Uganda

From New World Encyclopedia


Republic of Uganda
Flag of Uganda.svg File:Uganda Coat of Arms large.jpg
Flag of Uganda Coat of Arms of Uganda
National motto: For God and My Country
LocationUganda.png
Principal languageEnglish
CapitalKampala
PresidentYoweri Museveni
Prime ministerApolo Nsibambi
Area
 - Total
 - Water
Ranked 81st
236,040 km²
36,330 km²
Population
 - Total (2000)
 - Density
Ranked 42nd
24,699,073
105/km²
Independence1962
CurrencyUgandan shilling
Time zoneUniversal Time +3
National anthemOh Uganda, Land of Beauty
Internet TLD.ug
Country calling code256


The Republic of Uganda, or Uganda, is a country in East Africa, bordered to the east by Kenya, on the north by Sudan, to the west by the Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda on the southwest, and Tanzania to the south. The southern part of the country includes a substantial portion of Lake Victoria, within which it shares borders with Kenya and Tanzania. Most of Uganda (usually pronounced yoo-GAN-duh) lies within a basin formed within two branches of Africa's Great Rift Valley and is larger in size than Minnesota but with a population, at nearly 25 million, greater than Texas'.

Uganda takes its name from the Buganda (boo-GAN-duh) kingdom, which encompasses a portion of the south of the country, including the capital, Kampala. Due to its distance from the coasts where Western and Arab traders operated, the history of slavery in this region of Africa was minimal, allowing the Buganda kingdom to grow and prosper while several others on the continent collapsed.

Uganda is often called the Heart of Africa, not only for its slight cartographic resemblance in shape to the human organ, but also because of its position in the continent's interior and for the suffering its people have endured, particularly in its religious and recent political history.

Geography

Though Uganda has no direct navigable outlet to the sea, it is incorrect to describe the country as landlocked since it shares borders with Kenya and Tanzania in the midst of Lake Victoria, the world's second-largest freshwater lake (after Lake Superior), and the border with the Congo traverses two smaller Rift Valley lakes, Edward and Albert.

The water of all three lakes passes through the middle of Uganda, with the river flowing north out of Lake Victoria called the Victoria Nile until it empties into Lake Albert and then named the Albert Nile from the mouth of that lake until it reaches Sudan. Lake Victoria was once considered the source of the Nile, but it has since been discovered that the true source lies farther south in Burundi, where the farthest waters begin the long northbound journey through Uganda and on to the Mediterranean Sea.

Uganda is located on the East African plateau, averaging about 900 m above sea level. Although generally tropical in nature, the climate differs between parts of the country. Scores of islands lie offshore in Lake Victoria. Most important cities are located in the south, near Lake Victoria, including Kampala and the nearby city of Entebbe. The Equator runs through the country's south, close to Entebbe, at one of Uganda's widest points.

The land bordering Lake Victoria and the other lakes is extremely fertile, with a growing season lasting the whole year. There is a local saying that if you stick an iron bar into the soil, it will grow nails. Winston Churchill, who visited Uganda about 1900, is known to have called the area "the pearl of Africa."

History

Little is known about the history of the region now covered by Uganda until the arrival of the Arabs and Europeans in the mid-1800s. Humans are known to have lived in the area since at least the first millennium B.C.E.

When Arabs and Europeans arrived, they encountered a number of kingdoms in the area. The largest of these was Buganda, which continues to exist into the present. Both Islam and Christianity were introduced to these kingdoms. Buganda's king felt threatened by the Catholic and Anglican faiths, which led to the martyrdom of many, including 22 Catholics burned to death near Kampala in 1886. These martyrs were later declared saints, and Pope Paul VI, the first pontiff to visit sub-Saharan Africa, made a pilgrimage to their shrine at Namugongo in 1969.

Map of Uganda

The area was placed under the charter of the British East Africa Company in 1888, and the U.K. ruled it as a protectorate from 1894. As several other territories and chiefdoms were integrated, the final protectorate called Uganda took shape in 1914.

The Sixth Zionist Congress, meeting in Switzerland in 1903, formed a committee to look into British East Africa, in particular the area of Uganda, as a possible future Jewish homeland after the British government offered the land. Even though the congress hoped for a return to the ancient land of Israel, it also wanted a fall-back plan. The committee's report in 1905 to the Seventh Congress, rejected Uganda as a viable location for a mass Jewish settlement.

Independence from Britain came in 1962, but four years later, the first prime minister, Milton Obote, overthrew the constitution and declared himself president, ushering in an era of coups and counter-coups that would last until the mid-1980s. General Idi Amin took power in 1971 and ruled the country with the military for the next decade. Amin had delusions of grandeur, having himself declared Field Marshall and President for Life.

Amin's rule cost an estimated 300,000 Ugandan lives. In 1972 he declared "Economic War" and forcibly removed 50,000 of the entrepreneurial East Indian minority from Uganda, decimating the economy.

A French commercial airliner was hijacked and taken with its mainly Israeli and other Jewish passengers in 1976 to Uganda, where Amin, a Muslim, sympathized with the Palestinian cause. The ensuing rescue by Israeli commandos of their fellow citizens in the raid on Entebbe marked an early victory in the War on Terrorism.

Amin's tyranny ended with an invasion by Tanzanian forces aided by Ugandan exiles in 1979. The situation improved little with the return of Obote, who was deposed once more in 1985.

Yoweri Museveni has held the presidency since 1986 and been viewed as being part of a new generation of African leaders. There is controversy, however, about the change to the constitution that allowed him to run for a third term. Relative stability has been brought to the country with the exception of in the north, which continues to struggle with a rebel insurgency called the Lord's Resistance Army.


