Kyankwanzi District Explained

Kyankwanzi District
Settlement Type:District
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Uganda
Subdivision Type1:Region
Subdivision Name1:Buganda Region
Seat Type:Capital
Seat:Kyankwanzi
Established Date:1 July 2010
Area Land Km2:2455.3
Population As Of:2012 estimate
Population Total:182900
Population Density Km2:74.5
Timezone:EAT
Utc Offset:+3
Coordinates:1.2°N 79°W
Elevation M:1200
Native Name Lang:Luganda

Kyankwanzi District is the westernmost district in the Buganda Region of Uganda and Buganda Kingdom, bordering Bunyoro. The district headquarters are in Butemba Town.

Geography

The Kyankwanzi District borders Nakaseke District to the east across the Mayanja River, Kiboga District to the south-east, Mubende District and Kibaale District to the south-west across the Lugogo River, and Hoima and Masindi districts to the north across the River Kafu. The district headquarters in Butemba Town on the Bukwiri-Kyankwanzi Road are approximately 160km (100miles) by road from Kampala, the nation's capital.[1]

The district has lush green forests and prairies with only minor elevation differences as it is the plateau behind the western fork of the East African Rift running across the Hoima District. The altitude is roughly 1,000–1,200 meters above sea level.[2]

History

Kyankwanzi District was carved out of Kiboga District by Act of Parliament in July 2010, with eight sub-counties in Kiboga North County.[3] Prior to the creation, district services operated from Kiboga Town,[4] approximately 35km (22miles) from Butemba.[3] Further in the past, Kyankwanzi District was carved out of Kiboga District.[5] The reasons given for forming the district included the long distances that residents had to travel to access district services at Kiboga.

The district name derives from Kyankwanzi Town, 20 km farther away from Kampala-Hoima Road, as the region is historically associated with the National Resistance Movement (NRM), which started the Ugandan Bush War of 1981-86 from cattle-herding Kyankwanzi under the direction of President Museveni.[6] Up to this day, Kyankwanzi serves as the strong foothold of the NRM and hosts the National Leadership Institute that provides training to serving military troops and public servants of Uganda.[7] Meanwhile, Butemba was chosen as the district seat for accessibility and land availability reasons.[8]

Administrative units

The district has only one county, Kiboga West County.[9] [10]

Culturally, Kyankwanzi is the northwestern frontier of the Buganda Kingdom, overseen from the Ssingo county seat of Mityana. Once belonging to Bunyoro, as Rugonjwa Sub-county, Nsambya Sub-county in the northwest was won by the Buganda Kingdom in the battles in the 1890s under Kabaka Mwanga II's rule.[11]

Demographics

In 1991, the national population census estimated the district population at 43,500. The next national census in 2002 estimated the population at 120,600. In 2012, the population was estimated at 182,900.[12]

In 2009, Kyankwanzi Sub-county, then under the Kiboga District, was recorded as the poorest administrative area in the Central Region, with 38 percent of the population living on less than US$1.00 a day.[13] [14]

Kiboga and Kyankwanzi are popular destinations for rural-to-rural migration in Uganda. The government announced in the 1990s availability of land resources to attract farmers from around the country. It is now inhabited by the Soga and Masaba peoples in the east, and the Kiga and Fumbira peoples from Kigezi in the southwest, as well as indigenous Baganda, Banyoro, and the cattle-keeping Ankole people/Rwandans with some Congolese refugees. Almost all residents are at least bilingual.[15]

Economic activities

Crop husbandry, livestock keeping, logging/charcoal-making are the three major economic activities in the district.[16] [17]

Because the Kyankwanzi District is located along the cattle corridor that crosses the country from south-west to north-east, many residents are of Banyankole/Banyarwanda origin who pasture Ankole cattle in the vast woodland. Cattle-keeping is mostly concentrated on Kapeke, Kyankwanzi, Nsambya Sub-county areas. In these areas, weekly or bi-monthly cattle markets are set up in major trading centers.

Crop husbandry is most prominent in the Nsambya Sub-country area with maize, beans, and rice produced, as well as tobacco leaves. Nsambya crop produce is marketed in the regional town of Hoima and the capital Kampala, where traders from urban areas and as far as in South Sudan and Kenya make purchases. Food crops, both for cash and subsistence purposes, include the following:

Utilizing the rich soil, the Kyankwanzi area is also known as a producer of forest products, namely, timber and charcoal, both of which are tax revenue sources.[18]

The German company Global Woods AG has obtained a 50-year tree farming license from the National Forestry Authority for an area of 12,186 hectares on Ugandan state land in the Kikonda Forest Reserve. Global Woods plans to plant monocultures mainly of pine (Pinus caribaea, Pinus oocarpa) and eucalyptus (Eucalyptus grandis) trees on 8,000 hectares for later logging and to reserve the rest "for conservation".[19] Local farmers were driven from the land, ending the traditional practice of grazing cattle in the woods and making charcoal for cooking and the market.[20] [21] Global Woods sells carbon credits, which allow the purchaser to emit more greenhouse gases than the limit agreed in the Kyoto Protocol and later international climate conferences.[22] [23] Carbon certificates are also the subject of a speculative financial market.[24]

