Food shortage hits 52 districts

Jul 15, 2009

SEVENTEEN districts in the north and northeastern Uganda are experiencing famine, the Prime Minister, Prof. Apolo Nsibambi, told Parliament yesterday.

By Milton Olupot
and Cyprian Musoke


SEVENTEEN districts in the north and northeastern Uganda are experiencing famine, the Prime Minister, Prof. Apolo Nsibambi, told Parliament yesterday.

He said 52 districts countrywide were faced with food insecurity.
Nsibambi categorised the food crisis in three levels; famine, acute food shortage and moderate food shortage.

He was contributing to the debate on the recent State of the Nation address by President Museveni.

Famine, he said, was being experienced in Amuria, Katakwi, Kaberamaido, Bukedea, Kumi, Soroti, Bukwo, Adjumani, Arua, Koboko, Moyo, Yumbe, Moroto, Kotido, Kaabong, Nakapiripirit and Abim.

The Prime Minister told the House presided over by the deputy Speaker, Rebecca Kadaga, that acute food shortage was being experienced in 31 districts, while four districts faced moderate food shortage.

He named persistent poor agricultural performance in Karamoja, the continued stay of people in internally displaced person’s camps in Acholi and Adjumani, the impact of the 2007 floods in Teso and dry conditions along the cattle corridor as the major causes.

Nsibambi said the Government released sh10b in June and another sh10b for food relief.
He added that the department of relief and disaster preparedness and refugees needed an additional sh30b to alleviate the situation.

Nsibambi pointed out that the National Agricultural Advisory Services was distributing free maize, sorghum seeds, cassava cuttings and farming implements, including hand hoes and fertilisers, to the affected households.

He noted the need to shift from reliance on rain-fed agriculture to irrigation and tapping gravitational water from Sipi falls off Mt. Elgon for irrigation in Teso and Karamoja.

He announced that sh5b had been allocated for irrigation systems and that $100m (about sh200b) was being secured from the Islamic Bank to support the scheme.

Nsibambi said the Cabinet, chaired by President Museveni, had on Wednesday deliberated on the food security issues.

“I have requested the Minister of Local Government to use Section 95 of the Local Government Act to direct districts to make ordinances (bye-laws) which will compel homesteads to maintain granaries for food storage,” he stated.

He said climate change, increasing occurrences of extreme weather and climate variability like droughts, floods, hailstorms, heat waves were caused by an accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere.

Seasons, he said, had become erratic and difficult to predict.
“While advancement in technology had made it possible to predict climate six months in advance, it is still difficult to predict the distribution of rainfall over seasons,” he said.

In Uganda, the rainy season had not performed according to the forecasts, Nsibambi added.
He noted that security situation in the north and north eastern Uganda had normalised.

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