Login

WOUGNET on One Percent Club

WOUGNET Office

WOUGNET is located at Plot 55 Kenneth Dale, Off Kira Road, Kamwokya. Directions: After the Kamwokya market as you travel along Kira road, turn off to your left onto Kenneth Dale, (just before the football field and Kira Road Police Station). Once on Kenneth Dale, look out for the WOUGNET sign post on your left towards the end of the road. Click here for a map.

Go to:

Kubere Information Centre Website


Women In Business Website

WOUGNET Gallery

www.flickr.com
This is a badge showing public photos and videos of WOUGNET hosted on Flickr. Click the images to go to the gallery.

Related

HOME arrow Mamblog arrow Default Category arrow EASSI Monthly Book Review - July 2008
EASSI Monthly Book Review - July 2008 PDF Print E-mail
 

Book Review:             Today You Will Understand
Authors:                      Members of Uganda Women Writers’ Association (FEMRITE)
Publisher:                    IRIN, Supported by Federal Republic of Germany, 2008
Reviewer:                    Beverley Nambozo Nsengiyunva

Books come with a CD and can be found at FEMRITE (+256 772 743943) or IRIN offices (+254 20 762 2147).

This is a collection of true harrowing tales of Women of Northern Uganda during the harsh times of the conflict led by LRA rebel leader Joseph Kony. Most of the women still live in IDP camps. The testimonies that were recorded were aired by local radio stations and later IRIN documented the work.

EASSI has also been engaged in the work around Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW) and the effect on women and children. EASSI has already developed gender mainstreaming guidelines and is also involved in engendering the National Action plans on SALW in East Africa.

Today you Will Understand: (Names have been changed)

One widow recalls how her husband died from AIDS. After testing several times and finding that she was HIV negative, she appeals to other widows to remain strong at heart in order to look after the children.

Mildred fights back tears as she recounts the experience at Abia camp in 2004. After hearing gunshots from a distance, she gathered her six children into her hut. Soldiers in uniform started setting several huts ablaze and she feared for her children who sought refuge under the bed. As she struggled to let them out, fire gutted her door.  Her children cried for Mama to pour water onto their burning backs. Other people told the children to keep quiet lest the rebels returned. The next morning dead bodies lay strewn all over. Her landlord had been burnt to death with only his skull left in ashes.

For Beatrice, her husband left her for another woman.  He did not leave her with anything but she cultivated the little she had. Her husband however took them away. Her in-laws intervened and even tried to convince her to go back to her husband. He threatened to kill her.

Beatrice says, “He can kill me with a knife and no one will follow him. At the police station of you kill your wife, you stay in for only three days, that’s shy I am afraid.”

These and other stories give a face to the effect of Small Arms and Light Weapons and the need to analyse it with a gender lens.

- -
Beverley Nambozo Nsengiyunva
Programme Officer Communication and Networking
The East African Sub-regional Support Initiative for the Advancement of Women (EASSI)
Plot 87 Bukoto-Ntinda Road P. O. BOX 24965, Kampala Uganda
Tel: 256-41-4285163, 285194
Fax: 256-41-4285306
VISIT EASSI BLOG:   www.eassi.wordpress.com

 

 



Users' Comments (0)

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.6 © 2007-2012 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >