Government to Bail out Hunger Stricken Schools

Prime Minister Dr Ruhakana Rugunda has announced that Government plans to supply food to schools across the country due to a shortage triggered by a prolonged dry spell.

Government to Bail out Hunger Stricken Schools
Read: 2522 times \

Prime Minister Dr Ruhakana Rugunda has announced that Government plans to supply food to schools across the country due to a shortage triggered by a prolonged dry spell.

The prime minister told parliament on Tuesday evening that food will be provided through the District Education Committees in all the 116 districts. The committees will then determine the schools that need urgent relief noting that severe food shortages have impacted on school attendance.

According to Rugunda, the matter will further be discussed at a Cabinet meeting slated for today. 

His statement followed a passionate and heated debate on an action plan to mitigate the food insecurity situation in the country. This was part of a joint statement presented by Agriculture Minister Vincent Ssempijja and State Minister for Disaster Preparedness Musa Ecweru.

Ecweru explained to the house that the most food insecure regions include Teso, Karamoja, Bukedi, the Cattle Corridor, Busoga, Lango, Acholi and parts of central Uganda. He said that these areas had started receiving relief food from the Office of the Prime Minister.

He added that the food crisis situation had impacted severely on the attendance in schools especially in the rural government primary schools where children find it hard to go to school on empty stomach.

Ecweru told parliament that the current relief stocks stand at 30,000-100kgs bags of maize flour, 7000- 100kgs bags of beans and 119,660 50kgs bags of rice. He said the food items worth 22.2 billion Shillings were a donation from the government of China.

Ecweru told parliament that the Japanese government has pledged to support particularly the Karamoja Sub-region through the World Food Program towards feeding in schools. 

Agriculture Minister Vincent Ssempijja said that bean seeds are scarce due to the drought and that government can only provide 600,000 kilograms worth 2.4 billion Shillings. 

Members of parliament demanded for adequate funding to the agriculture sector.

Download the Howwe Music App
Howwe App

MSport