The “Extractives for Community Development” project, implemented by MIRAC with funding from EWMI’s USAID-funded Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA), has had a transformative impact on local businesses in Uganda’s oil-rich Albertine region. Through the story of Bijampora Business Venture Limited, the video below showcases how local businesses are benefiting from training on business registration, local content laws, and securing contracts in the oil and gas sector. The documentary also features insights from MIRAC’s Executive Director on efforts to empower communities, enhance transparency, and resolve land compensation issues, ensuring that local citizens actively participate and benefit from extractive industry developments.
Cultivating Opportunities for Youth in Uganda
Shy smile, calm demeanor — Alexander Opiyo’s warm personality carefully masks the hurdles he has had to overcome to provide for himself and support his aging parents, especially for a young man barely in his twenties.
“I used to go around providing casual labor for very little pay. Weeding gardens, carrying farm produce, and things like that”, he says, “In a month I would make about 20,000 Uganda Shillings (USD 6)”, he says.
Alexander’s plight is very relatable for many youths from his home district of Nwoya, Northern Uganda. Nwoya is still tardily recovering from a two-decade war that deeply scarred the region, creating a lasting economic and social void. Due to disrupted education and infrastructure destruction during the war, many youths lack the skills or capital to pursue sustainable livelihoods. With the joy in his voice almost palpable, Alexander shares that he feels like the sun is finally starting to shine in his life.
“I have started a small poultry project, and now, because of the agricultural techniques I have learned, I also get occasionally hired to work on bigger farms that require modern farming knowledge. They pay a lot more than I used to earn”, he smiles.
A patchwork of fertile fields and untamed wilderness, Nwoya’s virgin lands provide a remarkable opportunity for agriculture, as evidenced by the countless thousands of acres of foreign-owned plantations stretching to the Nile River on the horizon. Land is, therefore, a critical livelihood resource in the district, yet limited access hinders youth’s ability to engage in agriculture – and for those with access, lack of modern farming skills greatly affects their yields.
EWMI’s USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA), through the Ugandan organization Young Farmers Champions Network (YOFCHAN), is empowering youths to overcome these challenges by providing access to land and high-quality agricultural inputs, as well as hands-on training in modern farming techniques and financial literacy. The project also provides young people with market access and associated services such as financial linkages and access to government programs that they could benefit from.
To achieve this, a 30-acre Youth Agricultural Park (YAP) has been set up in Nwoya district.
“At the park, we were taught advanced agricultural skills in areas like proper crop management, fertilizer application, irrigation, and many other modern farming practices, and I feel like I am now an expert, especially in growing watermelon and maize”, says Alexander, who is one of the 75 pioneer beneficiaries of the project.
“I was finally able to move out of my sister’s house and rent my own space”, says a delighted Alexander, “I am also able to support my parents more, and now I am saving to rent a garden of my own, and expand my chicken business – soon I will be able to marry and start a family of my own”.
Besides the agricultural skills, Alexander and his colleagues at the park were also trained in entrepreneurship, building their capacity in business management and marketing.
“We were also able to connect the youth to the district leadership to make it easy for them to walk in and ask for the services they need from the local government”, says Tumwebaze Khamutima, YOFCHAN’s Executive Director. “We supported 31 youths from the project to apply for the government Parish Development Model loan, with I5 so far successful. They have rented land and already planted their own maize and watermelon gardens using the expertise they got from the park”.
Expanding Opportunities for Women Smallholder Farmers in Uganda
In Uganda, most households depend on agriculture for food security, nutrition, and income. In many communities, these smallholder farmers are traditionally women. With changes in climate patterns, smallholder farmers are facing many new challenges and are often unsure where to get the assistance they need. Through the USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA), EWMI and the National Association for Women’s Action in Development (NAWAD) are working with women smallholder farmers in Western Uganda to provide them better opportunities to enhance their positioning to benefit from government programs. Please watch this video to learn more about work that is being done to expand opportunities for women smallholder farmers in Mbarara and Rubirizi districts.
Enhancing the Quality of Life for People Living with HIV/AIDS in Uganda
The National Forum of People Living with HIV/AIDS Network in Uganda implements the Treatment Literacy Program to ensure that people living with HIV/AIDS know their status and regularly take their medications, allowing them to live healthier and happy lives. With funding from PEPFAR, East-West Management Institute’s USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA) supports the National Forum and the Treatment Literacy Program as part of CSSA’s mission to support Ugandan CSOs and contribute to the improved development outcomes in four thematic areas including health, with particular attention paid to achieving Uganda’s HIV/AIDS’ reduction goals. The video below follows Aloyo Sharon and her journey as one of the 28,000 people enrolled in the Treatment Literacy Program.
Building Global Leaders
“I know stigma like I know the back of my hand.”
“From a young age, I watched everyone walk away from me when I tested positive for HIV. From my friends at school to my very own father, who sent me away to the village to my maternal grandmother. Apparently, so I could die next to my mother – and that is how I found out that my mother had died of HIV.”
“According to my father, it was only a matter of time before I joined my mother. In his words, why waste money paying school fees for a corpse?”
“Sadly, he was right. I indeed felt like a moving corpse. That year, I became suicidal. My mental health deteriorated so much that it took my grandmother all the strength she had to tie me up so I wouldn’t harm myself,” narrates Kuraish.
But what really counts, they say, are good endings, not flawed beginnings. Like a phoenix, Kuraish rose from the ashes of a dejected childhood to become a global representative, a leader in the civil society, and an inspiration to other young people – and he says he greatly credits EWMI’s USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA) for making him the leader that he is today.
“USAID/CSSA helped me build the capacity to assist young people who face challenges similar to those I faced growing up, and to influence processes and decisions that affect them, which has also notably impacted Uganda Youth Positives (UYP), the organization that I now lead as Executive Director (ED),” he says.
Kuraish, who took over as UYP’s ED in December 2019, says that, after his traumatizing childhood experience, he developed the desire and determination to prove that HIV wouldn’t limit him from becoming an exemplary leader for his generation.
“Just a couple of months into my tenure as UYP’s ED, the country went into national lockdown due to theCovid-19 pandemic,” he recalls, “This greatly affected service delivery and access to medication for young people living with HIV. So, I voluntarily used my car to support the Ministry of Health to deliver HIV medication and food door-to-door to young people living with HIV in Kampala.”
“My car, that I call ‘my hero’, and I went all over Kampala, bringing medical services closer to young people living with HIV, and in no time, my car and I were getting recognition from the media and other civil society organizations – and that is when I was invited to join the USAID/CSSA GUIDE program,” he says.
Kuraish is one of 20 pioneer GUIDE program participants (2022 cohort). GUIDE (Giving Rise to Ugandan Indigenous Direction and Experience) is USAID/CSSA’s cutting-edge servant leadership program designed to challenge the present situation in which Ugandan CSOs operate, by creating opportunities for powerful,thoughtful, and strategic collaboration among young leaders representing diverse communities.
“The GUIDE program fueled and repurposed my dream of lighting the candle for young people, especially those living with HIV,” he says.
“I can’t credit USAID/CSSA enough for unlocking my leadership potential in ways I hadn’t envisioned. I obtained substantial servant leadership skills that inspired and propelled me on a journey to be the change I desire to see out there.”
Kuraish says that by attending the virtual and in-person training and mentoring sessions, he picked up strategies for attaining influence in decision-making platforms and processes to benefit the people and entities he represents.
“That was such a game changer for me. I started to consciously position myself in places where decisions that affect my community are made – and almost immediately, I started to register a lot of tangible achievements”.
“As a result, I was selected to represent the civil society at the PEPFAR Regional Planning Meeting that was held in Johannesburg in March 2023. While at the event, I was selected to present the statement of the young delegates to Mr. John N. Nkengasong, the Ambassador-at-Large and Coordinator of United States Government Activities to Combat HIV/AIDS Globally,” he says.
