Return From Sudan

KajoKejiMap.gif (72394 bytes)It has been just over a week since I returned to Luweero and already it seems like a distant memory. It wasn't the physical exertions that I found exhausting, it was the constant pleas for help. Everywhere I went people approached me as the answer to their prayers even though I wasn't there representing any donor agency. 

The week began with the flight to Moyo, a town in the North of Uganda. It was on a small ten seater airplane. There was a button on the ceiling labeled, 'Please push to call the flight attendant' which I thought very amusing as it wasn't physically possible for any one on the plane to be more than 10 feet away from anyone else.SudanTripTeam.JPG (31855 bytes)

I traveled for the week with some of the members (see photo on the right) of the Kajo Keji Ecumenical Training Project (KaETP). Below is a quote from some of KaETP's literature describing what it does: -

KaETP, under the Anglican diocese of Kajokeji, has trained 44 Community Development Promoters (15 women and 29 men) selected from different churches in the Sudanese Refugee settlements in Ajumani Districts and Kajokeji County, New Sudan in between 1998 and 2000.

The Promoters were trained for one month on various development topics focusing on holistic development and self-reliance.

23 Self -Help Projects have been formed and are operational in various development activities including: -

Agriculture Food Production, Horticulture, Catering, Brick Making, Honey Bee Keeping, Grinding Mill Management, animal Husbandry, Poultry, Marketing of agricultural products to mention but a few.

The individual projects have raised US$8,885 through contributions and sale of their products.  

The main problem is lack of finance to continue the work. KaETP took me to see many of their projects so that I could see for myself the work that is going on. The main purpose of my trip was to make a video for the Sunday Schools in Ireland about the difficult conditions of the refugees though I was very glad to be able to see some examples of activities that are attempting to combat those conditions. 

LandMinedVehicle.jpg (53011 bytes)In the end I only spent a day in New Sudan though I spent the rest of the time with Sudanese refugees. The highlight of my trip was the visit to New Sudan. The area that I visited (Kajokeji) is rebel controlled. Along the roadside were vehicles that had been destroyed by land-mines (see photo on left). The whole area was very overgrown and the walls of the buildings that were still standing were covered with bullet holes and graffiti. 

Inside rebel- controlled Sudan, some people are returned and are trying to get their lives back together. Others are not ready to return just yet remembering how they returned in the early seventies after an agreement was etched out, but had to leave again a year later. 

LimiDisplacementCamp.jpg (30485 bytes)So where are all the people? Many have been killed through atrocities carried out by the Islamic North or through starvation. Others are in resettlement camps in rebel controlled Sudan such as the family shown at Limi Displacement camp in the photograph on the right. Conditions in these camps are stark. UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) is helping though the need far exceeds the ability to meet it.

Others are in refugee camps in Uganda and Egypt. Neither of these countries are in a position to give out huge amounts of aid. Many of the refugees that I met showed great initiative and are trying to help themselves. Money is a problem though. 

ChildWithChild.jpg (13816 bytes)I visited two orphanages in the week, for children who have lost their parents in the conflict. One is inside Sudan and in a terrible state. The other is in Uganda and receives some support from outside countries. The one in Uganda was started by the KaETP team after a child was found alone, eating faeces in the corner of a refugee camp. Other horror stories include that of the child who had to have his arm amputated after he was bitten by a snake while foraging for rats to eat. There are other stories that are not fit to print. 

My impression of the week was one of overwhelming need. We are working on a web site for the project and I will let you know when it is ready if you would like to contribute. I have about 15 project proposals from various groups, all are genuine and need help desperately.

Video Clips

Some of the orphans at the Childrens Care Committee orphanage in Southern Sudan. They see themselves for the first time on the viewscreen of my camcorder. Click on the picture to watch the video clip
Some of the orphans at the Childrens Care Committee orphanage in Southern Sudan singing a local song. Click on the picture to watch the video clip

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