May 2012 in Uganda, Mozambique, & Ethiopia

Greener Pastures

Posted on 10 Aug, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts, Video3 Comments

My most recent video assignment is truly a story of success. The Kimaro family has graduated from poverty thanks to the programs of the environmental NGO Plant With Purpose.

Several years ago Jacob & Joyce Kimaro were small farmers living in poverty and trying to make ends meet on the foothills of Tanzania’s Mount Kilimanjaro. Things became even more difficult when Mr. Kimaro’s brother and sister-in-law passed away, and they had to take in seven extra children.

It was then that the Kimaros joined VICOBA, the Village Community Bank organized by Plant With Purpose. There the family received training in sustainable agriculture practices, organic farming, and earning income while preserving the environment. VICOBA members are also able to save money jointly and access credit each week. Today the Kimaros not only have their bills paid on time, but are eating healthy and balanced diets while preserving their natural surroundings.

All for the Kids – recent videos from East Africa

Posted on 17 Jul, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts, Video2 Comments

Featured here are two recent videos of mine from locations across East Africa. The first is a ChildFund PSA that aired on television in the US and was filmed in Kenya’s remote Maasai land. Though ChildFund has other outlets for the footage, on this particular spot my four days of footage were cut down to meager 62 seconds. Post-production for this piece was done by the Causeway Agency.

Though certainly not as polished, I did my own editing on the spot below for Light in Africa. The video is aimed at recruiting volunteers to come out to Tanzania and aid in the work. I myself am a volunteer alumnus of the organization that years ago helped inspire me to take root in East Africa.

My Liberia assignment that was scheduled for this week has been postponed. I’ve instead been rerouted to Kenya to cover the catastrophic drought gripping the North and East of the country. More on that in the coming weeks…

From the Rooftop of Africa

Posted on 03 Jul, 2011 in Assignment, Blog Posts2 Comments

In the past few months I’ve been working in Ethiopia, Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. In this video update I discuss and review my most recent work with ChildFund, Right Choices, Computers 4 Africa, the Times London, and Light in Africa from my base in Kilimanjaro Region, near Africa’s highest peak.

Cashing in on Cattle – Kotido, Uganda

Posted on 14 Jun, 2011 in Blog Posts, VideoLeave A Comment

Kotido’s weekly cattle market is deep in the land of the Karamojong tribe. It’s a great place for those seeking discount prices on livestock. However, sometimes the great bargains come at the expense of neighboring tribes.

Extreme Hope

Posted on 18 May, 2011 in Blog Posts, Photo Essay3 Comments

Living Hope Education Centre, a primary school in war and disaster-torn northeastern Uganda, is beating the odds. As much as I can, I am an advocate for this school, which is doing wonderful work in the lives of young ones.

48 Hours in Vintage Harar

Posted on 28 Apr, 2011 in Blog Posts, Personal Work, Photo Essay6 Comments

It’s hard to believe it had been five years since I’d been to Ethiopia, not counting the many hours of down time spent making a connection in Addis Ababa’s airport. Recently I arrived a couple days early for a ChildFund assignment in this Horn of Africa country so that I might explore an ancient city in Ethiopia’s exotic East.

Harar’s meandering old town is other-worldly, a step back in time along the caravan routes of the middle ages. Indeed, if it weren’t for Coca Cola’s stubborn presence inside the city walls it may sometimes be difficult to decipher which decade, or even century, you were losing your way in.

Most Ethiopians don’t mind having their photograph taken. It was my original intention to shoot only portraits for these two days I’d set aside. However, I was quickly enveloped in the atmosphere of the town and the eye candy was too much for me.

The green leafy substance seen here is known as khat, a highly addictive stimulant originating from Ethiopia. It appears to be both the boon and bane of Harar. Many farmers spend their entire lives cultivating it. Many women earn their living selling it on the streets. Many people, mostly men, spend far too much time idly chewing it in a hypnotic daze.

The World Health Organization classified khat as a drug of abuse in 1980. Though its use is illegal in many nations, Ethiopia is not one of them, and the country brings in a great deal of revenue every year in exporting the plant to places like Somalia, Kenya, and Djibouti.

Khat does not come cheap. A lesser-quality bag begins at 100 Ethiopian Birr, or about $6, which is about three times as much as the average Ethiopian earns in a day. Consequently Harar’s alleyways are lined with addicts who are broke and sleeping on the street, sometimes begging in hopes of scrounging up money for the next fix. Khat, along with coffee, are Harar’s two main cash crops.

