On November 22nd and 23rd, JESE conducted a training of key stakeholders from Agago District Local Government on using the Menstrual Health Management (MHM++) manual.

The manual targets women and out-of-school girls and was developed by MHM master trainers along with Ministry of Education and Sports (MOES) with support from Nuffic and funded by Orange Knowledge Programme.

In conjunction with Geregere Sub County Community Development office, key stakeholders were mobilized and these included; District officials (Gender officer, District Health Inspector), technical and political leaders, sub county personnel, Parish chiefs, health centres’ in charges, heath assistants, schools’ management committees, parents’ teachers’ association representatives, Village Health Teams (VHT’s) and wetland community management committees. 

A total of 65 people (Males= 27, Females= 38) participated in this training.

The MHM master trainers from JESE and HEWASA Caritas conducted the training in an intensified manner, covering all the 04 modules; Puberty, Myths and misconceptions; Sex and Gender, Understanding the menstrual cycle and its challenges; Knowledge on menstrual health management, and Communication of information around Menstrual Health.

This was crowned by categorical action planning for District/ Sub County officials, heath centres/ schools representatives and community based structures cadres (VHT’s and wetland management structures).

Participants were actively involved both in experience sharing and functional drawing such as body parts with much preference on men with majority of the participants who ably identified the gaps in terms of their involvement on MHM issues. All participants promised to disseminate MHM information with immediate effect.

Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs) are a valuable social safety-net for vulnerable groups of people. They provide a sort of adaptation financing and increase financial choices for poverty-stricken populations in the face of climate change
and Pandemics.

For us JESE, we learn that VSLAs are a valuable social safety-net for vulnerable groups of people. They provide a sort of adaptation financing and financial choice in the face of climate change. Poor people can draw their reserves to invest in climate Smart Agriculture, healthcare and education.

For the 30 years of its existence, JESE facilitated the mobilisation of over UGX10 Billions in Western Uganda that have been re-invested by rural households and providing alternative livelihoods. In this magazine, we share some of the stories of beneficiaries of this village financing model. Below are the stories of change:

Atuhaire Grace

I belong to a VSLA group called Kyembogo Bakyara Tukorre Hamu. I am a Community Based Trainer (CBT) but also a group member since I could not sensitise the community about an initiative that I am not part
of. So, I am the 30th member of my group. I started saving well like I was taught by JESE.

During the first cycle, I saved only UGX 520,000 and received UGX 620,000 at share out, which means I had a profit of UGX 100, 000. I learned that saving is one way to minimise the misuse of money because we save weekly. I also learned that saving money helps me make priorities. I learnt to prioritise and where
I need to spend; practices that I had never done before. It helped to avoid unnecessary expenditure.

The money I shared out in the first cycle was used to expand our coffee plantation by half a hectare. This was in collaboration with the entire family, here we all work on the farm including my husband. In the second cycle, I also saved UGX 520, 000 because we maintained the share value of UGX 10,000. We saved for 52 weeks, I received UGX 680,000 with a profit of about UGX 160,000.

We did not have a vehicle then when we started expanding our farm. We had challenges in transporting our coffee and bananas, so we waited for the share out and topped-up to purchase a pickup. It’s old but it serves the purpose that when we harvest coffee, we are able to take it for processing and no longer sell it to middle men. I got a loan of UGX 400,000 in the second cycle to start a piggery project. I am starting small and have bought one piglet at UGX 200,000. I also got another loan to support my children at school. My children are encouraged to study well.

VSLAs supports diversification into off farm enterprises

On-farm livelihoods are increasingly facing climate change risks, including uncertainty of seasons, pests
and diseases and the resultant farm losses. Such risks and vulnerability forced Allen Twinomujuni to diversify into the business of groceries, while drawing empowerment from the VSLA approach to obtain the much needed startup capital. VSLAs enhance sustainable access to credit and provide
opportunities for financial inclusion, income diversification and expanding the asset base.

Allen Twinomujuni is one of the many beneficiaries of VSLAs supported by JESE over
the past 10 + years and she narrates how VSLAs provided the launch pad to start her grocery
business.