Public transport to Kyankwanzi District is chiefly made up of long-distance bus services which connect Kampala with the Bunyoro capital of Hoima. Taxis, both in wagons and sedans, connect major trading centres such as Bukwiri, Ntwetwe, Kyenda, Ntunda, and Kikonda with Kiboga. Kyankwanzi is served by taxis from Bukwiri and Bukomero, beside the training participants at the National Leadership Institute who have direct shuttle services from Kampala.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Road Distance Between Kampala And Kyankwanzi With Map . Globefeed.com . 15 May 2014.
  2. Web site: Overview Kyankwanzi District Local Government. 2021-05-19. kyankwanzi.go.ug.
  3. Web site: Location & Size Kyankwanzi District Local Government. 2021-05-19. kyankwanzi.go.ug.
  4. Web site: Uganda: Kiboga Council Okays Creation of Kyankwanzi District . Muzaale . 3 September 2008 . Fred . 15 May 2014 . Daily Monitor via AllAfrica.com.
  5. Web site: Overview Kyankwanzi District Local Government. 2022-02-14. kyankwanzi.go.ug.
  6. Ofcansky. Thomas P.. 1999-07-01. Musevenis War and the Ugandan Conflict. Journal of Conflict Studies. en. 1715-5673.
  7. Web site: National Leadership Institute (NALI) – Kyankwanzi. 2021-05-19. www.nali.go.ug.
  8. Web site: Kyankwanzi District Local Government. 2022-02-12. kyankwanzi.go.ug.
  9. http://www.statoids.com/uug.html Districts of Uganda, Statoids, accessed 3 August 2015
  10. http://www.statoids.com/yug.html Counties of Uganda, Statoids, accessed 3 August 2015
  11. Web site: Amasaza ga Buganda . Mukasa E. Ssemakula . 26 August 2014 .
  12. Web site: Estimated Population of Kyankwanzi District In 1991, 2002 & 2012 . Citypopulation.de . 15 May 2014.
  13. Web site: New Study Names Poorest Ugandans . . 3 February 2009 . 15 May 2014 . and Francis Kagolo . Anthony Bugembe . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121002000143/http://www.newvision.co.ug/D/8/12/670249 . 2 October 2012 .
  14. Mallick. Lindsay. 2019. Using the Uganda Demographic and Health Surveys from 2011 and 2016 to assess changes in Saving Mothers, Giving Life intervention district. Journal of Global Health Report. 1–13.
  15. Web site: Kyankwanzi – Uganda Data and Statistics – knoema.com. 2021-05-20. Knoema. en-US.
  16. Ali. Farasat. Khan. Babar. Khan. Garee. Abbas. Yawar. Hussain. Ejaz. Masud. Ambar. Akber. Karim. Karim. Rizwan. November 2015. Hazard Vulnerability Risk Assessment of District Gilgit, Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan. Modern Environmental Science and Engineering. 1. 5. 255–268. 10.15341/mese(2333-2581)/05.01.2015/007. 2333-2581.
  17. Ggoobi. Ramathan. 2017. Economic development and industrial policy in Uganda. Friendrich Ebert Stiftung. 1–43.
  18. Mulumba. Moses. 2018. Using Health Committees to Promote Community Participation as a Social Determinant of the Right to Health: Lessons from Uganda and South Africa. Health and Human Rights. 20. 2. 11–18. 26542056. 30568398 . 6293345 .
  19. Web site: timber – global-woods Uganda . uganda.global-woods.com . 17 July 2016 . 18 September 2016.
  20. News: Umstrittene Aufforstung in Uganda Bäume pflanzen, Bauern verdrängen . de . Controversial Afforestation in Uganda – Planting Trees, Driving out Farmers . Susanne . Götze . 2015-12-09 . . SpiegelNet GmbH . . 18 September 2016.
  21. Web site: Global Woods' plantations in Uganda: Trees versus food . Chris . Lang . 2016-01-08 . redd-monitor.org . 18 September 2016.
  22. Web site: Company Overview of global-woods international AG . bloomberg.com . 2016 . 18 September 2016.
  23. Web site: Unterstützer Unternehmen: global-woods AG – Agentur für Erneuerbare Energien . de . Supporters – Companies – Global Woods AG – Agency for Renewable Energies . global-woods AG . unendlich-viel-energie.de . 2016 . 18 September 2016.
  24. Allan. Nadiope. 2018. The influence of diameter on resin yield from pinus caribaea at Kikonda forest reserve Kyankwanzi district. Thesis. 1–42.