Showing posts with label Soup kitchen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soup kitchen. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 04, 2024

Uganda welcomes Sudanese refugees with a plot of land to live & farm, 5-year residency, school education

OVER 60,000 Sudanese refugees have fled to Uganda where, reportedly, asylum processes are dealt with swiftly. Once new arrivals have registered with the UNHCR in Uganda, they are granted a five-year residency permit. 

The Ugandan government also grants refugees a plot of land to settle on and farm, and Sudanese children are given opportunities to enter schools. 

International organisations also provide weekly food and financial aid, and alongside this Sudanese volunteers have set up initiatives to provide free meals in the refugee camps with support from organisations and individuals.

Note, Europe has war at its door. Illegal immigrants risk losing their lives en route via criminal gangs or being turned back. Read more in report below.

Infographic credit: Africa Center for Strategic Studies - PDF

Image map credit: Encyclopaedia Britannica

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From The New Arab

By Abdelhameed Awad

Dated Tuesday, 03 December 2024 - full copy:


'Missing Sudan, but at least it's safe': Uganda welcomes Sudanese refugees with a plot of land and residency as displaced navigate challenges in new lives


Over 50,000 Sudanese refugees have fled to Uganda, where asylum processes are dealt with swiftly and upon acceptance, refugees are given a plot of land

Tens of thousands of Sudanese refugees in Uganda are struggling to resume their lives in the face of myriad difficulties, despite the silver lining of a relatively open-door policy in the country and asylum provisions which are more generous than many other states.


Over 50,000 Sudanese have reached Uganda so far, and many more are crossing the border into the country, which has stood out for the relatively swift pace it has processed newly arrived Sudanese refugees and granted them entry visas.


Tanzeel, a young girl from Wad Madani in central Sudan, came to Uganda in the hope of being able to complete her secondary school studies, she explains to Al-Araby Al-Jadeed, The New Arab's Arabic-language sister edition. She has registered for the Sudanese Certificate Examination and is currently waiting for the rest of her family to arrive.


Once new arrivals have registered with the UNHCR in the country, they are granted a five-year residency permit. The Ugandan government also grants refugees a plot of land to settle on and farm, and Sudanese children are given opportunities to enter schools.


International organisations also provide weekly food and financial aid, and alongside this Sudanese volunteers have set up initiatives to provide free meals in the refugee camps with support from organisations and individuals.


Near the Refugee reception offices in Bweyale, in east Uganda (300km away from the capital Kampala), hundreds of Sudanese refugees gather in cafes and restaurants.


Refugee communities have formed in 11 neighbourhoods across the city. Some of them have constructed tents with wood sticks and tarpaulin mats draped over them.


They complain about the lack of toilets, the distance to the hospital, and that a number of them have been assaulted and robbed by gangs.


Most Sudanese refugees in the country are currently spread between Kampala and Bweyale. Those in Kampala have tended towards renting private apartments or houses despite the high rents, and many have tried to enlist in the job market despite a lack of work opportunities.


Due to this, some have set up their businesses; restaurants, bakeries and stores owned by Sudanese individuals have spread, and these in turn are gaining the custom of other refugees, as they are providing Sudanese products.


Young refugee Anas Al Hussein says: "Work opportunities are limited, and those available are poorly paid. I worked twice - once in a factory, and a second time in a company distributing food items. In the end, I decided to open a small shop in a suburb of Bweyale, through which I can support my family and cover school and medical expenses."

Since the start of the conflict in Sudan in mid-April 2023, over 11 million civilians have been forced to flee their homes  

[Amaury Falt-Brown/AFP via Getty]


There are thousands of Sudanese refugees living in Bweyale, all of whom have journeyed hundreds of miles to reach the city, where a UNHCR office has been opened especially to provide reception to Sudanese refugees and host them during their initial days in the reception camps until their registration process is completed.


Once they have acquired the necessary documents, they start receiving financial support and are relocated to land that the Ugandan government has allocated for them.


Abkar Arbab lives with his wife and eight children in one of the refugee reception camps. He tells of how his family journeyed for around a month, starting from the Mayo district in the south of Khartoum. From there, they travelled to Rabak City in White Nile State, then to Renk City in South Sudan.