My name is Twinomujuni Allen. I am the chairperson of Kyerenga Village Savings and Loans Association and an active member of Kyerenga Wetland Conservation Association. I am also a retail trader, operating a grocery in Rwaibale. I have been involved with JESE since 2019 when I was trained in VSLAs and taken for learning visits in Fort Portal to see how other farmers do things differently and profitably.

Since that time, I was personally challenged to be creative and pursue agribusinesses that have stable income streams. So, when I started out in my VSLA, I was inwardly persuaded to take out a loan of 300,000 Shillings to invest in crop growing. However, I lost it all when the crops failed. I paid off the debt with other produce I had kept that season. I dared the second time and took out another 500,000 in loan and this time I invested it in a grocery, selling a variety of food stuffs like tomatoes, potatoes, beans,
cassava and fresh vegetables, a thought that I had invested wisely this time.

From the grocery, I am able to save 20,000 every month and the rest of the money is invested in food production and a piggery project. I am also working towards establishing a zero grazing dairy project”
I am grateful to JESE for introducing to us the VSLA initiative because the women do not have to stake their land and other assets any more to guarantee loan acquisition. The process is easier and friendly
to our status as women who in most cases do not own land or assets to raise collateral required by
the banks.”

My name is Kaija Paul from Matiri in Kihuura Sub County, Kyenjojo district. I started working with JESE as a farmer from the year 2000, when Kyenjojo was actually still part of Kabarole district. JESE came with its agenda that included transforming agriculture, environmental protection that included planting trees, Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs), marketing of our farm produce, and how to improve sanitation and hygiene among others.


Those days, we used to get water for drinking from rivers and would be so dirty. As a result, typhoid cases got so high but when JESE came, they built for us boreholes and taught us how to boil the water to prevent typhoid cases. I remember very well how the cases of these diseases were reduced. Even when the schools were very few, they encouraged us to educate our children.


In the year 2002, they brought us cows and introduced zero grazing to us. They also brought us goats, which were imported from South Africa. Here in Kihuura, we were very lucky because we were the very first to have those goats in the region. These goats multiplied and they could be in the whole country now. On farming particularly, they taught us many good practices. In Kihuura here, we used to collect grass and burn it when clearing the fields for the planting season. But JESE staff stopped us from doing that. They told us that when we burn the grass, we reduce the fertility

levels of the soil. They told us to start burying the grass, and we did that. We were taught how to dig vertical and horizontal trenches to tackle soil erosion and other challenges. From that time, our harvests increased, and our incomes also increased.


They also brought us improved varieties of Irish potatoes and bananas and we started growing them on a large scale. On my side, I am so grateful and proud of JESE because of the transformation they made in my life. First of all, they gave me a cow which I looked after for a long time and I really earned so much from it. They gave us varieties of coffee, bananas and coffee which I still have up to date. By the time I met JESE, I had very young children who were just starting to go to school, but they encouraged me and showed me ways how I could educate them.


Right now, I have eight (8) degrees in my home. These include doctors, nurses, teachers, accountants among others. My last two children have just completed S.6 and they passed very well. All these were educated with money I earned from JESE interventions and advice. I have built a permanent and beautiful house and I have some means of transport now. I have never gone to the market to buy food for my family because we grow enough food here.


The five hectare of coffee that I have can enable me to harvest over 100 bags per season. That is really some good money in my advanced age now. During those earlier training, we were also taught how to integrate trees in our coffee gardens. I now have mango trees where I can earn over Shs 150,000 per harvesting season per tree. That is also some income for my family.


Nam central, Kamonojwii and Latinling Namare villages in Latinling parish, Geregere subcounty, Agago district. These villages are south of River Agago and sit in the hotspot areas identified at the beginning of the project along Olupe micro sub catchment that feeds into the River Agago where the WASH SDG 6 sub programme is being implemented in Agago district.

The three villages were faced with the following challenges; floods, encroachment, deforestation and poor sanitation and hygiene at household levels.

The flood mainly arising from not only settlement within the wetlands but also other human activities that led to encroachment of wetlands and cutting down of trees without replacement. Due to loose soils and flooding nature of the area, many households find it hard to get good yields from their gardens due to water logging in the farmlands. Impassable roads due to floods that cut them off to access other commodities from the market.

