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Northern Uganda: SOS children Become a
Permanent Fixture |  |
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SOS Children's Villages
October 19, 2006
Northern
Uganda is on its way to peace after 20 years of war. An
agreement made between the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) and
Museveni's government at the end of August has given the
long-suffering Ugandan people good reason to hope for an end to
displacement, abduction and mass murder. Two members of our
charity's staff made
their way to the north of the country that has been blighted by
Africa's
longest conflict. Hilary Atkins, one of SOS
Children's regional editors, describes the changes that have
taken place since her last visit.
Report from Gulu, Uganda
We leave Entebbe, a 20 minute drive from the capital Kampala,
for Gulu in the north at 7.30am. The 340km journey takes about
four hours, but getting through the rush hour traffic of Kampala
can add up to an hour to the journey. The road from Kampala is
fairly good, and although deep potholes appear unexpectedly, our
sturdy four-wheel drive skims over them.
This is my fourth visit to Gulu. I first went in January 2003
at the height of the conflict, when the LRA was rampant in the
countryside around Gulu, attacking villages and displacement
camps and kidnapping
children for use as child soldiers and sex slaves. That was
the year that the children began their now famous 'night
commutes' - walking into the safety of town every night and
sleeping in bus stations, churches, hospitals and on pavements,
only to return home early in the morning. It was a solemn, yet
dignified nightly procession, and it drew the attention of the
world's press to northern
Uganda, far better than any politician could.
Signs of
confidence
Uganda is a fertile country, evident by the lush fields and
large rural population. There is comparatively little traffic
the further north we go, and what there is consists mainly of
four-wheel drives emblazoned with the names of aid
organisations, giant buses and bicycles carrying anything from a
mobile shop to half a tree of green bananas. Many people are on
foot and that's a good sign - they must feel safe.
My colleague, the National Director of SOS
Children's Villages Uganda and a frequent visitor to the
north, remarks on the lack of military check points on the road
- a sign of confidence perhaps (although he adds that we can be
sure that the army will be somewhere close by).
Karuma Falls is my landmark. The road crosses the falls about
an hour from Gulu; sprays of white water plummeting towards
Sudan where the White Nile meets the Blue Nile on its way to
the sea. Once a tourist attraction, the Karuma Falls instead
marked the boundary between safety and danger, the known and the
unknown. Three years ago the LRA could have been camped
anywhere, even in the high grasses bordering the highway.
Attacking commuter buses was one of their trademarks, so on
previous visits I travelled this road uneasily. But today it
feels good and the only uneasy thing about the Falls is the
unusually low level of water.
The closer we get to Gulu, the more the roadside population
grows. Displacement camps, once limited to the north of Gulu
have sprouted on this side of town. They do not seem to be as
officially organised as some I have seen, but their safety is in
their numbers and proximity. Four years ago pedestrians walked
this road at their peril, but today they stride purposefully
forward, heading for the market, the
school, the hospital. This
is the surest sign yet that northern Uganda is reverting to
normality after the brutality of a 20-year-insurgency that has
targeted the poorest and most vulnerable of the population.
Despite its associations, I like Gulu. It's a small
industrious town, so small that you can walk from one end to the
other in 20 minutes, and ironically it feels very
non-threatening. With such small distances, bicycle and motor
bike taxis proliferate but the relatively few motor vehicles,
usually large and air conditioned, are kings of these small
roads.
A temporary
village, but palace to some
The SOS Children's Village is located on the edge of town in
temporary premises which, due to their solidity, feel quite
permanent. Two long low buildings house small bedrooms where the
children sleep with their SOS mothers. The rooms are a little
cramped but still comfortable and to some of the children must
feel like a palace. A number of these children were born in the
bush to young child soldiers killed on the battlefield; some
were found lying beside their dead mothers and others were
deliberately sent back to Uganda by their LRA fathers, knowing
that without their mothers, their chances of survival were slim.
Other children are victims of the general situation, orphaned by
war, or HIV/AIDS,
or other common diseases like malaria.
The village initially opened in a temporary house where over
40 children slept in four bedrooms - it was
emergency relief
in its most literal sense, giving shelter and care to children
found in reception centres, in the hope that one day they would
be reunited with their families. Now there are over 100 children
in a larger temporary facility and it is clear that for some,
reunification will never happen. Two-year-old Susan, for
example, was found in the remnants of a displacement camp where
the rest of her family was killed in an LRA attack. When the
Village Director saw her at the hospital she was injured and
afraid, but today she is the delight of the village as she
strides across the grass towards the day care centre - as secure
as any two-year-old could be.
Some good news
The good news, though, is that since January the Village
Director has united five children with members of their
biological families. With the situation becoming more stable, he
has been using all available means to trace families and three
more children are likely to be reunited with their families once
final checks are made. The Director stresses that that is not
the end of the matter - he will continue to follow up on the
progress of the children and in some cases SOS Children's
Villages is providing educational support.
The other piece of good news is that SOS Children's Villages
has now acquired some land to build a children's village in Gulu
ensuring a permanent home and long-term support for those
children without families to care for them. Construction should
start by the end of the year.
The temporary village, however, is still likely to remain the
focus of attention in Gulu, housing as it does a
medical centre, a
social centre and a day care centre, all for the use of the
community at minimal cost. The medical centre currently sees
over 50 patients a day, some from as far as Kitgum, 50km away.
With the on-site laboratory, equipped to test for HIV as well as
other standard diseases, the premises are becoming too small and
expansion is inevitable. The social centre targets vulnerable
people in the community, in particular child-headed and
grandparent-headed families, former child soldiers and single
mothers. Training is currently offered in tailoring and
agricultural skills, while
school-age children are supported with school fees,
supplementary food and regular visits from social workers. The
day care centre, meanwhile, is open to children from two to six
years old, allowing parents to go out to work.
Since my last visit a year ago there are more signs of
permanency. The day care centre, once under canvas, now has
three permanent classrooms and there is also a large recently
built basketball court near the
medical centre,
which is used by youth from the
community. The place is buzzing with activity, especially
when the SOS children come home from
school and dominate the
playground.
SOS Children's
Villages - there for the long-term
Before we leave Gulu we pay a visit to the elected local
leader of the municipality - a lawyer and former Member of
Parliament, known officially as the 'LC5' (LC5 is the district
level in Uganda). He warmly receives our delegation of four and
is complimentary about the work of SOS Children's Villages.
The leader is aware that in a town with the highest number of
NGOs in Uganda, many of which come and go within months, SOS
Children's Villages is in it for the long-term offering
sustainable family care and ancillary services to the local
population. He is right - SOS Children's Villages is now a
permanent fixture on the Gulu landscape and I am already looking
forward to going back to see the growth and the progress that
will inevitably be made in the next 12 months.
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