Museveni, UN chief address Kampala's solidarity summit on refugees

President Museveni addressing the solidarity summit on refugees in Kampala on June 23, 2017. Looking on is the UN Secretary General, Mr Antonio Guterres. PPU photo

President Museveni's address at the solidarity summit on refugees

I greet you and welcome you to Uganda. We are happy that you decided to hold this big Conference on Refugees here in Uganda.

We the indigenous people of the Great Lakes, have been dealing with refugees (empuungyi, abashuhuukyi, etc.), for millennia. Our concept of refugees was dynamic, not static like the concept we hear about today.
When there was a bad ruler (king or chief), portions of the population could kumwimuura (withdraw allegiance from a ruler) and they would okwehongyera (pledge allegiance to a new ruler). Thereafter, they would become citizens of the new area. Sometimes, there would be civil wars or wars of succession.

The losing party would flee to another kingdom where they would be secure. To give example, in one of our kingdoms, Buganda, there was a succession war between two princes: Semakokiro and Jjunju, in the year, 1797. The faction that lost scattered all over East Africa and became citizens of the new areas. There are now six districts in the East African countries of today where the Diaspora of that conflict are now resident. They are no longer referred to as Baganda. In Kamwengye district, they are called Batagweenda with a Parliamentary constituency. In Ibaanda, they are again, called Batagweenda with a Parliamentary constituency. In Kamwengye they are part of the Batooro people. In Ibaanda, they are part of the Banyankore people. In Rubirizi district, where they are part of the Banyankore people, they are called Banyaruguru or Bakuunta (the ones who came with rugs).


The word Batagweenda means the ones that could not continue travelling (fleeing ─ kugyeenda). Banyaruguru refers to those who could run more and more (fleeing).

The Diaspora of the Jjunju – Semakokiro war did not end in Western Uganda. Some are in Kayunga, which was not part of Buganda at that time. Others are in Pallisa. In these two districts, they are called Bakenyi (originally Bagyenyi). Two other branches went to Kenya and Tanzania. In Kenya, they have a whole district to themselves known as Suba district. In Tanzania, they are part of the Musoma-Kuria groups. They are called Basuba in both countries. This is a corruption of the Luganda word: “Abasubwa” ─ the ones who “missed” ─ meaning the ones who missed the throne. In all the direction of their dispersal, these Baganda became the citizens of the new kingdoms.

Occasionally, the refugees could go back to their countries of origin. Prince Bacwa of Ankole, a great commander, accidentally, killed a person and was exiled to Rwanda. Later, the Rwanda kings, on some suspicion, killed him; but he left a son, Bikwatsi.
Bikwatsi was invited back to Ankole and his people are still around. These refugees would bring new skills ─ bark-cloth making, medical skills, etc, etc. This was our concept of managing refugees before the onset of colonialism.

Moreover, it is not that difficult to absorb or to co-exist with the refugee groups because the entirety of the African population is comprised of only 4 linguistic groups. These are: the Niger-Congo group of languages, the Nilo-Saharan, the Afro-Asiatic and the Khoisan. These linguistic groups are either similar or linked. Given our Pan-Africanist ideological orientation and the history of our people already captured above, it is not such a difficult problem to absorb or co-exist with refugees from within Africa.

Nevertheless, the sudden large numbers of refugees present the following problems:
(a) feeding them;
(b) sheltering them;
(c) providing energy for them (for cooking, lighting, etc), so that they do not destroy the environment by cutting trees;
(d) water for household use and production;
(e) allowances for clothing and other household needs;
(f) education for knowledge and skills so that , having lost property in their home countries, especially for the children and the youth, do not lose time for knowledge and skills acquisition; and
(g) health ─ immunization, treatment, etc.

If the International Community assists us to cope with these challenges, we shall manage as we have done in the past.

Currently, Uganda is hosting the following number of refugees:
1. 950,000 refugees from South Sudan;
2. 216,612 refugees from the Congo;
3. 3, 294 refugees from Sudan (Khartoum);
4. 36,278 refugees from Burundi;
5. 35,941 refugees from Somalia;
6. 14,899 refugees from Rwanda;
7. 12,654 refugees from Eritrea;
8. 3,080 refugees from Ethiopia; etc., etc.

