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Uganda

 
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PostWysłany: Czw 10:48, 06 Gru 2007    Temat postu: Uganda

Kobiety spia na podlodze i gryzione sa przez pchly, pluskwy. Dlatego czesciej lapia plage, niz mezczyzni, ktorzy spia na lozkach.
Jesli kobiety beda spaly na lozkach to beda zdrowe, bo pchly skacza tylko 20 cm wysokosci i nie wskocza na lozko:
Tak mniej wiecej mysli i swpoje mysli wypowiedzial dr Zaramba z Ugandy
Dr Zaramba nic nie wspomnial o tym, aby wytepic pchly i trzymac domostwo w czystosci.
Cytat:
"The people mainly affected are women because in that district (Nebbi), women only come up on the bed (for sex)," Dr Otaala said, at the Media Centre in Kampala.

"The flea (that causes plague) can only jump up to six inches (high) and (that means) if everybody was sleeping on a bed, there would be no plague in this country," Dr Zaramba said in a separate interview.



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PostWysłany: Czw 23:04, 06 Gru 2007    Temat postu:

Mulago najwiekszy szpital w Kampali


Makerere University in Kampala.
(Gulu University jest polozone okolo 400 km od Kampali)
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PostWysłany: Sob 12:10, 14 Cze 2008    Temat postu:

tu jest o glodnym dwunoznym gownie

Cytat:
UGANDA: Food crisis, starvation in the northeast
Photo: Jane Some/IRIN
Malnutrition rates were found to be above the emergency threshold in two districts -Moroto and Nakapiripirit
KAMPALA, 22 May 2008 (IRIN) - Uganda's remote northeastern Karamoja region is facing a humanitarian emergency due to widespread food shortages, with some local people already starving, senior officials said.
"We witnessed people starving," Aston Kajara, the government minister in charge of Karamoja development, told reporters in Kampala after visiting the region last week. "People are eating rats, others are eating leaves."
Disaster preparedness minister Musa Ecweru said some hunger-related deaths had been reported. Other people were living on one meal a day. "Between 80 and 90 percent of the one million people in Karamoja are in acute food shortage and depend on relief supplies," he said on 20 May.
A joint survey by the UN World Food Programme (WFP), the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the health ministry in February found acute malnutrition rates above the emergency threshold in two districts – 15.6 percent in Moroto and 15.1 percent in Nakapiripirit.
"WFP cannot confirm or refute reports that people are dying, but there is a humanitarian emergency," country director Tesema Negash said. "A combination of factors, including long dry spells, droughts, population explosion, severe environmental degradation and chronic insecurity has led to perpetual vulnerability in Karamoja."
In 2006, the region suffered a severe drought. In 2007, it experienced a dry spell followed by floods and massive water-logging in the most fertile areas. Then, a honey dew fungal infection destroyed the staple sorghum crop while other diseases killed thousands of cattle, goats and sheep, and food prices rose.
"Many people in Karamoja are becoming part of the 'new face of hunger' as rising food prices make food unaffordable," Negash told IRIN on 22 May.

"According to our market surveys, from December 2007 to April 2008, the price of sorghum in Nakapiripirit and Moroto increased by an average of 56 percent, while the price of maize increased by 32 percent and beans by 43 percent."

Cash constraint

WFP, which is involved in various programmes in Karamoja, said an estimated 700,000 people needed immediate relief on a monthly basis until they could recover; 300,000 people needed relief until September and 400,000 up to July.

Cash was, however, a constraint. "We cannot be sure we will reach all the 700,000 on a monthly basis all the way because we have cash constraints," Negash added. "WFP Uganda needs US$185 million to get through this year. We have received only 42 percent of these resources."


Photo: IRIN

Ecweru said the Ugandan government had mobilised three billion shillings ($1.8 million) to address the food crisis in Karamoja as well as in flood-affected neighbouring districts and other parts of the country.

"During the election violence in Kenya, food stores were destroyed ... many [Kenyan] people currently get their food from Uganda, which creates some pressure on available stock," he told IRIN. "Most of the food feeding Southern Sudan comes from here and you can see the pressure mounting."

Kajara said the government would distribute high yielding sorghum seeds that could mature in 30 days. Tractors would also be made available.

In a recent report, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said Karamoja's problems had been compounded by the increasing impact of climate change, insecurity and ongoing forced disarmament by government soldiers.

"Whereas in the 1980s and early 1990s the severe drought cycle was every 10 years, at present droughts are coming every two to three years, while 2006 and 2007 saw back-to-back years of extended dry spells," it noted. "At the current rate of progress, Karamoja will not attain the Millennium Development Goals by 2015."

The region has the country's worst development indicators, according to the Uganda bureau of statistics. Only 19 percent of children aged 6-12 are in school (compared with a national average of 83 percent) while maternal mortality is 750 per 100,000 live births against 505 nationally.

Theme(s): (IRIN) Children, (IRIN) Conflict, (IRIN) Early Warning, (IRIN) Environment, (IRIN) Food Security, (IRIN) Health & Nutrition

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
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a paree dni potem o tym samym gonie co ma za duzpo zarcia:
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Wednesday, 11 June 2008 12:11 UK
Uganda 'happy' about food crisis
Because they can't sell them, 40% of Ugandan bananas rot
The president of Uganda says he is "very happy" about the food crisis.
"Why? Because we produce a lot of food... We are stuck with food," President Yoweri Museveni told Commonwealth heads of government.
The president hopes the food crisis will prompt the removal of trade barriers, allowing countries like Uganda to profit from food surpluses.
A BBC correspondent says most benefits are going to large, commercial farms, while poor Ugandans are suffering.
The BBC's Sarah Grainger in Uganda says most of the population are subsistence farmers, who do not export their crops but are affected by the rising cost of fuel and other inputs.
I think out of all these hiccups we may get a more rationalised interaction... by removing trade barriers, by removing subsidies

Fruit could curb Ugandan poverty
But overall food production has risen in recent ars.

