Thursday, 23 July 2020

Karangura: Caught between Covid-19 pandemic and water crisis



A child dumps waste in river Mpanga in Karangura in Kabarole District, Uganda. Photos by Felix Basiime 

THURSDAY JULY 16 2020
https://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Karangura-Caught-between-Covid-19-pandemic-water-crisis/688334-5594232-65ni8y/index.html


https://infonile.org/en/2020/07/karangura-caught-up-between-the-dual-danger-of-covid-19-pandemic-and-water-crisis/


In Summary

  • NWSC has over 10,000 water connections (households) in Fort Portal city alone and at times consumers complain of the chocolate colour of the tap water pumped into their homes especially during the rainy season due to the contamination upstream.
By Felix Basiime
Young girls are getting pregnant. Domestic violence is on the rise. These are just some of the effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and its restrictions in an area where water is scarce, says Mr Kikora Masereka, of Kyahwire zone, Karangura Sub County in Kabarole District of Western Uganda.
“The challenges we have got during the lockdown due to Covid-19 is increased pregnancy due to young girls walking long distances to fetch water at far water sources,” Masereka said.
“Previously men and women have been fetching the water, but now due to schools’ closure, parents send their children to water sources and boys have taken advantage of that,” he adds.
“We are now starting a dry season (June to August); we are going to face a lot of challenges of domestic violence because of long queues at water sources. It will force women who fetch water more than men to delay at water sources. And usually men think that they were not at the water sources but had gone for other men,” he added.
Mr Chris Tumuranzye, the LCI chairperson for Kyahwire zone, says he is facing a lot of challenges leading a community that is water-stressed amid the dangers of Covid-19.
Residents of Kabende village in Kabarole District crowd at a water source to fetch water.
He said more than 6,000 residents in the area scramble for water at two sources that serve four zones. Others who are scared of the crowds and queues are forced to walk over one and half kilometers to fetch water from River Mpanga, he says.
“The government tells us to stay at home, but we have to walk to water sources where there are no sanitizers at the taps,” Kikora Masereka, a resident says.
People are forced to crowd at boreholes and shallow wells thereby no social distancing is observed at all, a basic requirement to slow the spread of Covid-19.
Karangura with a population of 12,368 is the source of River Mpanga that snakes through Kabarole, Fort Portal City, Kyenjojo, Kamwenge and Kitagwenda districts before it empties into Lake George. The upstream part of the river is highly contaminated. Lake George connects to Lake Edward through the 40-kilometer Kazinga channel and Lake Edward is connected to Lake Albert through River Semuliki before they connect to River Nile.
“We have a gravity flow scheme that supplies only two wells that serve four zones; Kazingo (Bukuuku sub county), Katuuru (Mugusu sub county), Katuuru Upper (Karangura) and Kyahwire (Karangura). There is always a scramble for water at these sources; kids are beaten; this has created bad blood between women as they fight due to the long queues, so we want government to avail us more water sources,” says Tumuranzye, the LC I Chairman for Kyahwire zone.  
He adds, “We have tried to teach the people of this area to avoid Covid-19 by using clean water for drinking, water at their toilets, washing hands all the time and to wear face masks, but it is a challenge amid a water crisis.”
Mr Vincent Mugumya, a resident of Karangura, says the people in his area have no safe water for consumption since their water is either stagnant or originating from shallow open wells.
An elderly woman washes hands at Kazingo trading centre in Bukuuku sub county, Kabarole District
“In the hills it is very rocky, while in lower areas the water table is high, so people dig very shallow latrines and faeces mix with water, which means the people downstream drink contaminated water,” Mugumya says.
Contamination of water sources
Ms Maureen Kajumba, the acting sub county chief of Karangura, says the issue has been worsened by the widespread trend of open defecation.
“Most families spend the whole day up in the hills in their shambas digging from morning to evening and even have their breakfast and lunch from there so what do you expect after eating?” she says. “In the gardens there are no toilets and they dig very far away from their homes, so when it rains, the floods and landslides sweep the waste in the river and other water sources.”
She says managing hygiene and sanitation is also worsened by the topography of the area, a mountainous region with six rivers and their tributaries.
“When it rains, all the faeces and waste is washed into the rivers,” she says. “Despite using enforcement and sensitisation by NGOs like NRDI, Protos and Hewasa, people’s attitude is still poor to hygiene and sanitation,” she observes.
Kajumba is worried that human activities in Karangura are contaminating the rest of the region downstream.
“All the gravity flow schemes are contaminated and I am scared that since Karangura feeds the entire region because the source of river Mpanga is here, it is not only us who are going to be affected but the entire population of Kabarole district downstream” she says.
A man in Karangura sub county, Kabarole District extracts sand from river Mpanga. The activity leaves water contaminated
Mr Mwesige Fenehansi, the LC I chairperson for Nyarukanga village in Karangura, is trying to address the problem by mobilizing all LC I chairpersons to organise all households in the sub-county in groups of 10 model households, which will begin communal cleanup of each home including setting up standard latrines. But the long-standing issue of water scarcity has multiple competing causes in the region that will require a comprehensive approach from many stakeholders, district leaders said.
There have been only two cases of Covid-19 thus far; the patients were admitted at Fort Portal regional referral hospital. The first patient, a 29-year-old truck driver, tested positive for coronavirus on May 8, 2020 and was later discharged in June after testing negative, according to Dr. Solomon Mugarura, the head of Covid-19 team at Fort Portal Regional Referral Hospital.
The second Covid-19 patient was admitted at the same hospital on June 20 from Bwera Hospital in Kasese. He is a Ugandan who was sent back from DR Congo authorities.
So far no case from the communities has been reported in the region.
Ms Olive Tumuhairwe, the District Health Inspector for Kabarole district, says Karangura has about 79 per cent latrine coverage, but less than 10 per cent have improved sanitation facilities, which are safe and clean facilities.
“The sanitation and hygiene coverage in this area is not so good, because we have a majority of the structures which are temporary and those that compromise the environment and the water safety,” Tumuhairwe says.
According to Kabarole District Wash Master Plan 2018-2030, access to water services is low (58 per cent) and is less than the national average estimated at 70 per cent at the time.
The district master plan indicated that there is a high level of contamination of drinking water sources (64 per cent) especially in rural areas. This compromises the quality of water for domestic use.
The adoption of hand washing with soap at household level is very low, and less than 10 per cent of households had improved sanitation facilities with hand washing facilities with water and soap.
Some of the makeshift pit latrines in Karangura, Kabarole District, Uganda have water facilities for hand washing but have no soap
Since hand washing is key to stay the spread of Covid-19 pandemic, there is a high chance of the communities becoming infected with Covid-19 if community transmission begins in the region.
Geological challenges
According to the district chairman, Mr Richard Rwabuhinga, loamy soils composed mainly of sand and silt with a small amount of clay have made it impossible for engineers to build Water Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) structures. These soils make up about 70 per cent of the district, and have caused the district to lose lots of money in latrines that collapse.
Tumuhairwe says that in Harugongo sub county, pozzolana rocks made up of volcanic material have also made it hard to dig pit latrines.
The high water table in areas such as Karago town council, Karangura and Bukuuku also make constructing latrines difficult, since the waste can easily enter into the groundwater or run into rivers and streams when they flood, Tumuhairwe says. A water table is the level at which underground soil and gravel is completely saturated with water. The water table is generally higher in areas with high density soil related to clay content.
Mr Chris Amanyire, a Field Officer with Natural Resources Defense Initiatives (NRDI) says to solve the issues of sanitation in areas with a high water table, they are promoting eco-san toilets.
