POLITICS & DEATHS
The most rampant deaths in Acholi are for older adults
who pass for the elders of the community.
These people became elders in the
community by virtue of surviving the two decades of war of annihilation in Northern
Uganda. Many of these men and women are young, in their 50s and 60s, who inherited
the burden of lifelong grief and stress during the conflict made worse by slow post-conflict
renewals. Many became parents at tender age, providing for orphans of war, and offered
little to themselves – health, education or ambitions.
Sadly, most of these deaths are preventable, and
primarily accentuated by perpetual poverty and degraded environment, inaccessible
healthcare system; and neglect by family members.
The post-conflict Acholi is a place subtle mired in misery
and destitution. Rural life is rough, and contrasts sharply with the urban glitters
of possibilities. Across Uganda, poverty is more concentrated in Northern
Uganda and worst in Acholi region. This poverty is cofounded with fast
degrading environment, shorter and very intense episodes of rainy season and
sporadic loss of ground cover. The combination of poverty and environmental
degradation are self-reinforcing with disease and misery as natural outcomes.
Further, the liberalization of Uganda’s economy has
exacerbated the commodification of healthcare services making it very expensive
and inaccessible. The challenge of a timely and regular interfacing with qualified
medical practitioners, and the bureaucratic corruption in the system have
generated apathy towards seeking healthcare. Many locals are reverting to
cheaper local herbs and mysticism which have accentuate mortality among
children, pregnant women and older persons.
Incidentally, the generation of post conflict Acholi
youths are equally as helpless as their guardians in a zero-sum situation.
Those out of the zone care little other than for their ill-begotten wealth in
Kampala, Jinja, Mbale, Mbarara or Gulu.
Those
at home still endure undiagnosed forms of debilitating mental health challenges
secondary to post-traumatic stress disorders. Studies show that stress and
psychological trauma are transmissible across generations. These circumstances
pan out in Acholi region and has driven maladjustment behaviours to the roof. Acholi
youths are less likely to be employed in formal sector other than low paying
precarious jobs such as security.
In Acholi, social infrastructure needs urgent
overhaul. Incidentally, the minds in charge seems overwhelmed or compromised
with politics and corruption.
The Acholi older persons suffer alone, afflicted with a
deep sense of personal loss, they become susceptible to preventable early demise.
At times, these elders die in the hospital due to delays to get them there, or
even the thoughts of the cost of treatment, once well. Their death may even be
a form of chocking from hopelessness. If they have no pensions, they must sell
land, or food reserve to reach a hospital to afford a patch-up.
Incidentally, I found that deaths in Acholi is increasingly
getting popularised. In some communities, death is strange and received with
shock, awe and a sense of loss. In Acholi, death has its own political economy.
Some people even look forward to the next death or facilitate death by
poisoning one another when none is happening
These funerals are important social and political
places for politicking and reaffirmation. It is at the funerals that one’s political
worth is measured through financial, material or leadership contributions.
People fight to get their names on the contribution list and for their names to
be publicly announced!
These days, funerals have taken political rally status
fraught with political speeches. And, you attend funerals if you belong to the
political inclination of the deceased or one of their prominent relatives. Sometimes, mourners from other political
parties are blocked from attending funerals.
Far from politicians and policymakers working hard to
improve living conditions to eliminate preventable deaths, they rely on deaths
to make empty political statements. It is the absurdity of our generation!
End.
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