As of today, there are 1,271,000 refugees in Uganda.
In terms of avoiding conflict with the rural populations of Uganda, we discourage the rural migration of refugees beyond the gazetted camps. However, when they have skills and capital, our African brethrens that are unfortunate to be refugees, can locate to the urban centres and participate in the sectors of industry, services and ICT. The International Community should assist those who are able to acquire that mobility.

The hosting districts of Uganda should also be rewarded. Especially in the area of the road infrastructure, the government of Uganda is already doing most of the development required. On account of many demands, however, there are certain roads that over-night become of high demand because of the sudden big numbers in the area on account of the influx of refugees. There are, in particular, two roads that should be bituminized but the government is not yet able to take on.

These are: Moyo-Yumbe-Koboko, in the neighbourhood of the famous Bidi Bidi camp in Yumbe district that is hosting 272,168 refugees today; and Kabiingo-Rugaaga-Magabi-Rakai that starts from the famous Nakivaale Refugee Settlement camp that looked after the Rwanda refugees between 1960 and 1994 and is still hosting different waves of subsequent refugees.

The Uganda government will, eventually, do these roads. If, however, the International Community was to expedite that process and we informed our people in the areas, they would understand that their hospitality has not been in vain.

Finally, a word on the factors that cause refugees to flee their countries of birth. The poor African people either flee from bad governments or from criminal, terrorist groups or from both. Sometimes, of course, they may flee from drought which is easier to understand because it is not man-made. It is the man-made crises that are totally unnecessary and should be condemned. The regional mechanisms, if actively used, supported by the International Community can help resolve the man-made crises. Hence, the Great Lakes and the UN are supposed to handle the endless man-made crises in Congo, including the occupation of Eastern Congo by terrorists from Uganda, other East African countries, Congo itself and, I hear, even Somalia and the Middle East.
The ICGLR and the UN have been totally un-useful on this long-standing tragedy in that area. IGAD is trying to handle the problem in South Sudan. President Salva Kiir has additionally, mandated me to deal with certain aspects of that crisis. The EAC is handling the problem of Burundi. I appeal to the Government of Burundi to make our work easier than it has been. The Burundi-Arusha Agreement was guaranteed by the East African Governments. Any failure there will, in part, be our responsibility.

The problem of Somalia where we are, rests more with the Somali leaders. Otherwise, the IGAD, the AU and the International Community have done alot to save Somalia from the demonic groups that had overrun the country. If the Somali leaders could use the solidarity of the Africans and the World to revive the pillars of the Somali State (the army, the police, etc) and form patriotic parties, the terrorists could be defeated completely and Somalia’s recovery would be irreversible.

Bad politics, utilizing the pseudo-ideology of opportunistically exploiting identity of religion or tribes is behind most of these crises.


The ideology of sectarianism in Africa must be condemned. Uganda suffered from those mistakes until we formed the Student Movement in the 1960s that rejected the pseudo-ideology of exploiting identity and emphasized the ideology of pushing for the legitimate interests of our people (development, peace, wealth creation, market access, education, health, etc). It is that Movement of patriotism as opposed to sectarianism and Pan-Africanism as opposed to parochialism that helped us to rescue Uganda.

The leaders, both in Government and Opposition, of the suffering countries have a very serious historic responsibility to end this haemorrhage and suffering of the poor African people affected.

I thank you for this Solidarity Conference. I wish the Conference success.

Earlier, the UN Secretary General, Mr Antonio Guterres while addressing the summit had said "This is the biggest refugee exodus since the Rwanda Genocide."

