Select Page

Raids of Locusts andCoronavirus (COVID-19) It is a triple disaster in Karamoja
The year 2020 has already presented us with a stream of disasters, especially in the northeastern part of Uganda. Notable among these have been the credible risk of resurgence of livestock theft and rustling, the locust crisis and the biggest of them all – the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic.
At least to Karamojong ears, the insecurity problem is a disaster wrought by ourselves and upon ourselves, enabled in part by a longstanding duel with the state in which political, economic and security questions have been left unresolved.

Karamoja
Livestock related security problems had persisted in Karamoja for the latter half of 2019. In February 2020 the first swarms of locusts ‘arrived’ in Uganda through Karamoja, mostly remaining there save for a few districts in eastern and northern Uganda. A second ‘arrival’ of more dangerous swarms in April has shown us that the locust disaster is far from over, with another round expected in May and June.
In March 2020, Uganda confirmed its first case of Coronavirus (COVID-19), prompting nation-wide mitigation action. The global pandemic understandably shot up in terms of priority. Attention, and the already meagre resources got redirected.

Karamoja
Since March, interventions in the front of ensuring human security especially in the north of Karamoja have been impeded because of necessary COVID19 action. Cattle related conflicts, initially brought to a manageable state have increased because social distancing rules cannot make dialogue possible.
While Uganda has paid up its arrears to the Desert Locusts Control Organisation to the tune of US$ 3 million, it has spent some 23 billion UGX to fight against desert locusts largely through the army. Whereas this is commendable, the use of the army gets these resources farther from the public eye, leaving experts in the districts unfunded.
As estimated by the World Bank, some 80 million hectares of crop and pastureland worth about US$ 9 billion will be destroyed across eastern and the horn of Africa, especially in Ethiopia, Sudan, Kenya and Somalia. The estimates indicate that Uganda could lose nearly US$ 800 million in livestock asset damage, livestock production losses and staple crop production losses.
What would have been an opportunity to mobilise preventive and management action against locusts has been weakened by our response to Coronavirus (COVID-19). This is further exacerbated by the security problem in Karamoja that has significantly been concerning in the last year, effectively relegating this locust outbreak to the periphery.


The World Health Organisation has warned Africa will be the next epicentre of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, owing to poor health infrastructure and poverty among others. Since it is clear food security, next to healthcare, will be a pillar in the fight against Coronavirus (COVID-19), then our ability in the East African region to ward off greater losses against the desert locust outbreak should be even more decisive. All indicators are that the fight against COVID19 is a marathon rather than a sprint. We’ll need food to manage this fight in the medium to the long term.
As our nation comes face to face with Coronavirus (COVID-19) in our communities and health care facilities, it is clear that preventive action hinges on our ability to put food on the table – to provide nutrition to boost immunity, keep people home and maintain the Social distancing. This is where the fight against locusts becomes important.

What this means is that local actors’ coordination and intervention capacities to detect, prevent and manage desert locust invasions in a timely manner need investment. If the next swarms will be 400 times bigger than the last, as anticipated by scientists, then we must have requisite capacity to deal with this.
Economists have predicted Africa’s first recession in 25 years. A famine across East and the Horn of Africa caused by desert locusts could further define the nature of that slump.
The Coronavirus (COVID-19) disaster affects us all. In eastern and northern Uganda we directly face a double crisis – Coronavirus (COVID-19) and desert locusts as an additional ‘crisis in a crisis’. In Karamoja we are up against a triple disaster – livestock-related conflicts, Coronavirus (COVID-19) and the desert locusts. Action must focus on all.

Karamoja Development Forum