JESE through the WASH SGD 6 sub programme intervened with an aim to achieve Climate Vulnerability
Resilience and inclusive Water, Sanitation and Hygiene services. Community training and awareness
creations were conducted per village and each village came up with Simple Doable Actions (SiDAs.). These
awareness training led to a change that is visible today.

JESE facilitated a district extension staff (District Agricultural Officer) to create awareness and train
communities in the three villages on the best possible ways to achieve good crop yields irrespective of the alarming floods.


Community members were trained on different agronomical technologies and climate smart agriculture.
They include; inter-cropping, crop rotation, agroforestry, mulching, creation of contours bands, trenching
in the farmlands, kitchen gardening among others.

Establishment of kitchen gardens by households

Out of the 162 households in the three villages, about 10 households have taken up kitchen gardening as a serious venture to grow vegetables. About 30 households practice it majorly for home
consumption. Some households are earning up to about Shs 150,000 per month from the sale of eggplants from the kitchen gardens and yet they also sell some to the neighbours that are not accounted for.

At least a basin full of egg plants is obtained daily when it starts yielding. One cabbage is sold ranging from shs500 to 1,000 depending on the size. This has improved the household incomes when the vegetables are sold. The money is used to purchase the basic necessities at household levels.

Vegetables from the kitchen gardens
The health and sanitation have been improved since the income being got from the kitchen gardens is used to buy soap, construct latrines and sanitary pads among others. The nutrition levels have
also increased with the various vegetables being grown in the kitchen gardens like cabbages, onions, egg plants, Sukuma wiki, Dodo, green pepper, and spinach. This helps in a balanced diet of family members
thus being healthy.

The community members are so thankful to the WASH SDG Program especially partner JESE for the wonderful work they have done in the community.


Ocaka Robert said that in 2012, the flooding started after returning from the camps yet his grandfather told him that it last happened in the 1950s. Their houses started falling off around 2016 to 2019 with water sometimes coming from underground yet they were sleeping on the floor and they lost a lot of properties.


Robert added, “we could not construct latrines during the rainy season, the latrine is always filled up with water, the walls are weakened and washed away and it forces me and my family members to defecate in the bush.” He added, “I think the bad practices of our fathers, grandparents and I are the real cause of what we are experiencing these days”.


He applauds JESE for the creation of the trenches as he laments, “After the creation of the trenches, we can now construct latrines freely and this has reduced on open defecation”


“I could not cook using a local three stone stove when the whole compound is filled with water and the kitchen also has water coming from the ground. This affected me and my family members, making us go some days without food,” Akidi Rebecca said.


She added, “my garden is always filled with water and my crops destroyed, which led to famine. We lose a lot of money from the garden activities yet later on they are destroyed by the floods”


Akidi said, “The water run-offs always make the roads impassable making our access to the only borehole in the area hard and also to the market and hospital”.


She added, “The creation of the trenches has made us get good yields since there is no longer water logging in the farmlands and has improved our livelihoods. The roads are now passable since the water is channeled to River Agago.”

Parked maize flour that is processed by Kabambiro farmers

Joint Effort to Save the Environment with funding from Ilex de Paix (IDP) is implementing a program called Mpanga Super Farmers Program (MSFP) in Kabambiro sub county, Kamwenge District. This program aims at striking a balance between environmental, social and economic aspects in the implementing communities.

This program targets small holder farming households. In the year 2018 and 2019, maize price was at an average of 300 shillings in Kamwenge and our beneficiaries suffered great loss amidst much efforts of negotiating for better prices from potential buyers like New Kakinga and JB Kaganga but could not yield much. In the year 2020, MSFP beneficiaries started working towards maize value addition while processing it to posho and bran as a bi-product.

During the meeting to discuss the planned ideas on maize milling, JESE initiated the process of forming a marketing association (MA) for collectively marketing beneficiaries’ harvests. The meeting also resolved that members should start fundraising through members’ registration and buying of shares. JESE took the responsibility of building the MA capacity in areas of quality management, business development packages, leadership and governance packages.

