On October 18, 2022, cabinet leaders from the Lango Cultural Foundation (LCF) in northern Uganda signed a five-year memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Reproductive Health Uganda (RHU).
According to Robert James Ajal, LCF Prime Minister who led the cabinet delegation, integrating sexual reproductive health (SRH) into the LCF plan for 2022 to 2026 is critical in order to manage the LCF population and harness development in homes and as a foundation.
“Lango Cultural Foundation will educate and sensitize communities about sexual reproductive health and family planning, as well as strengthen the enforcement of existing laws against gender-based violence, defilement, child neglect, marriages, and land conflicts. Encourage and support the education of girls,” Ajal said.
The signing of the MoU was witnessed by the Lira district local government and the office of the Presidency, which vowed to protect the partnership and thus reached and birthed between RHU and LCF.
Dennis Otim Otto, Principal Assistant Secretary from the Office of the Chief Administrative Officer, pledged to support the partnership which aims to achieve demographic dividends for Lira district local government and also the Lango sub-region of Northern Uganda.
“We will support the partnership between Reproductive Health Uganda and Lango Cultural Foundation because it aligns with the Government of Uganda’s development goals like the NDP III, vision 2040, and the Parish Development Model pillar number four (4),” Otim said.
In his remarks, Jackson Chekweko, RHU Executive Director, said that as we climax with what we started in 2020 with the Lango Cultural Foundation (LCF), a resolution to promote family planning was jointly signed. LCF is now ready to cruise on its own.
“We are now putting in place a framework that will help our relationship progress. Our partnership with the Lango Cultural Foundation is based on work that improves the lives and social welfare of Lango residents and the foundation,” Chekweko said.
RHU and LCF signed a group resolution before, to promote family planning in September 2020, with support from Advance Family Planning (AFP).
The resolution, which focuses on educating communities about family planning and incorporating family planning into the LCF’s budget and development plan, has had an impact on all eight districts in the Lango region.
Cultural leaders in the Lango Kingdom are stewards of local traditions and powerful influencers of community values and health-seeking behaviors.
Dr. Buchan Patrick Ocen Lira, district health officer, disclosed that the signing of the MoU will help achieve Family Planning commitments 2030 by reducing the unmet need for family planning in the Lango region, now at 27.4% among married women and girls [1]. Cultural preferences for large families and substantial dowries for young brides have traditionally hampered family planning. This all contributes to a teen pregnancy rate of 35.2% in the region, which is higher than the national average [2].
While closing the signing ceremony, Lawrence Egole, Resident City Commissioner for Lira City, stated that Lira and the Lango subregion have many street people because parents were not guided about how to many children’s birth and care in the community.
He encourages other cultural, religious, and educational institutions in Uganda to join efforts to capitalize on demographic dividends.
Advance Family Planning (AFP) local partner Reproductive Health Uganda (RHU) has supported family planning advocacy in the Lira district of Lango since 2017. In 2019, during a meeting with the Lira district advocacy working group, a local district speaker identified the challenge of cultural leaders speaking negatively about family planning within the community. In August 2020, the National Population Council (NPC), a national governing body, held a meeting in Lira with representatives of the Lango Cultural Foundation, the kingdom’s governing body, on how to engage with cultural leaders to promote family planning. They identified the council of clan chiefs, overseen by the paramount Chief, His Highness the Won Nyaci me Lango Yossam Odur Ebii, as key to their advocacy efforts.
The writer of this article Aldon Walukamba is the RHU Media Advocacy and Documentation Coordinator
References
Uganda Bureau of Statistics (2016). Uganda Demographic and Health Survey 2016. Retrieved from https://dhsprogram.com/publications/publication-FR333-DHS-Final-Reports.cfm
Uganda Ministry of Health. Uganda District Health Information System (DHIS) 2. Accessed October 2022.