“We were also able to get the PEPFAR Ambassador to agree to establish a PEPFAR Youth Council,” he adds delightfully. “And when I demonstrated to the PEPFAR stakeholder’s platform the work that I have done under Engaging Young Boys and Men in the Fight against HIV initiative, supported by the GUIDE program, PEPFAR invited us to bid for a 3 million USD grant,” he says.
Kuraish, who says he now prides himself of serving young people beyond Uganda’s borders, adds that he was also invited to sit on the Global Fund Community Accountability Steering Committee for Research.
“This is a platform that brings together people from all over the world to highlight Global Fund’s accountability to key and affected populations, and now I get to effectively represent young people, thanks to USAID/CSSA”.
“And that’s not all”, he adds, “The GUIDE program also strengthened my proposal writing skills, as we learned how to develop competitive proposals that directly respond to community challenges. This has translated into actual grants for my organization, on top of the capacity strengthening grant from USAID/CSSA”.
“For example, shortly after I completed the GUIDE program, we (UYP) were invited to Dar-es-Salam by the Women’s Global Network for Reproductive Rights, where I used the skills I learned from GUIDE to pitch for a project, and we were awarded a grant of 16,000 USD,” he says. “And I am sure there are still more similar fundraising opportunities to come”.
USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity is a five-year Activity funded by USAID and implemented by East-West Management Institute that aims at supporting the capacity strengthening of Ugandan Civil Society Organizations to contribute to their improved development outcomes in four thematic areas: Health, with particular attention paid to achieving Uganda’s HIV/AIDS’ reduction goals; Education, youth, and child development; Agriculture and food security; and Democracy, rights, and governance.
Leaders in the Making
“It’s still magic even if you know how it’s done”, Says Author Terry Pratchett.
The teenage girls in Lira, Northern Uganda, will probably tell you technology is even more magical once you know how it’s done – as they have not only attained digital literacy but have gone on to develop a mobile application that shall link rural girls to online markets to sell products they produce locally, as well as create space for mentorship.
Yet still, that’s not the only magic to arise from GUIDE (Giving Rise to Ugandan Indigenous Direction & Experience), USAID Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity’s (CSSA) cutting-edge 12-month leadership program. From empowering rural girls with digital literacy, helping community members register a community-based organization, and creating safe spaces for largely ignored mental health conversations, the USAID/CSSA GUIDE program has had such an impact on the participants that, according to them, they previously only dreamt of.
“Empowering rural girls on digital literacy has always been my passion, but I did not have the opportunity or funding to do it”, says Harriet Adong, one of the GUIDE participants. “So, bringing this idea to reality was a very big dream come true. I am very grateful for the USAID/CSSA GUIDE program”.
Harriet, however, says even more magical and powerful than that is the impact GUIDE has had on her as a person, helping her discover her inner self, in a process that she defines as ‘humbling’.
“I literally found myself in the GUIDE program”, says Harriet, “The growth, learning, and networking experience has been humbling, quite frankly.”
“When I applied for this program, I was at a point of total burnout and depression, because the organization I lead (as Executive Director) had been greatly affected by Covid 19 and there was no Funding coming through. So, I saw this as an opportunity to keep sane”
“Coming from Lira district across the country from the capital, I wasn’t even sure I was going to make it. And then when I did, right about the time we were to start implementation, I fell so ill. I had a major surgery, and I could not do any work, and mentally that hit me so hard. I lost a month, I hadn’t done anything, and it was very depressing”, she recounts.
“But when I opened up to Sophie Kange, who was my mentor from the (USDAI/CSSA) team, she was very supportive in so many levels in helping me to pick up”, she says, “And that experience left me a totally new person”.
“The GUIDE program is not the kind of program where they just give you money and demand for results. It’s a program that cares about the well-being of the fellows and their personal growth and development, and I have been a huge beneficiary. I realized I did not even know who I was until we did that self-assessment, and the assessment that was done by our mentors”, Harriet adds.