From there they journeyed to Malakal, then to the capital Juba, reaching Nimule before crossing the South Sudanese-Ugandan border, where they were received by UNHCR staff and transported to Bweyale.


"The journey used up all the money I had, and physically exhausted me and my family," Abkar said, but "then we were given refugee cards and started receiving financial support."


He says the family plans to use the stipend to buy building materials after they were granted a plot of land.


"I am planning to farm it to provide for my family's needs, and am optimistic because I have experience in agriculture, unlike many refugees. As well as this, charity organisations have provided us with humanitarian assistance."


Formidable challenges facing Sudanese refugees are the difficulty of integrating into Ugandan society and the fears they have for the futures of their children, in addition to the lack of work opportunities and high rents.


Marwa al-Farsi, another Sudanese refugee in Uganda, expresses her sorrow at what the Sudanese people have endured and the state they are now in.


They "were burned a lot before the war, and they are being burned after it," she says.


She says she left her home in Khartoum for many reasons, including that her children were panicking every time they heard gunshots or shelling. However, now she misses her life in Sudan but says that living in Uganda is challenging, at least here they are safe.


Software engineering student Mohammed Al Muntasir Hussein came with a group of friends from Omdurman, after hearing that gaining asylum in Uganda might give them the chance to be resettled in Europe later.


With this hope, they embarked on the long, exhausting and dangerous journey to reach Uganda. After crossing the border, they spent four months in the Nyumanzi reception centre after which they were taken to Bweyale and given a plot of land to live on and farm.


They spent ten months in Bweyale, and have been unable to complete their studies. The UNHCR gives them 14,000 Ugandan shillings every month, equivalent to $4 per person, "which is barely enough for two days," according to Mohammed.


However, they coordinate and assist each other to get through the rest of the month.


His friend Abubakar Jalal, also a university student from the Kalakla area of south Khartoum, complains about the challenges in accessing Ugandan universities to complete his education.


He's a medical engineering student and completed his third year but his education was halted due to the war. Even though he has 14 certificates from various training courses, he still hasn't found a way to obtain a scholarship.


As for Sudanese musician Saud Imam, he is also in Bweyale, where he has been given a piece of land.

"The first period was hard, especially as the land they gave us is in the middle of an intensively farmed area. It's a narrow space, and is full of insects," he says.


"We've also had other problems like a lack of food," he adds, explaining that they had been receiving a monthly food basket "but then it was swapped for a monthly sum which isn't sufficient. The bigger problem though is accessing water; you need to walk several kilometres every day to fetch water."


However, Saud has tried his best to alleviate the suffering of those around him and lighten the burdens of his fellow refugees.


"When I reached Bweyale, I found that some of the people who had got here before me were suffering from nervous breakdowns, so I started organising concerts."


He began two choirs, one for children and another for adults, and started organising cultural evenings "to ease people's suffering, and help them heal."


"I have faith that music is one of the things which can bring a change of spirit, and allow people to forget war and its troubles," he says.


This is an edited translation from our Arabic edition. To read the original article click here.

Translated by Rose Chacko

This article is taken from our Arabic sister publication, Al-Araby Al Jadeed and mirrors the source's original editorial guidelines and reporting policies. Any requests for correction or comment will be forwarded to the original authors and editors

Have questions or comments? Email us at: info@alaraby.co.uk


RELATED


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A Mouth Full of Salt: Unveiling truths and tragedies in Sudan

By Aisha Yusuff

Book Club: Named after a Sudanese proverb, 'A Mouth Full of Salt' tackles themes of racism, gender-based violence, and oppressive traditions found across Sudan.


Sudan’s soup kitchens offer a lifeline to thousands of civilians

By Mohamed Mostafa

In the midst of the ongoing Sudan war, communal kitchens like It’aam have become vital for trapped families, despite facing major funding and security issues.


