Uganda’s open refugee policy needs support: UN 

EU Commissioner for Humanitarian and Crisis Management, Christos Stylianides, speaks with newly arrived refugees from South Sudan waiting to be registered on November 11, 2016 at Kuluba Reception Centre in Koboko District, Kampala. Uganda has a policy that favour refugees. PHOTO | ISAAC KASAMANI | AFP

What you need to know:

  • The country last year announced that refugees will be allowed to work to gain income to cater for their families.
  • Experts are now arguing that the world should come to the rescue of Uganda.

UGANDA

Uganda is paying the price of having an open refugee policy that has attracted thousands of refugees from neighbouring countries.

The east African country has the biggest Refugee Settlement in the world, hosting over 270,000 South Sudanese refugees.

The country is host to over 1.5 million refugees. Once a refugee arrives in Uganda and goes through the necessary documentations, he or she is allocated a piece of land where they can cultivate their own food instead of entirely depending on relief, especially in the face of dwindling financial support to humanitarian agencies.

PROJECT BACKING
The country last year announced that refugees will be allowed to work to gain income to cater for their families.

The skills gained would also be helpful when they return home. 

All these measures are geared towards empowering refugees to become self-reliant and reduce their dependence on humanitarian aid.

These measures are summed up in the country’s five-year USD350 million project dubbed Refugee and Host Population Empowerment.

The project has already received endorsements from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

HELP UGANDA
UNHCR head Filippo Grandi on a visit to the refugee settlements in northern Uganda last year, urged the world to embrace the policy noting that it can be a global model on refugee management and response in the longer term.

Since then, Uganda and humanitarian agencies have been calling for support but it has not been coming in as expected. 

Uganda is now arguing that it is at a breaking point because the influx is already putting pressure on the meagre resources government has to cater for the rest of its citizens. 

Experts are now arguing that the world should come to the rescue of Uganda, noting that the country should not pay the price for being good to refugees.  

UNDERFUNDED
Mr Wellington Carneiro, who has experience with working on humanitarian crises in Chad, Cameroon, and Sudan argues that the world should not let Uganda’s policy die off.  

“Uganda has turned out to be the biggest refugee host country in Africa with over 1.3 million refugees. Uganda needs support and this operation is critically underfunded,” Mr Carneiro told Xinhua in an interview at Ngomoromo, a border post between Uganda and South Sudan, through which refugees are fleeing to Uganda.

Mr Carneiro works for the UNHCR as a field officer at Ngomoromo.