“Among the many aspects, I also learned something very special about developing my individual plan which I will surely tell you I never knew about. It taught me the importance of self-reflection as a leader. I also learned about developing a transitional plan in my organization and creating an organization where we promote inter-generational leadership, while mentoring and building the confidence of the young people”.
As part of the GUIDE program, each participant came up with a project proposal and USAID/CSSA gave them each a grant (UGX 1 million) to implement. It is such a delight that the 30 girls from Lira district under Harriet’s project (Enhancing Basic Digital Literacy skills for Teenage Girls in Ojwina Division Lira District), have not only been introduced to digital literacy, but are developing a mobile application that they have name AGIC-BIZZ, that will support the girls to connect them in different aspects, creating a mentorship space and linking them to online markets to sell the products they produce locally.
“As I speak now, the girls are finalizing the prototype, and I am so thrilled about it because it is the GUIDE that brought out the power of creativity in these girls, who are very passionate about solving the problems in their community”, Harriet says.
Harriet says the mentorship and training she got from Sophie on writing a winning proposal has also borne fruit.
“I wrote a proposal and we got funding to buy computers to set up the girls’ digital innovation space. So basically, the GUIDE program supported the process for us to get more funding”, she says, adding that the donor preferred anonymity.
“My learnings and experience from the GUIDE program have also strengthened the organization that I am employed at as much as AGIC, which I am trying to nourish – and I shall forever be grateful to USAID/CSSA for this”.
The GUIDE program is designed to challenge the present state of affairs in which Ugandan CSOs often operate, by creating opportunities for powerful, thoughtful, and strategic collaboration among leaders representing diverse communities. GUIDE prioritizes the participation of women, younger leaders, and leaders who live and work in rural communities.The twenty (20) inaugural participants were selected to represent different communities, ethnicities, age groups, and thematic areas of the Ugandan civil society. They participated in state-of-the-art learning experiences built around the country’s demonstrated civil society sector needs.
Olive Namutebi, one of the participants through her project helped her community to register a Community Based Organization to foster growth, whereas another participant, Denise Kecho, who has gone through the painful trauma of losing an unborn baby twice, started a podcast that provides sharing and healing space for other women going through similar plights. And these are just a few of the examples of the impact GUIDE has had on the participants and their communities.
Success Story: I Found Myself in the USAID/CSSA GUIDE Program
Strengthening the Communications Capacity of Ugandan CSOs
“It’s not just a video of stories. It’s actually creating impact, and drawing the attention of donors”, says Peniel Rwendeire, the Executive Director of Network for Active Citizens (NAC), about the effect of the USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA) communications training on his organization.
NAC is one of 12 Civil Society Organizations (CSOs) that benefitted from a five-day Communications Technical Training conducted by USAID/CSSA through its implementing partner Rana Labs, from June 13 to 17, 2022, in Kampala. At the training, NAC was represented by Patricia Nakitto, who helps manage the organization’s communications strategy. Warm, reserved, and bearing an unmistakable eagerness to learn and a growing passion for digital media, Patricia perfectly represents USAID/CSSA’s proactive approach to promoting women in spaces and industries that have been predominantly male, such as media and communications in Uganda, where the few women in the field are encouraged to be ‘in front of’ rather than ‘behind’ the camera, where the work is more technical. But against those odds, barely a month after the training, Patricia has already single handedly shot, edited, and produced two fundraising videos for SCINE, one of NAC’s member organizations that is working towards facilitating the setting up urban gardens in slum school backyards.
“In the slum communities, food goes a long way in keeping children in school, as they usually leave to find something to eat”, Patricia says, “Setting up these gardens provide not just food, but nutritional food which is ordinarily not prioritized because it is a struggle for most of the slum dwellers to have just a meal everyday. So I feel really privileged to now have this skill that can actually mean a fortune to these children”.