Through MSFP, the MA in partnership with JESE undertook the initiative to raise money for MA maize milling business. This initiative had a primary purpose of providing milling services to program beneficiaries and the community so that they can spend less on acquiring posho and bran for human and live stock. The MA started a fundraising drive from its members where an approximate of 11 million shillings was raised.

After raising the money, it was agreed that the money be used in acquiring land for the business and JESE pledged to support them with a full set of milling machine, electricity installation and connection. Last year, the MA were able to buy a plot of land with a permanent structure and also restructured it to suit the milling project. Thereafter, JESE installed and connected power to the structure and also procured and delivered a full set of milling machine. On 24/12/2022 the MA started its milling business while serving its members and the entire community. All community members were very happy with the quality of posho produced and they pledged to support the business. By the end of April 2023, the business was able to generate 6.860.000 million shillings from milling for community members.

This interested JESE to negotiate with the MA leaders to do a co-funding on supporting the business with branding and packaging of their product, secure a digital weighing scale and a tricycle to facilitate marketing of posho within the sub county and nearby sub counties.

Joint Effort to Save the Environment (JESE) over the years has been engaging farming households in Kabarole, Kyenjojo and Kamwenge to improve incomes and nutrition security through dairy farming with a focus on zero grazing. To address the nutrition challenges in the region, JESE has also focused on engaging and supporting the primary schools and vulnerable youth in Fort Portal City to implement horticultural activities.

Our Work on Horticulture with Primary Schools  

Horticulture is unique to JESE and has created opportunities to engage young boys and girls and patrons in the primary schools to ensure school environment supports both health, wellbeing and learning about safe food production and consumption both at school and in their homes. 

This intervention has increased the children’s nutrition and knowledge among young children, attitude and practices to optimize their healthy lifestyle by encouraging them to eat healthiy and stay physically active, demonstrating practices for safe production and pupils’ interaction and discussion on nutrition and safe foods through debates.

The intervention has created opportunities especially in the new government curriculum for school teaching to link the theory and practical lessons using the set demonstrations.

Members of Nyakagongo Primary School Agriculture Farming Club (Left ) with members of the farming club of Kagote Primary School Agricultrue farming club weeding their demonstration garden (Right)

Our Work on Horticulture with Refugee Households

JESE work with refugee households in Kyaka II refugee settlement to improve incomes, food and nutrition security. Currently, JESE is engaging 1,000 refugee households in horticulture using the key hole method (see photos below).

A beneficiary refugee household in Kyaka II refugee settlement

Our Work on Horticulture with Youth

JESE supports vulnerable youth in horticulture through urban farming to create employment for the youth, improving livelihoods and strengthening sustainable food systems. JESE is currently supporting 200 vulnerable youth in Fort Portal city to use small spaces in growing and management of horticultural products including sukuma wiki, onions, cabbages, spinach, zucchini, beetroot and amaranthus among others.

Youth undergoing training in horticulture (left) with a youth supported in urban farming (Right)

Our Work on Dairy with Small Holder Farmers

JESE supports small holder farmers to integrate livestock (dairy) in their farming systems. Currently, JESE is working with 450 households in Kicwamba in Kabarole district under this intervention to enhance incomes and nutrition security at household level. JESE is using this as a complementary interaction between the livestock and crops whereby the dairy units are able to provide manure to the farm to enhance soil fertility and crop remains as fodder for the animals and for nutritional purposes at the household.

Members of beneficiary households in Kicwamba under the Mpanga Super Farmers Programme that have been supported with zero grazing units

For a long time, JESE has been working to protect the forested areas in Kyenjojo, specifically Matiri and Itwara. But restoration also comes with a question of alternative sources of livelihood for those who encroach on these forests. As an alternative source of livelihood, JESE with partners like Forests of the World, has looked at apiary as one of the businesses that communities surrounding forests can engage in to earn a living and get out of the forests.

Here is the story of one of the bee keepers and a business mentor that JESE has worked with to promote the business of bee keeping in Kyenjojo district.

My name is Sophia and I work here in Kyenjojo town council. I’ve been a beekeeper for over 10 years now. I like bee keeping because I started it a long time ago and I have come a long way.

Everything around me is Beekeeping and honey is my main source of income. The day when I met JESE, I had had an intervention with them some time back, like 10 years ago. But now they wanted me to meet their beekeepers and help them on value addition because I have walked a long journey in beekeeping.

