Posted inPolitics / Up Country News

Kabuleta tells Acholi ‘change of government will stop land grabbing, cattle rustling’ 

Kabuleta told Acholi to guard their oil jealously and push for what is theirs.


By Moses Okumu

Gulu – February 15, 2022: The National Economic Empowerment Dialogue (NEED) leader Joseph Kabuleta Kizza has warned the people of the Acholi sub-region to be extra cautious against the Balaalo herdsmen whom he said want to steal their oil.

Over a decade ago, oil was discovered in Nwoya district in Acholi by a French oil and gas company – Total SA. The discovery came in the aftermath of seismic studies around the Murchison falls area by its Ugandan operations, Total Exploration and Production (Total E&P) in September 2012.

And up to date, the East African country is yet to start its exploration.

Other districts in the sub-region include Agago, Amuru, Gulu, Kitgum, Lamwo, Pader, and Omoro.

Kabuleta made the call during a meeting with the local leaders and residents of the Acholi sub-region on Monday.

He said the Balaalo are only interested in settling in places where oil has been discovered.

“When they discovered oil in Bunyoro, within a period, the Balaalo were already in the sub-region. They usually have guns. Now even here in your area (Acholi) when oil was discovered, they did the same thing,” Kabuleta who stood for president in 2021, said.

According to him, many of them have settled here with their guns.

“They graze their cattle with guns in their possession,” he revealed.

He and his team are currently on a nationwide sensitization campaign premised on protecting Uganda’s national deposits that could be used by citizens to alleviate themselves from poverty.

“The same case is in Sebei; Balaalo and oil. We wonder whether the cows of these Balaalo feed on oil. Where do they get the guns? And the most annoying part is when they go to a place, they grab the community land and they claim it as belonging to them. By the end of the day, they render you people landless,” veteran journalist, Kabuleta told Acholi.

He also rallied the Acholi locals to advocate for a change of government if they want to fully enjoy the natural resources in their area.

“Those who steal or rustle cattle have an aim of ensuring that you don’t settle on your land because if you don’t have cattle to be kept on it then it will be very easy for you to sell the asset to them since most times it will be idle and useless on your side.

To fight cattle rustling and land grabbing, he said Acholi must change the government because as long as this current establishment is still in power, nothing is going to change.

The politician further pinned the government for deliberately denying the local people in Acholi their full rights of owning land by refusing to give them land titles.

By doing this, Kabuleta said the government makes it easy for Balaalo to grab land that belongs to the indigenous people.

He, however, advised the locals not to lower the guard, advising that they should stand up and fight for what rightly belongs to them.

“Nowadays it’s very hard to get a land title. The government is doing it deliberately not to give you titles that show ownership but I call upon you to be cautious against those people who want or are stealing your wealth. Fight for your cattle, land, and other resources. Show those people that they can’t take them because there are some serious repercussions if they do so.”

“Now if you’re born in this land, all the wealth that God invested in it, you’re supposed to have a stake and nobody is going to give you the stake by sitting back and hopping. It is going to be given to you by standing up and taking a strong claim on it and making sure that people who come to steal those resources are not given an inch of what is not theirs,” Kabuleta asserted.

In the case of businesspeople taking the land for investment, he said the indigenous people should be given a share capital and become shareholders in whatever establishment is put in place so that they benefit from their natural wealth.

“You have many mineral resources in your land like oil, agricultural potential is in place and there’s a vast piece of land with a small population because of war, unfortunately. But that means there’s a lot of potentials.”

“But the big question is who is going to benefit from these resources? Is it going to be the same people who were fomenting the war or is it going to be the indigenous people in this area? Please don’t be inactive, fight for your resources,” he urged.

In the same meeting, the residents decried army officers’ role in stealing their cattle.

“We have army officers in Kabong and Kotido who are using these rustlers to get cattle from Acholi. I talk frankly about this because we have a farmer who is an officer with more than a thousand cattle in Kabong. It is so painful, we cannot do anything. We have now resorted to tractors for ploughing but now what are we going to use for marriage? It is what we always use as dowry,” Opio Albino Ronald from Agago District tearfully disclosed.

Kabuleta’s revelation comes at a time when the Balaalo herdsmen’s presence in Acholi is raising questions among a section of Ugandans.

The number of Balaalo now spread across the sub-region has reportedly increased since 2017 amid growing concerns over land rights and conflict.

On October 24, 2017, President Yoweri Museveni directed the army and the Agriculture ministry to evict the Balaalo pastoralists from Acholi and Northern Uganda in general.

Four years later, the number of pastoralists and the population of their animals across the sub-region has more than tripled.

In 2021, the President rechoed his directive by giving the Balaalo two months to vacate Northern Uganda or face forceful eviction and prosecution.

In a letter dated November 2, 2021, to the Prime Minister, Robinah Nabbanja, Museveni described the herdsmen as illegal migrants whose animals remain a persistent problem to the farming communities in the north, specifically in the Acholi sub-region.

“Those Balaalo should be given two months to leave the whole north unless they prove that they fulfill these minimum conditions; lease or buy land but also have it fenced very securely before the introduction of cattle thereon and also with water within the land.”

Unfortunately, they are yet to adhere to the directive up to date.

Meanwhile, NEED has so far managed to spread the economic empowerment message to Buganda, Bugisu, Bukedi, Teso, Sebei, Lango, and Acholi sub-regions.

Last year in September, Kabuleta launched NEED with an aim of promoting economic empowerment among Ugandans.

He said the political movement is constituted of politicians who currently hold no office but have influence in their respective sub-regions and can start meaningful discussions that could see Ugandans fight for their resources.


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