Using what she learned from the workshop, Patricia guided SCINE on how to use Facebook more effectively to share the video, which soon attracted the attention of Seed Programs International (SPI), an American organization that promotes access to quality seeds. SPI has since been helping the organization to mobilize resources through crowdfunding.
“I was then requested to make another video for the DonorSee platform, where, using that video, they have so far raised 25% of the USD 225 they need for a garden that will feed over 100 primary school-going children in Makindye Division, Kampala”, Patricia says. Like many other participants since the training, Patricia has also been creating different communications products including graphics designs such as social media flyers, training presentations, banners, and many others through Canva.
The workshop equipped the (22) participants with a vast array of communications skills that included storyboarding, video shooting, and editing; impact story identification and better writing; graphic design; social media content creation, platform specific strategies, and campaigning; customizing content for different platforms, purposes and audiences; and some tips on how to use these skills for brand building, visibility, advocacy, project implementation, and resource mobilization.
“We have never had such a training before, and we are not going to be the same again”, says Winnifred Ikalai, a participant who represented NAFOPHANU at the workshop.
A delighted Daniel Ikwap, another participant, says; “We are already beginning to patch a few things here and there, and make a surprise to the institution”.
The workshop, which was first of a series, was organized by USAID/CSSA after an organizational capacity assessment of local CSOs showed significant gaps in communications management. That assessment was then followed by a more detailed communications capacity assessment to inform an approach to strengthening the communications capacity of these CSOs.
“We can never, ever, take this opportunity from USAID/CSSA for granted. We are more than grateful for this offer to learn life-changing skills, and cascade the positive impacts to our networks”, says Peniel.
Going Digital in Uganda
Bill Gates once said the Internet is becoming the town square for the global village of tomorrow. Looking at the numbers, we can see that “tomorrow” has arrived. The internet is the town square for the global village today.
A year-on-year comparison by Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) shows that 3 million new broadband subscriptions were recorded in Uganda between June 2020 and June 2021, a 16% increase. The nearly 22 million broadband subscriptions in the country translate into a broadband penetration of 1 internet connection for every 2 persons. By extension, that is equivalent to an active connection for every 1 of the 17 million adults aged 18 and above in Uganda.
Given this rapid growth in internet access, it is critically important for civil society organizations (CSOs) to have a digital presence if they are to reach communities that literally exist online. For the USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA), implemented by EWMI, the vital need for an online presence is a serious consideration when designing approaches to strengthening the organizational capacity of Ugandan CSOs.
CSSA recently collaborated with Diocesan Development Services – North Karamoja (DDS-NK), one of the CSSA Supported CSOs, to build an organizational website that is already changing their operations, and how they interact with donors, the general public, and their various stakeholders.
“Before anything, the email created for the staff (hosted on the website) is much safer, official, and looks more professional”, says Wilfred Luke Komakech, a Programme Manager with DDS-NK, who adds that their team members were initially using their personal emails for official work. This practice affected the confidentiality of messages and made it hard for certain partners to trust them, since custom emails are seen as a form of identity in itself. “We now look more legitimate to the community as a simple Google search can bring us up and connect us with people all over the world, including those who might have never heard about us before”, he says.
Simon Peter Ijala, the organization’s Executive Director says they are now able to apply for funding from certain donors who need a website as one the requirements for application.
“A donor recently sent a form for organizations with websites to fill. We are now up for such opportunities. We believe we will get more donors because of this website. Even with the regular donors, while making proposals, we no longer have to send heavy documents – just links to the pages that have all the information about us. We can now provide content to potential donors with just a few clicks.”
Mr. Ijala went on to add that the new website provided an important boost to the orgzanization’s transparency and accountability now that they can share reports, like quarterly reports, online for their stakeholders.
“We thank CSSA for the support and for walking together with us”.
Opening Up to Heal
Infectious smile, powerful ambitious voice – Gloria Mercy Laker could pass for any regular university student. But behind that innocent, delightful look resides a deep story that no young woman chasing her dreams should ever have to go through.
