# 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.
       
 (IMG) 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
       
 (DIR) Simone Schlindwein
       
       ## TAGS
       
 (DIR) migControl
 (DIR) migControl
 (DIR) Südsudan
 (DIR) Europäische Union
       
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