The current crisis is nothing new in Karamoja. The region frequently experiences periods of extreme hunger. In 1980, Karamoja saw one of the worst famines in history when over 20 percent of the population died, including 60 percent of the infants. The people of Karamoja, known as the Karimojong, are semi-nomadic pastoralists and cattle play a central role in life here. For decades, illegally armed cattle raiders have wreaked havoc on communities both within Karamoja and in neighbouring areas. The loss of livestock because of these inter-clan cattle raids is also contributing to Karamoja's extreme poverty. The IRC has helped counter this by setting up local committees which help negotiate peace between the fighting clans. To help the Karimojong in the acute phase of the crisis, the IRC plans to pay communities not with money but with food rations to build vital new infrastructure, such as access roads, schools and hospitals. The underlying reasons for the food shortages are complex and rooted in a long history of political and economic marginalization, explains Howard Ayo, the IRC's economic development officer in Moroto. "Food aid is only a short-term solution," he says. "The root causes of the crisis need to be addressed first." Howard tells me that people here are totally dependent on livestock which they sell in the neighbouring districts. But raising livestock has proven insufficient in protecting the Karimojong from food shortages. The intensive grazing of the livestock, along with deforestation due to firewood gathering, has eroded the soil and stripped the land of some of its agricultural potential. A new IRC program is under way to help people grow nutritious food and train people in skills that are in demand, like brick and handicraft production. "One way we want to break this circle of poverty is to introduce new agricultural methods and technologies here," Howard says. "We need to find new options for people to make a living, before it is too late."
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2 responses to “Karamoja's people face starvation”
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Peter Biro is a senior communications officer with the International Rescue Committee (IRC). He is responsible for covering the IRC's emergency and development work, most recently in Afghanistan, Chad, Congo, Indonesia, Iraq, Liberia, Sudan and Thailand. Biro, who was born in Sweden, has also worked as a journalist and photographer in Europe, Africa, Southeast Asia and Latin America and for the United Nations in Kosovo, East Timor, Cambodia and Sierra Leone.
13 Nov 2008 11:28:00 GMT
We need a program of paying residents for the trees that they save and the trees that they plant. This will help their water supplies and lessen soil erosion leading to long term success. Paying the residents of Karamoja will help them get the food they need now. Regionally produced food could be bought and given in return for trees also. This tree planting should be paid for by the U.S. as part of a carbon footprint mitigation strategy. Also individuals could donate to mitigate their own carbon foot print. This would be cheaper than tree planting in the U.S. so people should be willing to do it. Wood burning stoves that require less fuel could be created by the locals and sold instead of fire wood with our help of providing locally sourced materials to build them.
05 Dec 2008 19:10:14 GMT
i agree with the comment of james shelton, but i want also to add on my comment, i know am a karamojong by tribe and i feel bad for my people. however my suggestion is, despite the fact that some donars have tried their best to solve hunger/poverty in karamoja,there is still much to be done, if only and only they could drill more boreholes mostly in those deep villages such that this people can have access to enough water to water their crops especially the vegetables,i know the varied dams were dug to trap rain water which could have helped both crops and animals but since the place receives little amount of rain,then i think borehole water may help to a small extent.for how long will karamoja be spoon fed, if the problem is not solved. secondly,not unless this internal and cross boarder conflicts are solved,then karamoja will continue to be trapped in the circle of poverty and hunger. lastly, i argue the supporting governments,NGOs, development agencies/donars to focus also on longterm solutions not just only on the immediate needs, i know all this needs are crucial. and also they should give enough funds that can help to run the projects systematically to avoid doing shoddy work. thank you in advance for your positive response.