# taz.de -- Migration policy in Uganda: Economically potent flagship | |
> It acts as a virtual paradise for refugees in the heart of war torn | |
> Africa, whilst the economy booms – a success story. | |
Bild: South Sudanese refugees in Uganda | |
Uganda is an example of a liberal refugee policy, not only in Africa but | |
across the globe. This is what Filippo Grandi, the UN High Commissioner for | |
the UN Refugee Agency, emphasized at a press conference in Uganda's | |
capital, Kampala, later reiterating this praise in front of the UN General | |
Assembly in New York. In August, during a short visit to the north of the | |
country he returned back to the border. He had visited the refugee | |
reception camps there, where over 80,000 refugees from South Sudan are | |
seeking safety. Since fighting re-ignited in Uganda's northern neighbour in | |
July thousands of South Sudanese refugees have been escaping over the | |
border. At present the small country has offered refuge to over 800,000 | |
people in total. Now Uganda runs the third largest refugee camp in the | |
world. | |
This small country with a population of around 38 million is an island of | |
stability in the crisis-ridden heart of the continent. The Democratic | |
Republic of Congo, Uganda's westerly neighbour, has been at war for over 2 | |
decades, and in South Sudan, to the north of Uganda, violent conflict broke | |
out at the end of 2013, which was renewed in July this year after a failed | |
peace treaty. In Burundi the government terrorises its citizens. More than | |
200,000 people have fled to neighbouring countries, most of them to Rwanda | |
and Tanzania; but the camps there are overcrowded. The Burundians are now | |
also continuing on to Uganda, because they know that once there they too | |
can establish themselves in the long term. The Ugandan government quickly | |
offers them asylum without lengthy application processes or restrictions | |
and they are then assigned a piece of land, where they can build a house | |
and a field to farm or a work permit so that they can set up a shop, a | |
workshop or a restaurant. | |
In 2006 Uganda’s parliament adopted a law on refugees, that respects all | |
international standards which came into effect in 2008. Progressive | |
politics are being implemented institutionally into the president's | |
offices, where there is a department for refugee matters. They are working | |
closely with UN aid agencies and international NGOs because Uganda’s budget | |
is unable to cope with the flow of migration. | |
## A pragmatic approach | |
Uganda’s liberal Refugee policy has a history. During the 1970s and 1980s, | |
when the dictators Idi Amin and Milton Obote ruled with terror, many | |
Ugandans themselves fled as refugees to their neighbouring countries. The | |
current Ugandan President, Yoweri Museveni, lived in exile in Tanzania | |
where he formed his guerrilla movement, which eventually retook the country | |
in 1986 and this government remains in power to this date. | |
This policy of welcoming refugees is an essential part of President | |
Museveni's regional power-politics. Currently, Uganda plays host to | |
oppositional forces from Burundi, South Sudan, Rwanda or even from Somalia | |
and Ethiopia. This includes former armed rebels, who lost the war in their | |
own countries and are recuperating in Uganda, such as the Congo's M23 | |
Rebels (formed during the March 23 Movement). They retreated across the | |
border with all of their weapons following their defeat by the army of | |
Congo and UN peacekeepers in November 2013. Museveni hosts up to one | |
thousand fighters as a bargaining chip and keeps them going; they are a | |
valuable asset. | |
Uganda’s economy is also benefitting. The rich, who want to ensure the | |
safety of their possessions, are the first to leave countries in crisis, | |
followed by the middle class, such as business owners and small traders. | |
Some bring their grain mills, circular saws or sewing machines. They rent a | |
house, open a shop or restaurant, do trade with their relatives at home, | |
whilst paying taxes and hiring a couple of Ugandans. The UN's World Food | |
Programme purchases food from local Ugandan farmers at a fair price. A | |
study conducted by the World Food Programme, published in October 2016, | |
states that each piece of arable land, which is made available for refugee | |
families, generates around 200 euros revenue per year. An advantage for | |
Uganda’s economy. | |
The aim is that after five years, thanks to their own farm, the refugees | |
can provide for themselves. Initial aid such as building materials, cooking | |
equipment, clothing and food supplies, as well as the maintenance of the | |
camp, is provided by international donors such as the UN Refugee Agency | |
(UNHCR) or the UN World Food Programme (WFP). However, as a result of the | |
global crisis these organisations are now in a difficult financial | |
situation and this may have far-reaching consequences. | |
