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Tuesday, December 9, 2025

“We Found Those Beliefs and Followed Them”: Karamoja Elders Push to End Open Defecation

In the sweeping plains of Karamoja, elders are urging communities to abandon open defecation, a long-standing practice they say is harming public health but remains deeply rooted in cultural beliefs.

For generations, myths have shaped people’s attitudes toward toilets. Pregnant women are warned that using a latrine could cause miscarriage. Families fear “mixing waste” with in-laws. And in some communities, using the same toilet as everyone else is considered awkward or disrespectful.

Despite years of interventions—sensitization campaigns, construction of toilets, and behaviour-change programs—many of these facilities remain unused.

Joseph Angolere, a member of the Karamoja Elders Association in Kangole Town Council, said most communities still lack proper sanitation facilities and struggle with both cultural barriers and environmental challenges.

“Our soil is too loose. Only those with money can construct proper toilets,” Angolere explained. “The ones we build temporarily often collapse during the rainy season.”

But even where toilets exist, many remain empty.

Angolere said a lingering myth keeps people away from shared latrines: “They fear piling their waste in the same latrine with other family members, especially the in-laws.”

In Naitakwae Parish, he recalled, partners constructed toilets—but residents later turned them into shelters for themselves and goats during the rainy season.

Still, he believes progress is slowly taking hold. “Health programs have created awareness, and people are gradually adopting the use of the facilities,” he said, adding that elders are intensifying efforts to persuade households to abandon open defecation.

Another elder, Timothy Adiaka, has also noticed change—small, but meaningful. “People no longer defecate within the gates like before,” he said. “In those days, feces were everywhere. Now, with sensitization, the compounds are clean from such dirty things.” Adiaka is hopeful the practice will fade as more children attend school.

For many residents, the cultural weight of tradition runs deep.
Anna Mary Namer, from Lolain Cell, said, “We grew up knowing that defecating in the toilet is an abomination.” She explained that women fear the smell from toilets could “enter their reproductive system,” and pregnant mothers worry about “losing a baby in the process of pushing the feaces.”

“We found those beliefs and just followed,” Namer added. “But slowly, we are also embracing toilets.”Still, practical barriers persist. “Termites disturb us when we use local materials. Even digging a pit is a challenge,” she said.

For the younger generation, awareness is increasing but frustration remains.
Joyce Akiteng, a youth from Nadunget Town Council, said many people simply do not know how to use a toilet properly. “Instead of dropping the feaces inside, they smear them all over the floor,” she lamented

“Most of these latrines—you're welcomed with feaces right at the doorway. Now tell me why I should not go to the bush!” She worries the poor use of latrines can spread bacterial infections “more than defecating in an open space.”

According to Ministry of Health guidelines, every household must have a latrine. Yet in Karamoja, about 70% of communities still practice open defecation. A Karamoja Resilience Support Unit report found 64.3% of households lacked latrines entirely. Amudat District had the lowest coverage—just 2.6 percent—while Kaabong, at 69.8 percent, fared best.

The report concluded that cultural beliefs remain a major obstacle—and called for innovative, community-led strategies to improve latrine ownership and use.

But for elders like Angolere, the mission is simpler: keep talking, keep persuading, and keep challenging old myths.

“We are not giving up,” he said. “People are changing—slowly, yes—but they are changing.”

Uganda’s Digital Loans Are Changing—At Last, Borrowers Get Protection


If you have ever taken a mobile loan in Uganda—oluwa ku phone—then you know the stress. One minute you need quick money to boost stock, pay school fees, or sort a sudden emergency. The next minute, the loan app is calling your auntie in the village, your boss, even your ex. Some of them even enter your phone like they own it.

But things are changing. Finally.

FITSPA (the Financial Technology Service Providers Association of Uganda) has introduced a new binding Code of Conduct to clean up the digital lending space. And this time, the rules are on your side as a borrower.

For the first time, the industry has agreed on one simple principle: Customer protection comes first.

Before you even borrow lenders must check if you can actually repay

One of the big problems in Uganda’s digital lending boom has been the ease of borrowing. With just a few taps—loan approved. But behind that convenience, many people were sinking deeper into debt. 

A lender must now properly check:

  • How much you earn

  • Your existing debts

  • Whether the new loan is realistic for your income

These are real affordability checks, based on regulator-approved debt-to-income ratios. No lender can push you into a loan you clearly cannot manage.

Even your credit limit must match your proven ability to repay.
And if they want to raise it automatically? They must prove you can handle it and get your consent. No more “surprise” increases so they say. Interestingly, I got a surprise increase today. I was not consulted. 

Everything must be clear before you click ‘Accept’

How many times have you taken a loan only to realise the charges were hiding somewhere in the fine print?

The Code ends that.

Before you accept any loan, the lender must show you—in plain language:

  • The full loan amount

  • What will actually be sent to your mobile money

  • Interest and all fees

  • Your repayment schedule

  • Penalties

  • Cooling-off terms (just in case you change your mind)

  • How to report complaints

They must also tell you that your loan information will be sent to licensed credit reference bureaus.
No more secrets. No more “surprise deductions.”

Your phone is yours. Not your lender’s.

This is the part that made many Ugandans suffer silently.

Some digital lenders were accessing phonebooks, photos, WhatsApp groups—things that have nothing to do with your loan. And when someone delayed repaying, they would call relatives, bosses, neighbours, even church elders.

The new Code says ENOUGH.

From now on:

  • They can only collect the data necessary for your loan

  • Accessing your contacts, photos, or files is banned

  • Sharing your data with third parties is prohibited

  • Your privacy must be respected

Your phone belongs to you—not the lender.

Recoveries must respect your dignity

If you have ever received an embarrassing call from a debt collector, the new rules are written for you.

The Code bans:

  • Threats and intimidation

  • Abuse or insults

  • Pretending to be police or government

  • Calling at odd hours

  • Public shaming—no calling your boss or family

A lender must use reputable agents, follow approved recovery policies, and treat you with dignity. And before they take legal action, they must send a proper written notice.

Advertising must be honest with no manipulative tricks

Some apps have been convincing people to borrow recklessly. Extra cash! Instant approval! Zero risk!
But the hidden terms were dangerous.

Under the new Code, advertising must be transparent. Lenders cannot mislead you, conceal key information, or pressure you into borrowing. And you should have a clear option to opt out of promotional messages.

Why this matters

Uganda’s digital lending ecosystem has been growing fast—too fast, sometimes. For many small business owners, these loans are a lifeline. But without rules, borrowers were left exposed.

This new Code is a reset.
A chance to rebuild trust.
A chance to make digital credit work for you, not against you.

It won’t solve everything overnight,  progress is slow but it’s a big step forward.

Borrowing should not come with shame, fear, or harassment.
And now, it no longer has to.