“I now have the courage to smile, but trust me, I could not talk about this, I would only cry and not say a single thing whenever I thought about it”
Gloria is a second-year law student at Uganda Christian University (UCU), one of hundreds of students from UCU who participated in a twitter chat organized by the EWMI-implemented USAID/Uganda Civil Society Strengthening Activity (CSSA) supported Uganda Women’s Network (UWONET) to commemorate the 2021 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence, in December 2021.
“I think I am one of the people who benefitted the most, after being silent for almost four years”, she says “At first, I was scared that society would rise up and stigmatize me, because that is what usually happens – but this provided a safe space, I got the strength to believe in what I am despite what happened to me”.
After finishing high school in 2018, Gloria hoped and prayed for a government scholarship since her family could not afford university tuition for the law degree dreamed of.
“And I made it (for the government scholarship). I was so happy, my entire family was – but when I went to the University to complete the process, the people in charge asked for (a bribe of) 1 million Uganda shillings, which we did not have”, she recalls, “so I started to relentlessly search for other scholarship opportunities, and that is when it all started”.
Gloria says she went around desperately applying for scholarship positions. “Various men asked me for sex in return for scholarships – most of them tried to use words to get me to give in, but some actually tried to force themselves on me”.
“The first time, this gentleman asked me to get into the car and we were driving to some office. He stopped in the middle of nowhere and started touching me, when I resisted, he left me there in the middle of the road, I had to walk back home. Then I started selling at the market to raise some money but I kept applying”.
“I was luckily shortlisted by one of the biggest organizations that gives scholarships (name withheld). A gentleman from the organization then called me and said I was shortlisted, but he needs to interview me one-on-one as per organizational policy. He came to one of the big hotels in Gulu, he interviewed me, and saw how desperate I was for the opportunity.”
“After signing the documents, he said he had forgotten the stamp in his hotel room. ‘I don’t see my stamp. Please help me go pick the key to room number two. The stamp is on the table.”
“I didn’t suspect anything; I was so excited. I ran and picked the key. On entering the room, I could not see any stamp, and I thought maybe he put it somewhere else. Before I could turn he was in the room and he had locked the door behind him, and then he told me, ‘please relax, we need to talk about this’.
“I said OK, please open the door. We can go back out and talk.”
“He said Gloria, you are an amazing person, but nothing good comes for free”.
“When I refused, he started forcing himself on me, trying to rape me. We had to go through a big fight, I have a scar on my back. We were fighting for the key. I screamed, but unfortunately people came to see me, not to help me. My breasts were all out, my blouse was torn. I managed to open the door and I ran and reported to the police. He was arrested and tested positive for HIV. When I went to follow-up the next day, he had already been released.”
“I thought I would never be able to open up about this, and that kept eating me from the inside, until the 16 Days of Activism came about.”
“What prompted me to speak is I see a lot of beautiful young girls with great potential take these issues of sexual abuses for granted. I realized they think these things are happening out there and not within, they don’t realize they are potential victims, so I decided to speak out. If I can use my story to change even just one life, to give a reason for someone to speak out, then I will. Even when they try to stigmatize me”.
Pereth Niwahereza, a programs assistant with UWONET who was at the center of the program, says it was a unique approach to them as an organization as well. “As UWONET, we rarely use online platforms for such programs, so it was really great, and we reached more people than we had expected. We are very grateful to EWMI and USAID for the partnership – this also helps to inform our future programing”, she says.
The 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence is an annual international campaign that kicks off on 25 November, (the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women), and runs until 10 December, (Human Rights Day). It was started by activists at the inaugural Women’s Global Leadership Institute in 1991 and continues to be coordinated each year by the Center for Women’s Global Leadership. It is used as an organizing strategy by individuals and organizations around the world to call for the prevention and elimination of violence against women and girls.
The global theme for 2021 was “Orange the world: End violence against women now!”






