I spent much time indulging in the latter.

For the nerds out there, on each of these photographs I confined myself to either a Canon 16-35mm 2.8L zoom or a 50mm 1.2L prime lens, more so for the sake of continuity than portability.

 

Product of Rwanda

Posted on 18 Apr, 2011 in Blog Posts, Photo Essay4 Comments

After years of foreign aid pouring into the East African country of Rwanda following its 1994 civil war and genocide, its citizens are used to receiving help from those on the outside. Those tables could finally be turning, however. Recently I documented the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s Purchase for Progress (P4P) initiative, a program wherein food aid for Africa is bought, not from a farmer in Iowa or Australia and shipped thousands of miles to its destination, but from right here in Africa.

Rwanda is home to some 55,000 refugees, most of whom are sheltering from ongoing turmoil in the Democratic Republic of Congo, its neighbor to the west. Most of these refugees are landless and unable to provide for themselves and their families. Consequently they’re reliant on food aid. Above, children race a homemade scooter through the streets of Kaziba refugee camp along the shores of Lake Kivu in western Rwanda.


The Gates Foundation works through its grantee, the UN World Food Program, (WFP) to connect small farmers to a larger market by setting up cooperatives at the village level. Training and capacity building of these farmers are essential parts of the program in order to ensure that a quality product is passed on to the recipient. Above, Niyonsaba Gaspard (16) harvests corn in Musaza village in Eastern Rwanda.

For the first time this year, the World Food Program held a trade fair in Kigali, Rwanda’s capital city. The forum was an opportunity for food buyers to connect with P4P’s small farmers cooperatives from different parts the country. By pooling their resources and selling their food in bulk, Rwandan small farmers are now not only supplying food to the WFP but also exporting it to other markets in East Africa and beyond. Above, women from the COACNU in Musaza cooperative winnow corn outside their co-op’s headquarters before it’s weighed, bagged and shipped off to Kigali.

For decades small farmers have been crippled by lack of access to markets despite their geographic proximity to food buyers and recipients. By forming into cooperatives, farmers now have an opportunity to enter the market and sell their surplus harvest at competitive prices. Buyers like the WFP can distribute their food aid more quickly without having to pay for pricey freight and insurance costs when buying from outside. It’s a win-win situation for buyers and farmers.

Food aid from the west hasn’t been discontinued. Rwanda does not yet have the capacity to completely provide for itself and the refugees within its borders. But as the Purchase for Progress effort is scaled up, we can look forward to a day when Africa and other developing areas are food secure. P4P is working in 21 countries world-wide, 15 of which are in Africa.

No Longer Silent

Posted on 01 Apr, 2011 in Assignment, Blog PostsLeave A Comment

You would think as much as I’ve photographed the lives of women that they were getting preferential treatment here in Africa. Sadly in most cases it is the opposite. Though women are increasingly gaining more roles in government, Liberia’s current president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, remains the first and only elected female head of state on the continent. Although countries like Uganda and Rwanda do have significant female representation in parliament (in both it’s mandated by law), this inclusion hardly ever trickles down to the village level. Last year there was quite an uproar in Sierra Leone when a woman made a bid to become chief. Places where women are marginalized are often places where crimes against them go ignored and unpunished.

As part of my most recent assignment with AcionAid, I visited the Women Won’t Wait Centre in Mubende, western Uganda. The center is one of four such locations in Uganda run by ActionAid where women can seek safety from domestic violence. Furthermore, women have access to counselors and even a lawyer at each of these shelters. Above, Nagabugo Agnes (r) seeks advice from a counselor at the center in Mubende. “I heard about this program on the radio,” she says. “I’m feeling good. I hope my problems will be solved here.” The NGO works hard at getting the word out to women before it’s too late, both by informing women of their legal rights and empowering them speak out and effect change in their governments and communities.

Take the case of Naziwa Annette, shown above, age 20. One evening she was severely beaten by her husband, but when she turned to the police, her husband fled the village. The police and local officials said they were powerless to act until Naziwa and her family came up with facilitation fees for the investigation. Two weeks later, while the family was scrounging up what they could, Naziwa’s husband returned and, in a fit of rage, severed both of her hands in front of her mother and daughter. Following ActionAid’s intervention Naziwa’s husband was caught, prosecuted, and imprisoned. Today Naziwa’s mother Patricia cares for her daughter and granddaughter.

