Olanya argued that while the President has issued multiple directives ordering the eviction of the migrant cattle owners from Acholi land, his government has failed to enforce them effectively, leading to growing tension between communities and the encroaching herders.
Gilbert Olanya, the Kilak South Member of Parliament, has accused President Yoweri Museveni of exhibiting
double standards in handling the eviction of migrant cattle keepers, commonly
known as Balaalo, from northern Uganda.
In 2017, 2021, and again in 2023, President Museveni
issued directives ordering non-compliant cattle keepers to leave northern
Uganda, particularly if they lacked proper fencing, veterinary support, and
land ownership documents. However, many herders have reportedly
returned, or never left, with some acquiring land under questionable
circumstances.
Olanya argued that while the
President has issued multiple directives ordering the eviction of the migrant cattle
owners from Acholi land, his government has failed to enforce them effectively,
leading to growing tension between communities and the encroaching herders.
Speaking at a press conference held
at the Northern Uganda Media Club in Gulu City on Monday, Olanya explained that Museveni’s position,
as a fountain of honor, should have made his directives undefinable. He stressed that Museveni’s orders
without action on the matter have emboldened the Balaalo to defy
eviction orders.
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Olanya also blamed a section of leaders
from Acholi for being “transactional leaders” and neglecting the interests of
the electorate, something he says is responsible for the way the babalo issue
is being mishandled. He cited that the leaders’ selfishness
is shown by their being only two at the press conference, out of more than 30 MPs
from Acholi.
He urged the voters to critically examine
the current leaders and make a complete overhaul by voting for leaders who think for the tribe, and do not value money over human beings.
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Betty Aol Ocan, the Woman MP for
Gulu City, reiterated that if Museveni was serious about his executive order, he
would ask why its implementation is shaky. “The presidential
order on eviction of the Balalos or even any other order he gives should be
implemented to the dot. If the implementation is not to the dot, then he should
be able to query why it is not to the dot. That is why some of us query him,”
Aol said.
Aol argued that putting security
officials in charge of the eviction is another calculated move to prolong the
stay of the cattle keepers, because officials cannot recommend the eviction of
their bosses, who are grazing thousands of cattle in Acholi land. Aol equally blamed a section of leaders
for giving contrary views about the eviction order, rendering the voices of the
rest of the honest leaders weak and inaudible.
According to Aol, if the
cultural leaders were united and strong enough, they would have sensitised the
locals, who she said spent years in internally displaced persons’ camps without
formal education, against selling communal land.
She stressed that all
the huge chunks of land bought by the cattle owners were done fraudulently,
because no one in Acholi owns such large land alone, but in common.
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Aol said it is reasonable
if the cattle keepers buy land within the city, because it is akin to a compound
or sitting room where everyone is welcome. “Anybody can point to me
any Acholi person who owns like 1000 acres of land in Bunyoro…or any Acholi who
owns maybe 500 acres of land in the Western part of Uganda…id they come, let them
get something which is not too big, preferably within the city,” Aol said.
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Acholi leaders have long raised
concerns that the influx of Balaalo in Acholi is undermining community
land rights, degrading the environment, triggering violent land conflicts, and
further eroding the culture of the Acholi. On May 23, the
State Minister for Northern Uganda, together with the officials from the 4th
and 5th Division, told all the migrant cattle keepers to leave
within two weeks.
The deadline
for the order passed on June 4th. According to
Olanya, no single animal was evicted within the two weeks. Statistics
from the security officials indicate that more than 92,000 cattle belong to migrant cattle keepers in northern Uganda, occupying an estimated 11,000
kraals.