Mainly, I am a practical trainer, I have an apiary myself and I do harvest myself and get out the honey from one level to another. I helped groups to start adding value to their honey. I helped them to see that if you have comb honey, how you can turn it into a fine product which is honey itself. After getting the honey, there is another product called beeswax stage 2 from where we get candles.

They also learnt how to make propolis – a gum substance that bees use to seal holes on a bee hive.
This substance is collected by bees from any tree that gives sap and trees that have flowers with a
gum substance like guavas and avocados. Bees visit all these trees to collect this product that is medicinal and good for cough, flu and it also treats stomach complications. We also make a product
called Propolis Ointment which is for external use only like on skin rashes.

The groups which I trained were mainly youth groups, and they are now doing so well in bee keeping especially in value addition. They produce their own honey and no longer sell comb honey.

After harvesting their honey, they process it very well through all the stages, pack it so well and now put it out in the market for sale. Worth an investment. Bee keeping is worth investing in. If I can give an example of myself, I started with some little money with around 10 jerry cans of honey. I started small with half a stall but for some two good years now,

I have moved. I can now sell 10 jerry cans in like six or nine months. Every month when I balance my records, I see that I can make an interest that is almost half of what I invest in.
Honey has quick money because every time I am moving, I carry some in my bag and in a taxi
someone needs honey, and the same happens when in a bus or when I enter a public office.

I thank JESE for the intervention because I was identified as an entrepreneur by JESE. These
people found me as a simple entrepreneur. My honey wasn’t labelled yet. Someone called Faith Tusubira visited me here with James Okwiri and they told me that my products were nice but what was lacking was the Branding. They encouraged me to have a product that would be competitive on the market and can inspire other people to also do the same.

I really thank JESE and Forests of the World for this great work. I request them to give me more knowledge and training to enable me to excel in this business and be able to help other groups overcome their challenges.

The Integrated Community Response to Conserve, Restore, and Protect the Ecosystem in Mpanga Gorge is developed in line with the objective to contribute significantly to the sustainable preservation of the catchment area, where the Mpanga hydropower plant is located in Western Uganda while improving the surrounding communities’ livelihood.

The project will consist of community-based participatory approaches related to capacity building of both women and youth, but also of landowners, living adjacent to the Mpanga Gorge and the local governance structures to adopt sustainable environmental conservation practices and behaviors.  Through assessment and regeneration of the degraded ecosystem using farmer-managed natural regeneration and good agronomic practices, capacity building of communities will be achieved.

Objective

To significantly contribute to the sustainable preservation of the catchment area, where the Mpanga hydropower plant is located in Western Uganda while improving the surrounding communities’ livelihood

Goal

Environmental and natural resources are protected and restored and the concerned population is sensitized and has adopted environmental-friendly practices.

The youth who were trained in tailoring by JESE under the Skill Up! Project have received sewing machines to help them start their own businesses. The distribution started on Friday, December 16, 2022, and a total of 60 sewing machines will be distributed to beneficiaries in Fort Portal City, Kyenjojo and Bunyangabu.

Phiona Karungi, the Skill Up! Project Officer for Fort Portal City said by design, Skill Up! graduates receive startup kits to ensure they get self-employed immediately after the training.  For the case of those trained in tailoring, each graduate receives a full kit of a sewing machine.

Rose Kaligirwa, one of the beneficiaries from Kazingo in North Division, Fort Portal, said she will use the machine to earn an income that will sustain her family.

“I can now make school uniforms, pillow cases and Bitenge very well. I have been hiring a sewing machine and in a month, I have been saving at least Shs 100,000 after meeting all my other costs. With my own machine now, I will be in position to make some good money that can help me look after myself and my child,” she said.

Immaculate Komuhimbo, another youth and beneficiary from Gweri in North Division, Fort Portal, said before the training, she was a brick layer. She added that she did a lot of other odd jobs, but is now happy that she is getting into a decent job that that is also profitable.