This past Women’s Day Naziwa marched through the streets of Mubende along with other women who have been victims of domestic or gender based violence, brass band in tow. Hundreds of supporters from the local community, both men and women, trailed in their wake. It was a bold move on the part of these women and a sign of hope to those that still suffer. To express your own support for these women visit ActionAid’s website.

Do they know it’s Women’s Day?

Posted on 04 Mar, 2011 in Assignment, Blog PostsLeave A Comment

I haven’t been in the States during International Women’s Day in quite a while. Unless things have drastically changed, I can’t remember it being a big deal there. In Africa things are different. Currently I’m in Western Uganda gearing up to photograph a Women’s Day march and rally as part of a larger assignment for ActionAid. This coming Tuesday marks the 100th annual celebration of the event. Before I get to that however, detailing my previous assignment with the Uganda Women’s Health Initiative couldn’t be more appropriate for the occasion.

One of UWHI’s main programs is to deal with the diagnosis and treatment of cervical cancer, which is the leading cause of death for women in Uganda outside the child bearing age bracket. A joint study by the Uganda Ministry of Health and PATH found that 67% of bed occupancy in the gynecological ward of Mulago Hospital, Uganda’s largest, is of cervical cancer cases and 70% of the women who die in this ward are cervical cancer patients.

Above, Mrs. Christine Babirye, diagnosed with cervical cancer last year, now receives radiation therapy at Mulago Hospital in Kampala. The machine, procured with the help of the Uganda Women’s Health Initiative, is one of only a few in East Africa and the only such one in Uganda. Patients travel from Rwanda, Southern Sudan, and the DRC to receive radiation therapy here at Mulago.

Even in developed countries, treatment options for advanced stages of cancer are extremely limited. Consequently, UWHI puts most of its efforts into screening and prevention. The organization works out of two separate clinics in Kampala to provide free breast and cervical cancer screenings each weekday to any woman who walks in. Nurses and midwives of the Uganda Women’s Health Initiative also have the capacity for treating precancerous lesions at the clinics. They have supplied training and equipment to another such clinic in the eastern town of Mbale.

Women whose cancer has passed all early treatment options must be referred to Mulago in Kampala. Because of the burden of transport and being away from their homes and families, some women never seek treatment for their cancer and inevitably succumb to it. For those who can make the journey to the capital, the Uganda Women’s Health Initiative has constructed a hostel where, for a nominal fee of about $4.25 per month, women can stay while receiving radiotherapy treatment. Thus more women are likely to make the journey to the capital to receive radiation to treat their cancer.

Uganda Women’s Health Initiative, in collaboration with University College, London, has also pioneered a number of studies focused on reducing women’s postpartum hemorrhaging following birth, as well as techniques to reduce child mortality in a country where giving birth is one of the most dangerous things a women can do. Results and details from these studies shall remain undisclosed until their publication.

In addition to continuing their work in maternal and infant mortality, the UWHI hopes to scale up efforts for the treatment and prevention of cervical cancer in Uganda by establishing treatment and screening centers in each of Uganda’s 100+ districts.

A Time to Change? | Uganda Votes

Posted on 19 Feb, 2011 in Blog Posts, Event1 Comment

Election day in Uganda passed peacefully for the most part, with only a few scattered incidents of reported violence. This does not come as a surprise, however. The announcement of the presidential winner, due no later than Sunday evening, is what will draw the most reaction from the streets.

Peaceful does not mean that the vote was without irregularities, however. As opposition leader Dr. Kizza Besigye stated in a press conference today, “it is already very clear that there have been widespread malpractices in the electoral process.” I witnessed not only voters providing names that clearly did not match the picture provided on the voting register, but also the coaching of voters in the polling queue by party officials or their hired hands. Below, poll workers and local officials in the town of Mbale argue over apparent typographical errors on the register.

One colleague of mine reported and photographed the blatant handing out of cash in exchange for votes. Below, police arrest Jackie Nabulu, the campaign manager of MP candidate Dr. James Mtende, in the town of Mbale. Ms. Nabulu was accused of improper interference at the polls.

Of greater issue was that many voters’ names were absent from the register despite having confirmed their status as a registered voters and having received voters’ cards. After Patrick Achou went to the polling station where he voted in the town of Soroti during the 2006 election, he was shocked to find his name missing from the register. He was then directed to several other different polling stations in town but was never able to vote. “Last election I voted very well. I feel very bad, I wanted to vote for my candidate,” says Mr Achou, shown below. I witnessed at least a dozen other such incidents where voters, even with valid voter’s cards, were turned away at the polls because their names were missing.