Ecosan toilets work without water, separating urine from faeces and allowing waste to be recycled by turning the waste into compost or liquid fertiliser, which can be used to fertilise soil or crops.
The Acting Sub County Chief, Karangura, Ms Maureen Kajumba shows one of the makeshift pit latrines that are close to water sources river Mpanga in Karangura, Kabarole District, Uganda
“We just open the surface and start construction… The household contributes Shs700,000 and NRDI pays the balance of Shs2.3 million” Amanyire says. NRDI also runs a community project of planting trees along River Mpanga and provides free seedlings to the community.
Ms Rita Kiteme,a social scientist with the Ministry of Water and Environment, says that issues identified in Karangura include a high level of erosion because of the gradient of hilly areas.
“This has caused siltation of the river due to human activities cultivating close to River Mpanga, so Albert Water Management Zone focused at homes in Karangura because it is the upstream of River Mpanga,” she says.
The ministry has done some community trainings of technologies that could minimise issues of erosion such as constructing rain water harvesting trenches and formulating contours where the gradients are very steep.
“After two years, [National Water and Sewerage Corporation] NWSC in Fort Portal has been able to report that the water is a bit better,” she says.
Water treatment at NWSC plant in Fort Portal had tripled in the previous years, as they used more chemicals to purify the water of contamination, according to the NWSC Fort Portal branch manager, Mr Denis Muramuzi.
Muramuzi says it is at times very expensive for them to filter the polluted water from River Mpanga because it requires a lot of chemicals.
“Between 2010 to 2016, the chemical consumption at NWSC Fort Portal plant increased by 3.1 times from 0.0120 Kg/unit of water to 0.0375 Kg/unit of water treated,” he says. “It is all due to the increasing pollution levels on River Mpanga which serves as our source of raw water supplying Fort Portal and Kabarole District,” he adds.
NWSC has over 10,000 water connections (households) in Fort Portal city alone and at times consumers complain of the chocolate colour of the tap water pumped into their homes especially during the rainy season due to the contamination upstream.
Community attitude
Ms Lydia Mutiibwa, a Senior Environment Health Officer with the Ministry of Water and Environment attached to rural water and sanitation in Western region, says that the residents of Karangura have a big challenge of washing hands despite knowing the dangers and being taught what to do.
“Here people have been taught to wash hands but you find someone has a toilet but no water or some have water without soap, some have soap but no water yet hand washing in totality stops most diseases including coronavirus. You find five out the 20 households we visited were able to do proper hand washing; the rest know the importance of hand washing, but behavioural change is wanting so they don’t practice it,” she says.
The district health inspector Tumuhairwe says the district has been holding a community awareness campaign throughout the whole of last year to improve hygiene and sanitation in the area.
A child defecates near a toilet in Karago town council. Open defecation is common in the area.
Water coverage in Kabarole District
According to the Kabarole District water officer, Mr Bruno Basude, the status of water supply, sanitation and hygiene promotion (2018/19), water coverage was 80 per cent while functionality of water sources was at 88 per cent, functionality of water committees 41 per cent and latrine coverage at 81 per cent.
Hand washing facilities at household level were at 28 per cent in 2018/19, hand washing facilities at schools at 14 per cent, pupil: stance ratio at 65:1, household sanitation at 85 per cent, about 171 (35 per cent) villages without a water source and 323 villages (65 per cent) with a water source.
The waterborne toilets account for only one per cent of the facilities.
According to the Water Supply Atlas, the access rates in Kabarole vary from 7 per cent in Kijura Town council to 95 per cent in Bukuuku Sub-County. Kabarole has 1,137 domestic water points which serve a total of 258,053 people – 178,127 in rural areas. About 207 water points have been non-functional for over five years and are considered abandoned. Kabarole has three piped schemes.
This story was produced in partnership with InfoNile with support from Code for Africa and funding from the Pulitzer Center and National Geographic Society. 

