Part of Fort Portal town as seen from Rwengoma. Photo by Felix Basiime |
BY FELIX
BASIIME
& RUTH
KATUSABE
Published in Daily Monitor in November 2013
KABAROLE: What was seen earlier as something achievable within 5 years has been
pushed to 2030, that is the project: Fort Portal city.
According to the 2013 Five
year Development Plan, the new Vision now states as, “To have an Orderly and Liveable
Tourist city by year 2030”
The quest for a city status has been
delayed by several factors but the biggest of all is the bickering of local leaders
of Fort Portal municipality.
Both the mayor Mr Asaba Ruyonga and
area MP Alex Ruhunda in 2011 launched a joint campaign with a big quest to
transform this town into a city status.
During the campaigns, both Ruhunda and town
mayor had a slogan "Nikisoboka Fort Portal kufooka city" meaning that
it is possible for Fort Portal to turn into a city. These leaders promised the
electorates that this quest was possible in five years but things have changed
since and affected the original plan.
Hardly had a year past after the
municipal leaders were sworn in, than bickering ensued with councilors fighting
both the mayor and his Deputy Margaret Kihika over allowances and other petty
issues.
“I abandoned that plan (City status)
because my critics have mainly used the media in Fort Portal to tarnish me as a
thief, I no longer go out to monitor projects for fear of being stoned by
members of the public as I used to do and now development is at a slow pace”
Asaba said.
He added, “Do you see the bickering
in the 9th Parliament, we can’t have any tangible developments in
the country this term when there is bickering among the leaders, the same with
Fort Portal, for development to take place, leaders must unite and jointly do
projects, roads and other infrastructure is for all of us”
He added, “Am sure at this pace,
Kasese will surpass Fort Portal very soon in terms of developments”
Some of the
criteria for a city status
According
to the Local government Act, a municipality to turn into a city must have a
population of at least 500,000.
To
attain this figure, the leadership of the town cannot announce over radios
inviting people to migrate to town, but there must be facilities, institutions,
developments and the enabling environment that automatically attract people to
work, invest and stay there.
These
are like hospitals, schools, hotels, universities, banks enough space for both
residential and business premises.
Area
for expansion is another criterion. Currently Fort Portal has West, East and
South Divisions covering about 27.82 sq
kms. It needs to expand beyond this by annexing some neighboring sub counties
and to do this, the urban authority has to lobby these sub counties, it is not
an automatic process, the law says that sub counties requested must sit and
decide to join the city or may turn down the request.
However, according to the Acting
Deputy Town Clerk, Mr Michael Karwani, expansion is not their strategy at the
moment but they are focusing on improving the infrastructure first which will
attract people to work and stay in town.
One of these is the modern market
under construction at Mpanga market at the Fort Portal-Kampala road junction.
Other things that qualify for a city
status include the services that the private sector offers to support the
growing city and its population.
“Of course for any place to become a
city, you must have a modern market which is being constructed at Mpanga, you
must have a regional referral hospital, Buhinga has improved now, there are
good hotels, 5 star hotels are coming up, the town is being beautified and a
modern sports stadium will soon be constructed by the Chinese at Buhinga” Karwani
said.
He adds, “Fort Portal-Bundibugyo and
Ibanda-Fort Portal roads are being worked on and Fort Portal being the cleanest
town in Uganda, with its high tourism potential and oil development, there is
no doubt that it will be a business hub in the region”
What is in place
now
Fort Portal town was founded in 1893
as a garrison for Sir Gerald Portal for a colonial administrative centre.
However, over time it grew in size and population, becoming a Municipal Council
in 1975.
Fort Portal
Municipality lies at the foot of Rwenzori Mountains, 5050 feet above sea level;
it is dotted with more than ten small hills from where one gets a lovely view
of Rwenzori Mountains. The municipality is projected to be having a total
population of 99,653 persons.
Of the 27.82 sq kms, only 4 sq kms
is covered by the central business district and the remaining pieces of land
are used for residential purposes and agriculture related activities.
It is 316 km from
Kampala via Mubende. Accessibility by road is easy as it lies on the Kampala-Kasese
highway that is one of the major link routes to the Democratic Republic of
Congo (DRC). It is also the major liable link to the District of Bundibugyo
that lies on the border with the DRC. Additionally, it’s linked to the urban
centers and the rural areas in its surrounding hinterland by a number of first
class roads. This thus makes it an important center of trade and tourism.
It is a regional town for Kabarole,
Kamwenge, Kasese, Bundibugyo, Kyegegwa, Kyenjojo and Ntoroko districts. It is
the hub of Tooro in terms of business administrative and private sector
transactions.