Economy

Uganda has substantial natural resources, including fertile soils, regular rainfall, and sizable mineral deposits of copper and cobalt. Agriculture is the most important sector of the economy, employing over 80 percent of the workforce, with coffee accounting for the bulk of export revenues. Since 1986, the government—with the support of foreign countries and international agencies—has acted to rehabilitate an economy decimated during the Amin's regime and subsequent civil war. Stabilising measures have included currency reform, raising producer prices on export crops, rising prices for petroleum products, and improving civil service wages. The policy changes are especially aimed at dampening inflation, boosting production, and improving the balance of payments.

File:Coffee plant Uganda.jpg
Coffee is Uganda's main export.

During 1990-2001, the economy turned in a solid performance based on continued investment in the rehabilitation of infrastructure, improved incentives for production and exports, reduced inflation, gradually improved domestic security, and the return of exiled Indian-Ugandan entrepreneurs. Ongoing Ugandan involvement in the war in the Congo, corruption within the government, and slippage in the government's determination to press reforms raised doubts about the continuation of strong growth. Growth for 2001-02 was solid despite continued decline in the price of coffee.

According to IMF statistics, in 2004 Uganda's GDP per-capita reached $300, a much higher level than in the 1980s but still half of the sub-Saharan African average income of $600 per year.

Demographics

Uganda is home to many different ethnic groups, none of whom forms a majority of the population. Around 40 different languages are currently in use. English became the official language of Uganda after independence. The language with the largest number of native speakers is Luganda, spoken in the Buganda region, which encompasses Kampala. Ateso follows, spoken by about 4.2 million people covering much of the eastern part of the country. Kiswahili is widely used as a basic trade language.

Religion

Christian and Muslim missionaries first arrived in the 1860s, attempting to convert the Bugandan king.

The national census of October 2002 resulted in the clearest and most detailed information ever given on the religious composition of Uganda.

According to the census, Christians of all denominations made up 85% of Uganda's population. The Catholic Church has the largest number of adherents (42%), followed by the Church of Uganda—a local Anglican denomination—(32%). Minor Christian groups include Pentecostals (5%) and Adventists (2%), while 1% were grouped under the category "other Christians."

The second religion of Uganda is Islam, with Muslims representing 12% of the population. While Muslims today appear to be experiencing some degree of discrimination, in the 1970s they were the most favored group under the rule of Idi Amin, himself a Muslim, under whose government the number of Muslims had significantly grown. Only 1% of Uganda's population follows traditional religions and 1% is classified as "other non-Christians."

Also of note is that Uganda hosts one of only seven Bahá'í Houses of Worship in the world. It is known as the Mother Temple of Africa, is located on a hill on the outskirts of Kampala, and was dedicated in 1961.

AIDS Prevention

Uganda has been hailed as a rare success story in the fight against HIV and AIDS, and has widely been viewed as having the most effective national response to the pandemic in sub-Saharan Africa. A variety of approaches to AIDS education have been employed, ranging from the promotion of condom use to "abstinence only" programs.

The main supporter of the anti-HIV/AIDS program has been President Museveni. He has spoken in every part of the country, and in other lands, concerning Uganda's "ABC model." "A" stands for Abstinence—if you don't engage in sexual activity, there is a high probablity that you will not contract HIV/AIDS. "B" means Be faithful—if you do engage in sex, keep it focused on one person and make sure that that person keeps you as his/her only sexual partner. "C" means Condoms—if you cannot be abstinent or be faithful to one person, then always use condoms in any sexual activity.

Culture

File:Bicycle-taxi-2.jpg
Bicycle-taxi in Uganda

Uganda is comprised of over 20 tribes and languages, though the latter fall into two basic groups, the Bantu tongues that are spoken principally in the south and the Nilotic ______ that are heard mainly in the north. Many tribes still living within their own areas or kingdoms, but Ugandans living in areas outside their own tribal homelands is increasingly common and has helped create a more diverse culture within the country. Another element of diversity is the many Asians (mostly from India) expelled during Amin's regime who have been returning to Uganda, a country to which they had a deep attachment.

After visiting Uganda early in the twentieth century, Winston Churchill, the future British prime minister wrote, "... for magnificance, for variety of form and colour, for profusion of brilliant life—plant, bird, insect, reptile, beast—for the vast scale ... Uganda is truly 'the pearl of Africa.'" As there are many different words for the variety of snow in Alaska and northern Canada, there is also a large vocabulary for the vast array of green in Uganda, especially when viewing the seven hills of Kampala.

During the British Protectorate of Uganda (1890-1962), the British mainly relied on the local Baganda government, which was already set up with a king and parliament somewhat similar to the European model. Compared to neighboring Kenya, there was little European settlement, which resulted in less resentment towards Whites in Uganda. The British even organized their exit from the country before a nationalist movement could get started. the nation ... and hatred of the Baganda by other tribes developed early on because of the favor shown them by and their working relationship with the British. This is one reason for continuing flare-ups between the different tribes since independence.

Human rights

Respect for human rights in Uganda has been advanced significantly since the mid-1980s. There are, however, numerous areas that continue to attract concern.

The conflict in the north continues to generate reports of abuses by both the rebel Lord's Resistance Army and the Uganda People's Defence Force. Torture continues to be a widespread practice amongst security organizations. Attacks on political freedom in the country, including the arrest and beating of opposition members of parliament, have led to international criticism, culminating in a 2005 decision by the British government to withhold part of its aid to the country.


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