The High Commissioner of the UNHCR Grandi must have also realised this when | |
he visited the reception camps in the Adjumani district. Many do not | |
receive cooking equipment or clothes. The rations per person have been | |
halved. According to Grandi, less than a quarter of the funds needed were | |
made available by the donors. The reason is that news headlines are | |
dominated by the humanitarian crisis in Syria. However Grandi urges that, | |
„if the world is focussed on refugee crises, then the crisis here should | |
receive just as much support.“ | |
Uganda's Prime Minister Rukana Rukunda has also stressed that „this crisis | |
cannot be seen as Uganda's responsibility alone, the rest of the world must | |
help us cope with it.“ She has also added that „we will continue to support | |
the refugees – with or without monetary aid from the EU.“ | |
His government has signed the agreement of the Khartoum process, but it | |
only plays a marginal role. Actions envisaged and discussed for Uganda | |
were: Better methods to identify vulnerable people and better monitoring of | |
Uganda’s borders. | |
According to the Agreement of Valletta in November 2015, Uganda benefits | |
from the EU-Trust Fund. The aim of all these projects: To improve the lives | |
of refugees and their communities. The EU invests around five million euros | |
in projects in Kampala's slums with financial aid from the IOM | |
(International Organisation for Migration). Here is a shelter for those | |
refugees who don't want to live and be looked after in the refugee camps | |
but who also have no money of their own, in order to look after themselves | |
in the cities. Poverty and petty crime lead to conflicts with the Ugandans. | |
Under the gigantic Gaddafi Mosque, the Kisenyi Quarter in Uganda's colonial | |
old town is currently said to be a flashpoint. 90 per cent of the | |
inhabitants are of Somali origin. Here people speak Somali, pray to Mecca, | |
eat spaghetti and buy all kinds of cannabis concoctions, which is the | |
traditional drug in Somalia. The Somali Islamists who had been jumping up | |
and down during the final match of the 2010 World Cup in Kampala, had | |
prepared the attacks in these slums, underground. “Civilian peace-making, | |
conflict prevention and resolution“ are the names of the measures, by which | |
the EU-Trust fund supports health centres, schools and training schemes in | |
these slums. | |
The EU is investing a further ten million in the regions along the border | |
with South Sudan, namely in Adjumani and Kiryandongo. There, the majority | |
of the South Sudanese – around 160,000 in total – who had fled the country | |
since 2013, live in reception centres. The Government of Uganda will | |
endeavour to resettle refugees in the large settlements in the interior of | |
the country, since it owns no land that it can make available in Adjumani | |
and Kiryandongo. There, the land belongs to the local communities. Most of | |
the South Sudanese refuse to move away from the border; they have not given | |
up the hope of being able to return soon to their country. The mass of | |
refugees in the border regions are a cause of conflict because the local | |
population feels supplanted. The two regions have a local population of | |
about 200,000, but hardly any schools, health centres, electricity or water | |
supply. The EU is now investing in a regional development programme in the | |
local economy and infrastructure. | |
## Uganda: an important factor of stability | |
Uganda is considered as a guarantor of stability in the region: Ugandan | |
soldiers, with over 6000 of them, account for the lion’s share of the | |
African Union Military Mission in Somalia (AMISOM), financed by the EU. | |
Since the beginning of 2007, the EU has provided more than one billion | |
euros for the salaries of African-Union soldiers and police officers, the | |
equipment and catering. However, due to the development of EU military | |
missions in Mali, Nigeria and the Central African Republic at the beginning | |
of 2016, the EU has reduced its share by 20 per cent. | |
In the first half of 2016, the Ugandan Armed Forces (UPDF) complained about | |
outstanding payments to their soldiers in Somalia. The Ugandan soldiers had | |
received no salary for more than four months, according to UPDF Spokesman | |
Colonel Paddy Ankunda who spoke to TAZ in August. He threatened that Uganda | |
would exit the mission in 2017; then, in September, the EU promised once | |
again USD 178 million. | |
Ugandan Soldiers are also fighting in South Sudan; not, however, within the | |
framework of the UN or AU, but at the personal invitation of South Sudan's | |
President Salva Kiir, after his own army had crumbled. President Museveni | |
is reluctant to put his troops under a superordinate UN mandate; he | |
categorically rejects the UN weapons' embargo although Uganda sends a large | |
part of the military equipment to Juba. | |
In the scope of the EU regional programme for the Horn of Africa, the | |