Resty Ngonzi from Kidudu village in Nyantungo Sub county in Kyenjojo district said she dropped out of school from S.2 due to lack school fees. She then hunted for odd jobs but in vain before she gave birth to a baby. She promised to use the machine to get money, support her schooling siblings and also look after herself and her baby.

Francis Alijuna, the Fort Portal Central Division Community Development Officer (CDO) appreciated JESE and the partners for the SkillUp! Project, saying it is adding on the government efforts to fight youth unemployment.  He encouraged the beneficiaries to ensure they utilise the machines and improve on their livelihood.

The Kyenjojo Town Council Mayor, Geoffrey Kagoro Businge, told the trainees to be trustworthy and adopt the culture of saving.

“So, my dear youth, learn how to save. Imagine saving Shs 2,000 per day! That would be Shs 60,000 amonth, and in a year, that would be a lot of money. So please, take saving very serious as you do your tailoring work,” Businge said.

To ensure the machines are not misused, Karungi said each beneficiary signed a Memorandum of Understanding with JESE, which partly said that the Sewing Machine remains a property of JESE for one year and will be monitored regularly.

“If we find that the machine is with a different person or is idle, we shall pick it and give it to another person,” Karungi said.

Additionally, the sewing machines have been labelled so that they can easily be identified in case they are sold or stolen.

The Skill Up! Project in Uganda is implemented by JESE in partnership with Welthungerhilfe with funding by  BMZ – the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development in Germany. The project aims at contributing to a better socio-economic status of vulnerable youth ages 18-30 by providing them with technical, business and life skills in different trades.

The vocational training is carried out in hairdressing, tailoring, motor vehicle and motorcycle mechanics, brick laying and concrete practice, welding and carpentry. It always takes place in selected enterprises located in the four operation areas; Bunyangabu, Kyenjojo and Fort Portal Tourism City, where the trainees work Monday to Saturday, with the exception of one day of “life skills training”.

The training consists of 6 months of practical training and 2 months of grace period; it started on November 16th 2020 and currently consists of 230 graduates. After the training, the trainees get the chance to acquire a certificate by the Directorate of Industry Training (DIT).

Even before the end of the training, the trainees are able to produce quality products or provide their services. It is amazing to see their technical skills develop and their personalities flourish.

It was joy on Monday, November 7 as Joint Effort to Save the Environment (JESE) in partnership with Countryside Environmental Conservation- Uganda (CECO-Uganda) distributed relief items to persons of concern in Nakivale refugee settlement, Isingiro district. 

This was made possible with funding from Oxfam- US through the Emergency Response Fund (ERF).  

The items distributed included; water purifiers, reusable sanitary pads, jerry cans, and soap. In Rubondo zone, 100 jerry cans and 50 purifiers were supplied to the most vulnerable people who were struggling to access clean water and 250 women and girls were given reusable sanitary pads. These were supplied because of the many women and girls who experience menstruation amidst a financial crisis, which leads to stigma and social exclusion.

At Rubondo Community Secondary School, students and staff received 200 bars of soap to improve on their cleanliness and hygiene.  

Justine Gonza, who works with the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM) as the Assistant Commandant of Rubondo, appreciated JESE and the partners, saying the relief items were timely.

“This has been a stone added to our efforts to ensure that these people live a dignified life. But we still ask for more. Most of the school girls here lack pads and the women among the new arrivals also need more jerry cans and soap. So, we ask for more support,” Gonza said.

BENEFICIARIES APPRECIATIVE

During water crises, it is normally women and children who suffer most as they walk long distances to fetch water that they can use in their homes. This was the exact situation in Rubondo. The only major water source was a pond in a farm and it is used by the cattle at the same time.

According to a member of the Robondo C Village Health Team, Rose Dushimimana, the water is highly contaminated and was posing a higher risk of causing them waterborne diseases. Dushimimana was, however, appreciative and optimistic that the water purifiers will help them solve the challenge of unsafe drinking water.

The Rubondo C chairperson, Gamara-Yeli Rwamuhizi, said their area had many people who depended on unsafe stagnant water and was hopeful that the jerry cans will be used to collect and store rain water that is more safe.

“Women walk very many kilometers looking for firewood to boil water. With the support you have extended to us, we shall do our best to ensure we take clean and safe water,” Rwamuhizi said.