View original: https://www.newarab.com/features/uganda-welcomes-sudan-refugees-plot-land-and-residency


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Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Omdurman 11 miles from Khartoum is 'uninhabitable' amid its sanitary crisis and a total service collapse

NOTE from Sudan Watch Editor: Further to a 12 July 2024 post at Sudan Watch titled Sudan's police order all foreigners to leave Khartoum & surrounding regionthe following report describes Sudan's Omdurman locality as 'uninhabitable' amid its sanitary crisis and total service collapse.

Omdurman is in the "surrounding region". The distance between Khartoum and Omdurman is 11.1 miles, a 14-minute drive in light traffic. Why has Sudan's Ministry for Health allowed Omdurman to fester and not mobilised people to respectfully identify and bury the dead and clean up the area?

Maybe here's why. Around a week ago, the Sudanese authorities gave "foreigners" two weeks to leave Khartoum and surrounding region. It seems likely that the SAF plans to attack the region to rid it of RSF and supporters.

Dear God bless and help Sudan and her people, they need to be free of war.
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Report from Dabanga Online English
Dated Monday, 15 July 2024  21:11 OMBADDA. Here is a copy, in full:

Omdurman locality ‘uninhabitable’ amid sanitary crisis and total service collapse

Stagnant water in the streets of Ombadda, a breeding ground for insects and waterborne illnesses 

(Photo: Ombadda El Amir Emergency Room via Facebook)


The Ombadda El Amir Emergency Room said that the Ombadda Block 5 neighbourhood in Omdurman, sister city to the capital Khartoum, is currently uninhabitable due to the presence of decomposing corpses in streets and in homes a complete lack of services.


In a statement on its Facebook page, the Emergency Room indicated that there are no remaining functional markets, hospitals, or medical centres in Ombadda Block 5. Charity kitchens and hospices have also been relocated to Ombadda Block 2.

The streets of Ombadda are covered with litter 

(Photo: Ombadda El Amir Emergency Room via Facebook)


“Waste is widespread, and plundered homes have become breeding grounds for dirt, filth, and a gathering place for rodents and insects. Several corpses have left waste traces after decomposition, making the environment unsanitary. The area has not been fully evaluated to obtain the necessary environmental information.”


Parts of pipes and water connections have been stolen or broken, resulting in stagnant water in the neighbourhood, a breeding ground for water-borne ilnesses.


Kala-azar* (visceral leishmaniasis) disease was widespread in the neighbourhood when it was populated, according to the statement. Conditions in Ombadda blocks and 6 are similar to those in Ombadda 5, the Emergency Room said, noting that there are no residents left in the area.


There are only two families remaining in Ombadda 5. The emergency room warned that all residents from this area should leave to the safer eastern part of Ombadda 2.


The neighbourhood is divided: the northern and northeastern sections are under the control of the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF), while the middle section is a friction zone between the SAF and the RSF. Both the SAF and the RSF have imposed sieges on the parts of Ombadda controlled by their rival since October, severely hindering the flow of aids and goods into the area.


Ombadda, a locality primarily inhabited by people who fled previous wars and poverty in Kordofan and Darfur, witnessed heavy fighting on multiple occasions since the outbreak of war in mid-April of last year. On September 5, at least 32 people were killed in a SAF air raid targeting Ombadda Block 21.


Hunger hotspot


Already in March, 240,000 families in Khartoum state were threatened with severe hunger.


Sudan has been highlighted as one of the highest concern “hunger hotspots” in three separate reports published by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the Clingendael Institute of International Relations in the Netherlands, and a joint Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP).


Hunger is deepening in Sudan and in neighbouring countries to which millions of people have fled, creating a hunger crisis that could become the world’s largest.


View original: https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/omdurman-locality-uninhabitable-amid-sanitary-crisis-and-total-service-collapse

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Related


A soup kitchen in Khartoum state (File photo: Hadhreen FB page)

Source: https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/soup-kitchens-in-sudan-capital-resume-activities-thanks-to-huge-efforts-of-volunteers

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16 months in: Sudan war at a glance

Source: Dabanga English Online report dated Tuesday, 16 July 2024

Read full story: https://www.dabangasudan.org/en/all-news/article/16-months-in-sudan-war-at-a-glance


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