„Regional Action plan of 2015-2020“, in which the Regional Organisation | |
IGAD (Intergovernmental Authority on Development), the AU as well as the | |
East African Union are also supported, it is all about the following | |
points: security, migration, arms trade inside the region, climate | |
disasters as reasons for fleeing and prevention of the radicalisation of | |
youth. Here too the EU extends its financial support. Uganda’s President is | |
regarded as a steadfast advocate of integration in the East African | |
Community (EAC), which guarantees the free movement of persons, goods and | |
manpower in the Member States. | |
As a result of that Kenya, Uganda and Rwanda have already drawn up joint | |
tourist visas; an EAC passport will also be printed soon. In order to | |
enable the free movement of people within the EAC, Uganda has greatly | |
expanded its border infrastructure in the past years. Almost all of the 40 | |
border-crossing points have been equipped with fingerprint scanners and | |
reading devices for biometric passports. EAC citizens no longer need a work | |
permit within the Community. In East Africa a quasi-blueprint of the | |
Schengen Zone has come to being in recent years – based in large part on | |
the EU. | |
For Uganda, borders kept being flashpoints: most of them are neither | |
demarcated, nor watched or specifically formalised – thus they are | |
disputed. In the western border region – around Lake Edward – with the | |
Democratic Republic of Congo as well as in the North East along the border | |
with Kenya's Turkana region, huge oil reserves had been found. The | |
neighbouring countries are now in dispute over every square metre of land. | |
In the South along Lake Victoria's shore, there are border conflicts with | |
Kenia and Tanzania; there it's about the shrinking fish stock. | |
## Foreign aid for border control | |
Uganda's border authority lacks vehicles, in order to be able to control | |
remote borders through inhospitable regions in the mountains and | |
desert-like savannas. In 2016 Japan spent a lot on off-road vehicles and | |
other expensive forensic equipment. | |
The desire for increased migration control was put in place as a result of | |
the 2010 bomb attacks, when Somali immigrants were identified as the | |
perpetrators. The International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO) had | |
formalised 2015 as the deadline for the global introduction of biometric | |
passports. Shortly before the end of the deadline, Ugandan immigration | |
authorities started to issue biometric passports in 2015. On their chip, | |
photos, eye scans and fingerprints are stored, which are connected with | |
Interpol’s databases. | |
Since July 2016 foreign visitors must apply for a visa electronically. Now | |
everybody is checked over by the Secret Service. The link between the | |
e-visa and biometric databases is yet to be done. The government lacks the | |
hardware to deal with all the additional data and store them. Until two | |
years ago there was not a single computer at the immigration authorities in | |
Kampala; piles of applications were stacked in coloured folders up to the | |
ceiling. Only recently, was the necessary equipment purchased to process | |
digital files. | |
By doing so, the Immigration Authority was incorporated under the | |
Department of Homeland Security and on several occasions personnel was | |
shuffled and constantly militarised. Ex-army chief General Aronda | |
Nyakairima became Interior Minister in 2013 and he brought the military | |
intelligence CMI on board. The general died unexpectedly in 2015 during a | |
mission abroad. After the 2016 elections General Haji Abubaker Jeje Odongo | |
– former Minister of Defence – became Interior Minister. | |
Already in 2005, it had been decided by Uganda’s government to issue | |
national identity cards to make the electoral process more secure. There | |
have been regular scandals in awarding this major contract of approximately | |
64 million euros. Ultimately, President Museveni commissioned the German | |
company Mühlbauer Technologies. This deal was arranged by the German former | |
Ambassador Reinhard Buchholz, a trusted friend of Museveni, who introduced | |
the company founder Josef Mühlbauer to the President during a midnight | |
meeting in 2010. Shortly afterwards, the President ordered that Mühlbauer | |
should print 15,000 ID cards, bypassing all legally formalised bidding | |
processes. Two years and numerous scandals later, all the money had been | |
paid out, even though the Bavarian company had printed only roughly 400 | |
plastic cards. After fierce debates in Parliament and enquiry committees | |
that had been set up as a result, Uganda's army finally undertook the | |
project. | |
12 Dec 2016 | |
## AUTOREN | |
Simone Schlindwein | |
## TAGS | |
migControl | |
migControl | |
Südsudan | |
Europäische Union | |
## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA | |
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