At Rubondo Community Secondary School, the head teacher, Edmond Mukasa, said that due to the high number of persons of concern, there is high competition for basic needs that are provided in the area and as a result, some households miss out. He asked other well-wishers to extend more support to them to ensure students, especially the girls, keep in school.

PRIVATE SECTOR ENGAGEMENT

To ensure the objectives of the intervention were achieved, JESE brought on board Spouts of Water, the manufacturers and supplies of Ceramic water filters (Purifiers).

According to Lucky John, the company’s Team Leader at the Fort Portal regional office, the ceramic water filters are locally made from clay and are very effective. Once the filters are modelled into a perfect shape, they are put inside a locally produced plastic bucket to give a complete filter.

“The filters work in two ways: physical filtration and chemical disinfection. The tiny pores in the clay containers that are placed inside the buckets trap all the germs and disease-causing bacteria while the thin layer of silver nitrate kills any remaining germs within the clay. The water that gets filtered out is natural, contains no harmful chemicals and is very clean and safe for drinking,” John said.  

Johns added that the filtration rate is an average of 3 to 4 liters per hour and the life span is 2-3 years. The cost of each filter depends on the needs of the buyer. For instance, the one of 20 liters is at Shs 90,000 and can serve from 1-20 people. The one of 75 liters can serve 30 people and above and is sold at Shs 300, 000.

Rebceca Angumye, the ERF Program officer at JESE, said spouts of Water was particularly engaged because their filers are effective and have the capacity to purify stagnant.

BACKGROUND

The ongoing M23 insurgency in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) has seen an increase in the number of people being displaced from their homes into the neighboring Uganda. Hundreds of these – especially women, girls and children – have been given settlement in Nakivale, Isingiro district, but the need for basic needs is overwhelming. Gonza said that over 20,000 people have already been settled in Nakivale, while thousands of others are in different refugee settlements around the country.

JESE as one of the members of the Western Uganda humanitarian Platform (WUHP) and also a consortium member ERF came in to provide emergency non-food relief items. The ERF was launched early this year as an initiative through which local humanitarian actors could respond timely to the various forms of humanitarian needs with in their respective communities of operation, timely and rapidly, to alleviate human suffering.

With support from Oxfam, the ERF facility focuses on providing more flexible funding to local humanitarian actors and enhance their capacity to make urgent and timely responses to emergencies and disasters.

Due to the overwhelming number of new arrivals from DRC, access to basic sanitation facilities remains a huge challenge especially among women, girls, elderly, the disabled and the children. The support from development partners is scanty compared to the population with over powering demand ranging from basic needs to non-food items. Access to safe water is a challenge as majority depend on open wells/ponds and stagnant water during the rainy season.

It is against this background that JESE in partnership with CECO-Uganda decided to focus their support on Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) interventions. This leveraged on the current JESE program of Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) that is already being implemented in Isingiro district.

In 2016, the Ministry of Water and Environment issued a report which showed that Uganda’s forest cover was 4.9 million hectares in 1990. However, this had reduced to 1.8 million hectares in 2015.

Several other Geographic Information System (GIS) mappings that have since followed also show a serious reduction in the forest cover of the country, and Kyenjojo in particular has been severely affected.

For instance, according to Global Forests Watch (GFW), an online platform that provides data and tools for monitoring forests, between 2000 to 2020, Kyenjojo lost 62,000 hectares of tree cover.

With a value of environmental stewardship in mind, the Joint Effort to Save the Environment (JESE) with funding from Forests of the World started implementing a project titled “Engaging farmers in the restoration of Kibaale-Matiri-Itwara Elephant corridor”, to reverse the situation.

The project is being implemented in the sub counties of Kihura, Kyarusozi, Butunduzi and Kigoyera, and is mainly targeting the farmers who are adjacent to these forest reserves.

Sam Nyakoojo, an agroforestry expert at JESE, explains that the approach being taken in Kyenjojo is the one where farmers are encouraged to integrate high-value crops like cocoa, vanilla and coffee, with indigenous trees. He explains that this is being done to ensure the trees provide shade to the vanilla and cocoa which in turn earns income to the farmers.

