Posted By Jackee Budesta Batanda Share

The Ugandan president's office has announced that it is requesting 92 billion Ugandan shillings [$39m] in additional funding to run its activities. This comes just five months after State House already asked for a supplementary budget of 66.6bn [$28.3m]. This is, to put it mildly, outrageous.

The request comes just weeks after the government announced that it is refusing to increase spending (except for the security sector). The government had offered to increase teachers' salaries by only 15 percent, an offer rejected by the teachers, who were demanding a 100 per cent raise.

Here's more from The Daily Monitor piece:

If approved, the State House budget will balloon to more than Shs158.6 billion [$67.3m] -- more than twice the 2011/12 Budget for Mulago National Referral Hospital. This money would meet the Shs75 billion [$31.8m] required to answer teachers' demands for a 100 per cent salary increment.

(The photo above shows Mulago National Referral Hospital, Uganda's largest.)

Meanwhile, the northern part of the country is being ravaged by a strange disease referred to as "nodding disease." Of the 7 billion shillings [$2.9m] requested by the Ministry of Health to address the outbreak, the government only released a miserly 100m [$42,436]. The ministry's supplementary budget for tackling the outbreak is being delayed amid reports of bureaucratic infighting.

This bizarre disease is named after the strange seizures that it causes. The seizures can be triggered by the smell of food. According to the U.S-based Centers for Disease Control, little is known about what causes the disease or how it spreads.

The Daily Monitor article quotes Dr. Scott Dowell, CDC lead investigator, in an interview with the Center for Global Health policy, United States:

The children definitely die with it -- it's not rapidly progressive, but it seems to take hold of them. The nodding is in fact a type of seizure which causes damage on the brain.

Ugandan photojournalist Edward Echwalu wrote a poignant article on the disease, profiling Nancy Lamwaka, a twelve-year-old girl. Her father has to tie her to a tree during the day so she does not wander around and harm herself. At one point she fell into a fire:

Her father's heart bleeds daily as he goes through the traumatizing routine of tying his own daughter to a tree like an animal. He says only his two pigs receive such treatment.

"It hurts me so much to tie my own daughter on a tree because in our tradition, it's a taboo and unheard-of. But because I want to save her life, I am forced to. I don't want her to go loose and die in a fire, or walk and get lost in the bushes, or even drown in the nearby swamps," he says.

Under the tree, she struggles to move towards the direction of the shade as the sun begins to shine hard. She stumbles but moments later, recovers her waning energy and follows the shadow. All along Lamwaka is quiet, looking drowsily at her siblings seated a few meters away. She has not said a word or made a sound since she woke up. You could sense she wants to say something; perhaps invite her two siblings to play with her, but she just looks on, her eyes heavy and mouth effortlessly open, only occasionally shutting to close out preying flies.

Echwalu's article and photos give the disease a face, showing how it affects the family and community.

Legislators from northern Ugandan are understandably upset by what they see as the blatant squandering of state resources in the face of an epidemic. The Daily Monitor quotes the chairman of the Acholi Parliamentary Group chairman, Reagan Okumu:

If it is true that Shs92 billion is going to State House when our people are suffering with nodding disease without any serious response, may God have mercy on us....

To my colleagues in Parliament, if you approve this money the people of northern Uganda will never forgive you. It does not matter whether State House has already spent the money or not, this money shouldn't be approved before getting money for the children who are suffering with the nodding disease....

While the different ministries bicker over resources, the state of the afflicted only gets worse.

AFP

 

SAMAN7

11:22 AM ET

March 2, 2012

good

In 2001, Africa saw a year more stable and with more economic promise than 2000.
For a number of reasons, 2001 might probably have been the most successful year for Africa since the 1960s.
There was only one military coup on the continent, the one in the Indian Ocean island nation of the Comoros, and only one attempted coup, in the Central African Republic.
The brutal 10-year civil war in Sierra Leone appeared to be at an end at last, and the rebel Revolutionary United Front began disarming.
A new, 30 year-old leader, unexpectedly came to power in the Democratic Republic of Congo and suddenly Africa's most complicated ever civil war was headed for resolution.
Two Zambian cabinet ministers set off a daring revolt when it seemed that the incumbent president was contemplating a third, unconstitutional term of office, and thus prevented Zambia from sliding inevitably back to one-man rule.
The theme of African unity was seized by the horns and driven, almost forcibly, by a Libyan army Colonel, one of Africa's most controversial leaders.
And amid all the news coverage and analysis following the September 11 terrorist attacks on the United States, the Ugandan president, speaking before the United Nations General Assembly, gave the first, reasoned, impartial definition of what constituted terrorism and what the roots of international terrorism were, leaving delegates at the General Assembly staring in admiration and disbelief.
The most promising news of all came in April when 39 major international drug companies relented in their effort to sue the South African government for planning to go ahead and produce generic AIDS drugs --- opening the way for a drop in the prices of these critical drugs.
Another source of important news came with the discovery of oil in Sudan, Chad, and Equatorial Guinea. The implications of these oil findings were far-reaching.
Equatorial Guinea by June was reported to be the world's fastest-growing economy, registering a 25 percent rate.
Then there was the ultimate of ironies: South Africa, a nation which for 46 years between 1948 and 1994 had practiced the segregative policy of apartheid and was the most reviled and hated country in Africa, became by 2001, the main engine of economic growth and hope for Africa.
South African business --- which alone contributes 40 percent of Africa's overall industrial output --- continued its relentless roll out across Africa and bringing new and vital vibrancy and services to African economies long relegated to stagnation.
Among Africa's star economies in 2001 were, in order, Morocco, Seychelles, Tanzania, Uganda, South Africa, and Ghana.
In a December 25 economic forecast for 2002, the International Monetary Fund said four African economies --- Cameroon, Tanzania, Ghana, and Uganda --- would record economic growth rates of between four and six percent in 2002.
Mozambique, the victim of a double season of devastating floods, resumed its high economic growth rate.
Two West African girls, one Senegalese, the other Nigerian, electrified global television audiences, winning major beauty contests and bringing pride and joy to millions of Black Africans.
A Zambian-born teenager became one of the most popular Pop stars of the year, with her hit record that had large sales and regular airplay on radio stations in America and Europe.
Athletes from Kenya, Morocco and Ethiopia continued to win most of the world's major middle and long distance athletics races, from the 1,500 metres to the marathon.
Zimbabwean and South African cricket players broke world records.
A South African golfer became only the second non-American to win the prestigious U.S Open --- and this with the world's number one player, Tiger Woods, also taking part in that competition.
Many were the newsmakers in 2001; many were the people who, by their actions, achievements, initiatives, style, victories, discoveries, and personal integrity, helped advance Africa one step further than the previous year.

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MAXIMB

6:11 PM ET

March 22, 2012

Well, not until after she

Well, not until after she finishes watching BOTH versions of the Stepford Wives AND the HandMaid's tale and the Scarlet Lett (oh yeah, maybe she isn't gonna watch that one)..

"Is rio orange war always comparateur forfait inevitable ?"
MaximB

 

Transitions is the group blog of the Democracy Lab channel, a collaboration between Foreign Policy and the Legatum Institute.

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