Uganda's growth rate is expected to reach 8.9% later on this year, up from 6.5% last year, partly due to debt relief. "Our problem has been marketing...
We produce 10 million metric tonnes of bananas and 40% of it rots because we have nowhere to sell it," President Museveni told delegates.
President Museveni said milk production had risen so rapidly, it had been poured away.
That was until Uganda set up a recent agreement with an Indian processor plant: excess milk is now being shipped to India.
And he thinks Uganda can continue turning the food crisis to its advantage:
"I think out of all these hiccups we may get a more rationalised interaction in terms of the use of our resources, through trade, by removing trade barriers, by removing subsidies," he said.
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PostWysłany: Pią 14:31, 27 Cze 2008    Temat postu:

Cytat:
70 maize mills close
Thursday, 26th June, 2008 E-mail article Print article
By Jeff Lule

OVER 70 maize mills have closed due to scarcity of maize grain and high power tariffs.
“We have nothing to produce because maize is expensive. There is also a problem of loadshedding and high electricity tariffs,” Paul Nampala, the manager of Kisozi Millers in Kisenyi, said in an interview this week.
“We had over 120 mills, but they have reduced to 30. Many closed because they could not meet the demand. Also, the maize is too expensive compared to a few months back,” he explained.
Nampala said a sack of old maize stock costs sh65,000 from sh32,000, while freshly-harvested maize costs sh57,000 from sh22,000 before.

He said due to the scarcity and high cost of maize, the cost of first class quality maize flour had risen to sh110,000 from sh90,000 the previous months, while second class maize flour costs sh90,000 from sh75,000.
“Before, we were producing 50 sacks of maize flour per day. Today, we produce less than 10. This has made us run out of business and even lose our jobs,” he said.
Nampala said maize mills in Kisenyi were employing over 800 people.
He asked the Government to invest more in agriculture in order to solve the prevailing food crisis, adding that the high power tariffs should also be reduced.
Nampala said maize mills use a lot of electricity.

“Schools and other big organisations prefer other foods like matooke and sweet potatoes because they are cheaper,” he said.
Nampala said the price of a kilogramme of old stock maize had increased to sh650 from sh320, while newly-harvested maize costs sh570 from sh2


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PostWysłany: Pią 16:46, 13 Lut 2009    Temat postu: Uganda: Ritual Murder Suspect Dead

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PostWysłany: Pią 19:45, 22 Paź 2010    Temat postu: tungiasis

Horror disease hits Uganda
Wednesday, Oct. 13, 2010, Anatoli Alemo 40 a resident of Kamuli district in eastern … GODFREY OLUKYA, Associated Press Writer Godfrey Olukya, Associated Press Writer – Fri Oct 22, 9:38 am ET
KAMPALA, Uganda – A disease whose progression and symptoms seem straight out of a horror movie but which can be treated has killed at least 20 Ugandans and sickened more than 20,000 in just two months.

Jiggers, small insects which look like fleas, are the culprits in the epidemic which causes parts of the body to rot. They often enter through the feet. Once inside a person's body, they suck the blood, grow and breed, multiplying by the hundreds. Affected body parts — buttocks, lips, even eyelids — rot away.

James Kakooza, Uganda's minister of state for primary health care, said jiggers can easily kill young children by sucking their blood and can cause early deaths in grown-ups who have other diseases. Most of those infected, especially the elderly, cannot walk or work.

"It is an epidemic which we are fighting against and I am sure over time we will eradicate the jiggers," Kakooza said.

The insects breed in dirty, dusty places. The medical name for the parasitic disease is tungiasis, which is caused by the female sand fly burrowing into the skin. It exists in parts of Latin America and the Caribbean, besides sub-Saharan Africa.

Kakooza said health workers are telling residents of the 12 affected districts in Uganda that jiggers thrive amid poor hygienic conditions.

"We are also telling them to use medicated soap. They can apply petrol and paraffin in places infested by jiggers and they die," Kakooza said.

The most affected part of Uganda is the Busoga region in the east, 150 kilometers (90 miles) from Kampala, Uganda's capital. Some cases have been reported in the central region, less that 70 kilometers (43 miles) from the city, which has led to fears the whole country might be affected.

Some think jiggers — whose scientific name is Tunga penetrans — were brought to Uganda and other east African countries by migrants from India who constructed the railway from Mombasa, the Kenyan seaport, to Kampala in the 19th century. Others say they came to Africa aboard a British ship that sailed from Brazil.

Over time locals were affected. One observer near the turn of the century called jiggers "the most fearful calamity that has ever afflicted the East African peoples" after seeing affected people on the slopes of Mount Kilimanjaro crawling around on all fours and groaning with pain. Colonial governments brought it under control but jiggers have since re-emerged where hygiene is poor.

Some affected people in rural Uganda, like Dakaba Kaala, think they are bewitched and simply wait to die instead of trying to remove the insects.


"For the last three years I have been suffering from jiggers," the 60-year-old said. "I lost two children killed by jiggers.They were sent to me by my neighbor who wants to grab my piece of land."

"It is common to find graves of whole families wiped away by jiggers," said Simon Wanjala, a ministry of health official in eastern Uganda,

Uganda's government has allocated 1 million US dollars to fight the epidemic. Treatment involves removal of the insect or topical medication.

A study a few years ago in Nigeria concluded that raising pigs, having sand or clay floors inside the home and having a resting place outside the house increased the risk of getting jiggers. Wearing closed shoes and using insecticides indoors helps prevent infestations.


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