Pastoral Women's Socio-Economic Way of Life
United Nations Human Rights Council: Forum on Minority Issues
Theme: Minorities and effective participation in economic life
Session 3: Geneva, 14-15 December 2010
Thank you, Chairperson for giving me the floor.
I, Irene Nadunga, representative from Uganda Coalition, for Crisis Prevention hereby make a statement for intervention to
the forum at hand.
Basing on the Minority Declaration and CEDAW 1, this statement highlights discrimination of pastoral women from the
communities of Karamoja. Karamajong communities live off from Pastoralism as their main source of livelihood. However,
pastoralism's economic and social values have for long been understood and underscored by the policy makers and still
consider it to be primitive and economically incoherent with modern trends of development. With this perception based on a
narrow view of what constitutes value in pastoral systems, national policies have undervalued pastoralism, putting it at the
periphery of national development plans and actions
The Government of Uganda in line with its commitments to international obligations has over the years made considerable
achievements under good governance by instituting relevant national reforms, frameworks and interventions in developing
the country's economy. These have included the development of the National Development Plan (NDP) that replaced the
Poverty Eradication Action Plan (PEAP), Plan for Modernisation of Agriculture (PMA), and more specifically for the Karamoja
region; Karamoja integrated Disarmament and Development Plan (KIDDP), Northern Uganda Social Action, NUREP and PRDP