Most roads
in town are tarmacked and well drained but of late pot holes are seen on Rukidi
III Street. The town has
a road network of 146.3km consisting of 47.35km (tarmac), 98.95km (murram). Out
of the 47.35km tarmac roads, 10.2 km are trunk section and 37.15 km are Town
street roads.
“The oil industry will make Hoima
and Fort Portal towns into cities; I hope that Kamwenge and Kagadi roads are
worked on quickly, that is my conviction” said MP Ruhunda.
The oil prospects along
L. Albert shores and the extraction of Pozolana boulders make Fort Portal a
busy and economically strong commercial center in the region.
CNOOC that will operate the Ntoroko
oil block will set its base in Fort Portal town.
The hinterland of Fort Portal too is
attractive, and has pulled several tourists to the town the reason why the
hotel industry has steadily grown here.
The attractive features include Kibale,
Semliki Valley, Queen Elizabeth Mount Rwenzori National parks, the Rwagimba and
Sempaya hot springs, Amabere Ga Nyina Mwiru near Nyakasura School and several
crater lakes.
Good Hotels include: Mountains of
the Moon Hotel (2000) Ltd, Rujuna Hilltop Guesthouse, Palace Motel, Rwenzori
Travelers Inn, Tooro Resort, Ataco Country resort, Kluge’s farm hotel and
camp site, Sunrise International Apartments, Raja Excelsior, Lesuiex Centre,
Riviera, Hotel Cornerstone, Lake Kyaninga Lodge, Hilton and several camp
sites.
Fort Portal Municipal Council
authorities have prioritized physical planning exercise in the next five years.
This planning will provide for road location, schools and health facilities,
open spaces, play grounds, commercial centres and residential neighborhoods.
The council intends to hire a consultant
to design a strategic plan for the next 15 years to show the road map of a city
status.
“We want to hire an expert in
physical planning to help our technical team in planning for a city” says
Ruhunda.
On top of hydro-electric power supply by Umeme from
Jinja, other potential alternative sources of energy in Fort-Portal
Municipality include:-Katokoma mini-water falls, Biogas, Solar and Wind
World Bank Grant
The urban authority has lobbed a Shs 2 billion grant
every year from the World Bank for city development and out of this they will
build modern roads and a Bus park.
“We are going to build modern markets and we
encourage Fort Portal people to embrace this venture” said Karwani.
He said the Municipal council is going to lobby the district
leadership to give them land at Kyembogo so that they can build an Industrial
park.
“With this, we will have expanded Fort Portal in
order to be a city by 2030” said Karwani.
He added, “Our town beatification with green belts
and it cleanliness have attracted more people to tour around making our hotels
busy and we get hotel tax from the visitors”
Karwani said that they want to contact the ministry
of Tourism to construct Heritage Park for tourism attraction.
The construction of Fort Portal-Bundibugyo road has
attracted more people to acquire land which will boost business.
The vast tea industry in the hinterland has
attracted tourists to the town as some of the investors and workers sleep in
town hence bringing income.
Some development
challenges
Since the coming into force of the 1995 Constitution,
an establishment of land law was provided to the effect that land belongs to
the people. In essence, this rendered formerly controlling authorities mere
agents of planning.
According to the 5 year development plan, the urban
authority becomes practically difficult to effectively plan for what they do
not control. In this respect, Fort Portal Municipal Council faces it as a
challenge to enforce acceptable development standards; consequently,
development is in progress amidst unauthorized developments, particularly
illegal structures.
Fort Portal receives rainfall almost throughout the
year. Such a climatic condition has adverse effects on the road network and
drainage development. It has increasingly become expensive to maintain the road
network whose rate of deterioration does not match the available resources to
finance the damages. The problem is further aggravated by the increase in road
traffic through continuous tear and wear.
Heavy trucks to DRC mainly pass through Fort Portal
including the over 50 trucks that daily ferry pozzolana to from Fort Portal to
Hima cement factory in Kasese district.
What others say
Mr
Patrick Bamanyisa
I think it was a campaign slogan (City status) like
any other. Starting with Obama's "Yes We Can" yes we can what??!!!,
even Jacob Zuma of South Africa promised south Africans 500,000 jobs during his
election campaign and.......the list can go on and on!!!!! Briefly, all
politicians are liars.
Ms Nyakato Rusoke
It (City status) was just a campaign gimmick, nothing has been done, we don’t have a single public toilet in town, and most buildings in town especially on Laggard Street and Kiboga road are not connected to the sewer line. There are no street lights because Fort Portal municipal council failed to pay Umeme bills and the people of Fort Portal will not benefit from the quarrels of the mayor and his councilors, for us we want work not fights.