“So, it is one way of harnessing restoration because we are looking at cash in form of Cocoa, Coffee and vanilla but also the environment conservation using the indigenous trees like maesopsis, grevillea and others,” Nyakoojo explains.

The JESE agroforestry systems are well designed to meet the requirements of the high-value crops and they are being implemented in three models namely; A1, A2 and A3. The models are dependent on the needs and location of the farmer and the agroforestry system being implemented.

For instance, if the farmer is located near the forest reserve, then the A1 model, which looks at more trees than the crops, is used.

“If the agroforestry system is near the farmer’s household, then we use fewer trees with much high-value crops,” Nyakoojo explains.

So far, there is good adoption of the models. Godfrey Emmanuel is one of those farmers who has already adopted the agroforestry system. The resident of Butunduzi says he was a usual farmer engaged in the growing of beans, maize and such other crops until JESE introduced him to high-value crops.

Emmanuel says that other than planting trees that have grown so well, his vanilla and coffee are looking so nice too and he expects to harvest soon.

“From the first harvest, I might get like 15 kilograms and each kilogram is Shs 50,000. That will be some good income,” Emmanuel says.

But that is not all. He also grows some indigenous trees like Maesopsis Emiini (Musizi) and is expectant that around 8 years from now, he will also be earning from them.

“JESE gave us a lot of advice on coffee and how to dry it. I used to harvest one sack of coffee and at times I would even fail to get the one sack. I can now harvest three sacks when the season has gone well. I hope in future, I will not be the same way I’m today,” Emmanuel says.

Deus Muhwezi is a resident of Kawaruju parish in Kihura sub county. He explains that before JESE intervention, he was earning little money from his agricultural produce. He says he didn’t know about vanilla or cocoa and agroforestry in general, but he is now an expert.

“But I got a chance and JESE selected me to be a Community Based Trainer. So I was selected to have a model agroforestry garden. I started with cocoa and vanilla and I’m about to harvest,” Muhwezi says.

To Muhwezi, agroforestry is not just helping him grow high-value crops. He says he also has an apiary and the trees in the system provide the bees with the nectar.

“Actually, in this area, I’m the leading producer of honey because of this agroforestry. Like last season of harvest, there are farmers who didn’t get even a kilogram of honey, but for me I managed to get like 40 kilograms because I planted trees like cadiandra; they have flowers all the time. So, bees keep there. So I see I’m getting a lot of money through this agroforestry, there is a time I managed to buy a cow after making over Shs 1.8 million from honey,” Muhwezi explains.

CHALLENGES

Ensuring total protection of the environment is a huge task. Non-governmental organizations that partner with JESE like Kyaninga Forest Foundation (KFF), Natural Resources Defense Initiative (NRDI) and others are doing their best to ensure forests and other natural resources are well protected.

But like the Kyenjojo Resident District Commissioner (RDC), Julian Ayesiga, recently stated, the task is so big since some of the encroachers are the same people who are supposed to be giving the protection.

“There is a huge cartel that has infiltrated even us the security. You find that if someone is getting timbers from Muhangi, our own officers are in the know and you will find they have planted some people along the way and as you are moving, they will tell them that the RDC is there. By the time you reach there, you hit a dead end,” said Ayesiga at a meeting of stakeholders in environmental protection that was held in Kyenjojo recently.

Also, over a year ago, JESE in collaboration with NBS TV, carried out an investigation which exposed the people behind the loggers’ cartel. It was found that even when timbers are cut and authorities informed, they do not respond on time and in other cases, even the timbers that are taken as exhibits to police stations end up disappearing without a trace.

These challenges coupled with the poor mindset about agroforestry among some farmers adjacent to forests are still hindering the successful restoration of environment.

CALL TO GOVERNMENT

Nyakoojo says what is being implemented in Kyenjojo is just a pilot and the goal is to ensure that government adopts the same models and apply them to a wider area.

“So, what we are putting in place should be able to create learning so that the government learns and adopts the implementation of the systems into their annual budgets and plans.,” Nyakoojo says.

Contact Us


Kitumba Cell,

P.o.Box. 728 Fort Portal

Western, Uganda

Tel: +256 772492109

Off: +256-483-425 253

Email: jese@jese.org

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