How floods cleared tourist sites in Kasese

Sylevest Walyuba Kule, the team leader at Kiwa Heritage hot spring removes debris that filled thesite when river Nyamwamba burst its banks in May and flooded in the low areas. Photo by Joel Kaguta.  


SATURDAY JUNE 27 2020


In Summary

  • Tourists used to park along the Kasese-Kilembe road and would be directed by a wooden sign post. From the first gate, tourists would be welcomed by a path lined with reeds and bamboo trees to the reception which was also built with reeds and bamboo trees and roofed with spear grass. All these were washed away
  • Site managers were previously charging Shs2000 and Shs5000 as entry fee for local and international tourists respectively.

By Felix Basiime, Joel Kaguta & Enid Ninsiima
Proprietors of tourist sites in Kasese are counting losses caused by the devastating floods that befell the area in May. The same tourist sites had already been grappling with the negative effects of Covid-19, considering that tourists were no longer accessing these recreation centres.
For the better part of last month, the rivers Nyamwamba, Nyamughasana, Mubuku, Lhubiriha and Thako burst their banks, following heavy down pour leading to destruction of infrastructure estimated to be worth Shs50 billion. The Rwenzori area is no stranger to floods, as this has been a recurring problem since 2013.
This time around, more than 100,000 people were displaced after the floods spiralled into communities destroying property worth millions of shillings.
Most of the tourism sites in Kasese are counting losses caused by the devastating floods that befell the area in May. The same tourist sites had already been grappling with the negative effects of Covid-19, considering that tourists were no longer accessing these recreation centres.
Renovation process
Without the income from tourists and the floods that hit on May 7, 10 and 22, stakeholders in tourism sector from the Rwenzori region say they urgently need to renovate these sites, at a time when they are facing a year or even two of reduced income.
Kiwa Heritage located along the Kasese-Kilembe road is one of the tourist sites that has been greatly affected by floods.
At this site, revelers enjoy the hot springs and learn about the Bakonzo historical heritage which was initially kept in a grass thatched museum. Established in September 2013, Kiwa Heritage has been a top destination for both local and international tourists.
Tourists at the site enjoy swimming in the hot water, a sand beach with a spacious volley ball pitch on the banks of River Nyamwamba and Kikonzo cultural entertainment. The Kikonzo entertainment, known as ‘Ekikibe’, is a beautiful and melodic sound from the flute, drums that are accompanied by xylophone entertainers.
But the floods left Kiwa Heritage hot spring and the nearby fish ponds submerged in water from River Nyamwamba after it burst its banks.
Tourists used to park along the Kasese-Kilembe road and would be directed by a wooden sign post. From the first gate, tourists would be welcomed by a path lined with reeds and bamboo trees to the reception which was also built with reeds and bamboo trees and roofed with spear grass. All these were washed away.
Floods were catastrophic
Selevest Walyuba Kule, a team leader at Kiwa Heritage and conservationist says the recent floods were catastrophic, adding that a number of grass thatched structures acting as dressing shelters for those soaking themselves into the hot water for medicinal purposes were submerged. The fish ponds, pool table, and community museum were also buried by the floods.
“All my efforts and the money I invested in this community site were wasted in just minutes by the disastrous floods” Walyuba says.
He says more than 50 people who were employed at the site and the community were directly and indirectly benefiting from the site. Residents of Kasese District that will suffer loss include women that had been making the local baked bread made out of banana and cassava flour known as Ebbwanga’ in the Lhukonzo language. These women had also been making amatsayidongo from fresh maize, which they would then sell to tourists at Kiwa Heritage.
Counting losses
Walyuba says he had invested Shs200 million. Kiwa Heritage site would host a total of 300 local and international tourists per week. But most of the investments have been washed away by the floods, yet the site had already been suffering on account of Covid-19 which had significantly reduced the number of international tourists.
He also recalls that in 2019, at least 150, 000 students from secondary schools across the country visited the site for study purposes. They would primarly study about geothermal movements and the Bakonzo culture. He says he needs about Shs80 million to renovate the site but that he does not see where to get the money unless he secures a soft loan from micro finance institutions.
Site managers were previously charging Shs2000 and Shs5000 as entry fee for local and international tourists respectively. To recover from the current losses, Walyuba says Kiwa Heritage might be forced to increase entry fees to Shs10, 000.
