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IDP return efforts pose new assistance challenges; unseasonable rains, food assistance bring relief to Karamoja
02 Feb 2007 10:38:00 GMT
Source: FEWS NET
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FEWS NET Watch Alert for Uganda, published Feb 2 2007

UGANDA Food Security Watch  February 2, 2007

IDP return efforts pose new assistance challenges; unseasonable rains, food assistance bring relief to Karamoja

Relative security in northern Uganda has increased internally displaced persons (IDPs) access to food and other productive resources.  However, slow implementation of government led return plans and unmet benchmarks in the peace process, such as the failure by combatants of the Lord's Resistance Army to move into demobilization areas in southern Sudan as established in the cease fire agreement, have kept many IDPcs from completing their return home.  IDPs moving toward their homes now find themselves in areas with inadequate access to basic services, and targeting them for humanitarian assistance in new spontaneous locations is difficult.  If IDPs are unable to return home, their limited access to cultivatable land and low productive capacity will engender a need for continued assistance, including food aid, through much of 2007.  Persistent difficulties accessing basic services, including water and healthcare, may negatively affect their utilization of any available foods.

Figure 1. Population in need of food aid
 
Source: WFP, Graphics: FEWS NET January 2007

A below normal 2006 unimodal crop harvest caused by drought across Karamoja region resulted in low household food stocks and poorly supplied markets ? especially for sorghum, the staple in the region.  Low market supplies have increased commodity prices, limiting access to food for more than 50 percent of households that do not own livestock and cannot utilize animal products to purchase cereals.  For households that do own livestock and maintain their herds in the region, recent unseasonable rains in parts of Karamoja have ensured adequate access to pastures and water and enabled some local populations to access milk and other livestock products.  In addition, the World Food Programme (WFP) has begun distributing half rations (fifty percent of the minimum daily energy requirement) to 500,000 drought affected people in Karamoja region.  WFP's pipeline is reportedly well sourced for these distributions - 23,000 MT in total - and they will continue until the next harvest in July 2007.  Although a low level of civil insecurity continues (road ambushes, banditry), most recently due to disarmament of the Karimojong, humanitarian access remains relatively stable in Karamoja. 

Incidence of cholera, resulting from flooding in Kitgum and Pader districts in November 2006, has reportedly declined due to the ongoing implementation of control measures.  Incidence of livestock diseases, including Foot and Mouth Disease, is also low due to continued implementation of vaccination, treatment, and quarantine measures, and livestock quality in the region is reportedly normal.  Control measures for Banana Bacterial Wilt Disease are ongoing.

 

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) issues periodic Watches when there are indications of a possible food security crisis.  Decision makers should pay increasing attention to the situation highlighted in this Watch, and prioritize preparedness and contingency planning measures to address the situation.

Famine Early Warning System Network (FEWS NET)

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Villagers transport by makeshift raft wood they collected from houses flooded by mud in Sidoarjo, East Java province March 28, 2007. A mudslide last May has displaced about 15,000 people following an oil-drilling accident.