The local media has reported this as a widespread problem, especially in the eastern part of the country, where these images come from. The east, especially the town of Mbale, happens to be an opposition stronghold. Below, Mr. Elamu Michael (26) casts his vote for Dr. Besigye in rural Soroti district. He wore a Barack Obama shirt to the polls in the spirit of ushering in fresh leadership: “I want change. We have seen big problems here,” he says.

Many voters in the east echoed Dr. Besigye’s call for change. After casting her ballot for one of the seven presidential candidates running against incumbent Yoweri Museveni, the voter shown below, who wished to remain anonymous, remarked, “We’d like to see what the difference looks like.”

Even if protests do erupt on the streets following the announcement of results, it’s difficult to envision the weeks of Middle-East style resistance occurring in Uganda that Dr. Besigye is calling for. Ugandans are generally more complacent when it comes to government. Whatever the official tally of the vote, I genuinely feel that Mr. Museveni, whose massive campaign fund faced a divided opposition, has the support of the majority of the population. Below, poll workers count votes the old-fashioned way at the close of the polls in Mbale.

Closing Arguments | Ugandan President Museveni Wraps Up Campaign

Posted on 16 Feb, 2011 in Blog Posts, Photo EssayLeave A Comment

At a massive campaign rally that seemed at times more like a victory celebration, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni touted the achievements made under his National Resistance Movement’s leadership during the last decade. After detailing agricultural, educational, economic, and infrastructure improvements, he painted his various rivals as untested and risky choices.

Throughout a slew of performances by Ugandan pop stars, “No change” became the slogan of the day. Mr. Museveni has been in power for over 25 years. However, if this crowd has anything to say about it, the recent trend of deposing long-term heads of state won’t carry over to the streets of Kampala. Ugandans go to the polls to elect their President for the next five years on Friday.

Behold at last, the True Chapeau…

Streets Heating Up | Kampala, Uganda

Posted on 14 Feb, 2011 in Blog Posts, Photo EssayLeave A Comment

Uganda’s opposition parties are rallying the faithful ahead of Friday’s presidential and parliamentary voting. Today, presidential candidate Dr. Kizza Besigye campaigned in downtown Kampala to enthusiastic support.

Dr. Besigye is the front runner of all the Presidential challengers to Uganda’s incumbent President Yoweri Museveni. Along with supporters of his IPC party (Interparty Cooperation), he took to the streets of Kampala today for a last-minute push of campaigning ahead of Friday’s presidential vote. The crowd was raucous, taking on almost a militant tone. One vehicle in his caravan was decorated to resemble an army tank.

Many voters are frustrated that President Museveni has yet to stand down from office after more than 25 years. Dr. Besigye, speaking from the roof of an SUV, had a message for those politicians clinging to power: look to the streets of Egypt and Tunisia.

There was indeed a lot of energy on the streets today. It made me fearful of what is to come after the election results are announced, which is due to happen on Sunday.

old habits die hard – images from Kenya’s Maasai land

Posted on 15 Jan, 2011 in Assignment, Blog PostsLeave A Comment

I’m currently on assignment with ChildFund in Kenya working on a television spot that will air in the US. The video concerns solar panels that the NGO has placed in schools and dormitories in two separate areas of the country. These photos come from remote Maasai land, north of the Tanzania border – far from any tarmacked road or mobile phone tower.

The solar panels, which were of great help to me when charging camera batteries, are even more useful to the girls at Nanin’goi Girls’ Primary and Boarding School in Mosiro, Kenya. Here students can study in class and find their way around the dorms without relying on kerosene lanterns after the sun sets just after 6pm each day.

ChildFund continually works with the elders of the community to ensure that the girls of the school are not subjected to early childhood marriage and female circumcision, practices still very common in this and other Maasai communities. On my first night at Nanin’goi two girls from a far away village came seeking refuge at the school. Though many Maasai have ceased to live as they traditionally have for centuries, most in Mosiro have not.

Though their separate way of life is admirable and beautiful, many traditions of the Maasai hinder their development. However, the fact that Mosiro is home to an all-girls’ school is something that would have been unheard of in a Maasai community even ten or twenty years ago. Change may come slowly, but it’s not impossible.

ChildFund also installed a water system at the school which currently has around 500 girls enrolled. Where’s the footage of these solar panels, you ask? You’ll have to wait to catch the spot on TV.

all photos Copyright 2011 Jake Lyell Photography, LLC

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