Similarly, Rwenzori Mountaineering Services (RMS) was also severely affected by the floods and lockdown due to Covid-19. The community tourism organisation offers tourism services around the Rwenzori Central circuit trek.
Dan Mbahimba, the executive director says RMS lost trees worth millions of money.
He says an assessment report indicated that that Mubuku River swept about 10
acres of their land, on which they had grown 10,000 eucalyptus trees. According to Mbahimba, the floods also washed away two cottages at Mihunga Safari Lodge in Rwenzori Mountain National Park.
“This is our worst season in terms of business. As we were trying to come to terms with the losses we incurred during the lockdown, floods came and washed way what was left of Rwenzori mountaineering Services,” Mbahimba says.
He says under normal circumstances, May and June are always peak seasons for local and international tourists to visit the Margherita peak.
10, 000 members make losses
Mbahimba says each tourist who climbs the Margherita peak is charged $1365 (Shs5.1 million) and some of this money benefits the community. He revealed that each season, the company receives between 300 and 500 clients.
“About 10, 000 members of this community who benefit from this tourism site through Rwenzori Mountaineering Services are now counting losses. Our clients have cancelled their bookings and some are asking for a refund. These funds had been spent on preparing for their visits that would commence in March to until September,” Mbahimba says.
In the meantime, chefs, porters and guides have since been asked to remain at home until the World Health Organisation declares that Uganda is free from Covid-19. He expressed concern that the company might not receive clients for a whole year should Covid-19 continue ravaging the world.
William Kambale, the managing director Mahoma Tours, a Kasese based tour and guide company says domestic tourism in the district is on a standstill because people’s movements are curtailed by curfew restrictions. He urged government to embark on developing and promoting domestic tourism.
As the world waits for aircrafts to start operating again, the Kasese District tourism officer, Jovia Kabugho, says there is need for government to ensure that the impassable roads which have developed gullies are constructed.
Due to floods, most of the bridges were washed away, while others remained impassable. Others are still blocked with logs and boulders”, Kabugho says.
In order to rebuild the tourism infrastructure that was destroyed by the floods in the Rwenzori region, James Okware the senior warden Rwenzori mountains National Park says Uganda Wild Authority (UWA) needs Shs1 billion.
“If you visited the park now, you can’t believe it. There was a whole stretch of 100 meters that experienced landslides. These later submerged into the rivers before they burst their banks, causing total destruction,” says Okware.
He says UWA also needs the money to redesign the trails and put up permanent swings that could not be easily destroyed by water once rivers flood. Since the water levels are now high, Okware says putting up a bridge, wouldn’t be a sustainable solution.
Rwenzori national park covers part of Kasese, Bunyangabu, Kabarole, Ntoroko and Bundibugyo districts and is the source of all rivers that have been bursting banks or causing mudslides since 2013.
He says the lockdown, which affected the incomes of the community had increased the number of poachers in Rwenzori National Park. Floods have restricted mobility of rangers, which has in turn increased cases of poaching.
He says that UWA needs at least one month to put up temporally structures in order to allow their staff and tourists, if any to hike the mountains as they plan for permanent renovation.
Poaching threat
Okware observes that during the lockdown, poaching activities have increased due to the poverty among the community members.
“We have registered 13 cases of poaching since April. These numbers are expected to increase if the status quo is maintained,” he says.
Okware says the majority of the cases are cutting or debarking of Prunalis African, a medicinal tree in the park, charcoal burning and timber sawing among other things.
He adds that in the Rwenzori national park, chimpanzees were the only animals under threat since these are eaten by locals. But the list of animals and plants under threat is now increasing as people that had been employed by tourism activity in the area look for alternative sources of livelihoods.
In addition to the jobs, Bashir Hangi says UWA also shares tourism incomes with the locals and this too has been affected by a combination of the lockdown and floods.
The Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) spokesperson, Bashir Hangi says, “We are going to do an evaluation of the damage caused by floods and landslides on tourist infrastructure in Kasese so that we restore even better ones”
He added, “ Since Covid -19 pandemic, Uganda loses $ 2.5 million per month by not having tourists visit Uganda. Our priority now is resource conservation and reducing human-wildlife conflicts and this may take a year,” he says.