The UN Secretary General, Mr Antonio Guterres addressing delegates at the summit. Courtesy photo


The UN Secretary General, Mr Antonio Guterres’ opening remarks the Uganda solidarity summit on refugees
Your Excellency President Museveni,
Excellencies,
All protocol observed,
Twelve years ago I became on the 15th of June High Commissioner for Refugess. On the 18th of June caught a plane to fly to Uganda to visit South Sudanese refugees to celebrate with them World Refugee Day.
This was a moment during in which the Comprehensive Peace Agreement was being established and peace between north and south was finally being achieved.
There was enormous hope in the refugees I met. There was singing and dancing with the perspective of going back home. And, indeed, in the following years UNHRC helped about half a million South Sudanese return home, full of hope in the future of their country.


Now, seven years after the independence, yesterday I returned to the same place in the northern part of Uganda, I witnessed what has been the biggest exodus of refugees in Africa since the Rwandan genocide.

This is what we are facing today: the biggest refugee exodus in African since the Rwandan genocide.
You can’t imagine what it means for me, after also having been in South Sudan, as High Commissioner for Refugees, two or three years ago and meeting people who came to see me to say: “we saw you in northern Uganda and now we are displaced again” and yesterday feeling the same despair.


The first conclusion is obvious: everything must be done to end the war in South Sudan.
I want to express my deep appreciation for the efforts that you, Mr. President [Yoweri Museveni of Uganda], are making in order to create the conditions for those who in the past were united in the liberation movement of the country [South Sudan] to come back again into unity and to be able to establish peace in the country.

At the same time, it important to underline that Uganda that, in the past, received these South Sudanese refugees and I had the opportunity when visiting the same area that I visited yesterday, to see that they were not in camps but in so-called settlements that are in reality villages, like villages of the Ugandese people. This allows them to farm the land, allows them to go to the same schools, the same health centers, to have jobs, to allow them to have normal lives, to live in dignity.


It is necessary for the international community to recognize that Uganda has had an exemplary refugee policy in the past and, even today faced with the largest refugee in-flow of the past year, Uganda remains a symbol of the integrity of the refugee protection regime that unfortunately is not being respected everywhere in the world.
I have seen Uganda’s borders open, I have seen the doors of Uganda’s people open, I have seen the hearts of the Ugandan people open.

But not all doors are open in the world. Not all refugees are accepted, some are rejected, and sometimes in countries much richer than Uganda. So it’s also necessary to look into this example and to say clearly that the international community must come together and re-establish the integrity of the refugee protection regime everywhere in the world.
And, at the same time, the international community needs to step up and needs to give to the Ugandan people and to the refugees hosted by the Ugandan people the kind of support that is absolutely needed because the circumstances in which these sacrifices are being made are extremely extremely challenging.


I have seen a situation in which 160 students only have one teacher, health centres where people sleep on the ground because there are not enough beds.
The World Food Programme is struggling to be able to feed the refugee population and, unfortunately, is not able to provide the quantity that is necessary for a healthy development, namely for children.

At the same time, we see the impact on the environment of the local communities. We see how difficult it is to for many of the members of these communities to find a job when the labour market is overwhelmed by such a dramatic presence of refugees.
On the other hand, climate change is also impacting on Uganda. Drought is being severe. Uganda is facing its own problem is relation to drought and in relation food security in several areas.
International solidarity with Uganda is not a matter of generosity, it’s a matter of justice. International solidarity is absolutely crucial at the present moment.
An appeal for all those present here to step up to our common responsibility to support refugees and to our common responsibility to recognize the enormous sacrifice the Ugandan people are making and to support this country in this very challenging moment.

I must say that the cooperation between the Uganda government and the Uganda [UN] country team is exemplary.
New instruments, namely innovative financial instruments are being created to allow for a perfect articulation of these efforts.
I do believe that we have in Uganda an example that, from the point of view of UN reform can be extremely helpful to give us clear indication on how we can work together with other governments, in other parts of the world, in order to make sure that the Sustainable Development Goals are met and no one is left behind.

In this moment, it is absolutely essential to recognize this enormous effort and not to let Ugandan people down.
Your solidarity today is a must because without that solidarity this effort is not sustainable and, if this effort is not sustainable, the impact on the stability of the region will be absolutely dramatic.
Its time for us all to assume our responsibilities and I count on your commitment and your solidarity.
Thank you very much.