Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Africa. Show all posts

Thursday, September 21, 2017

Kenya General Elections 2017

Kenya Elections 2017: Possible outcomes

By

Jacob Waiswa Buganga
IMI Uganda
www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
+256774336277
waiswajacobo@yagoo.co.uk

Kenya set precedence. It broke bare the traditional tendencies of African democracies - sticking to power and rigging elections or suspending elections, altogether. Therefore, it was "Unafrican" and strange part of the governance system in the region. Also, it must have been received with surprise by the regional leaders.

 Several reports showed that Uganda ever interfered in the electoral process of Kenya in the efforts to defend the statuesque. There were similar reports that Uganda security wore Kenya police uniform, with a mission of influencing election outcomes in Uhuru's favour. Russia too was said to have been involved. Besides, calls from Uganda and other regional countries to cling to power and reject Supreme Court outcomes were expected.

Analysts said that the court decision had a lot to do with the 2007 election violence in which over 1400 people died. The awful memories of the violence could not encourage perpetrators to stage a similar episode this time around. On the contrary, militant civilians were determined to die for justice or otherwise see Raila in power. Two of my friends in Kenya told said to me, "no Raila, no peace, and we are ready to die." This followed my question that, "what if Raila does not become president?" From their responses you could see sheer determination to see Raila in power. It was also evident from the conversation that, for long Raila was cheated out of elections and Kenyans had simply lost the patience. This time no chance would be given to Uhuru to either rig his way to power or assume the presidency. Simply, he had to go. It was just enough for majority of Kenyans to keep Uhuru and Ruto at the helm of Kenya leadership.

Early congratulatory messages and reports from observers caused outrage. At least, this time, civilians did not burst out in full-scale violence as the case in the Kibaki era. Media reports indicated total number of the dead as about 24 people. The congratulatory messages were sent along side concessions from some elite Raila supporters, who traditionally knew that once announced winner, no matter how victory was achieved, it remained valid. Not even the courts would nullify it. It would have been most pleasing if congratulatory messages returned after court ruling for the very extraordinary occasion in the history of democratic governance and thank Uhuru for consideration of nationhood against self. I think, on this event, Uhuru rose to become a hero, to be remembered alongside the likes of Nelson Mandela and other renowned statesmen and women.

Although there were some cases of violence, restraint was well exercised to give way for the courts to decide. The two "elephants" too made efforts to control respective supporters and give the courts a chance to arbitrate and decide on the matter. The outcome of the court was most eventful in the history of electoral disputes in any African country, when it ruled in favour of the opposition. The court decision was celebrated by oppressed people and opposition leaders in the region and made week-long news globally. Some opinion leaders explained that court action aimed at preventing another election violence that threatened the election process.

One aspect about Kenya people though, is: they are decisive and very well know what they want and get it if they have to, unlike people in other African countries. I would say, for example; that, Kenyans are not like Ugandans, even the Armies in both countries are different. Ugandans have been suppressed for long whose reaction is latent in a short run, but highly explosive in the long run, more over carrying an ethnic context.

Unlike Ugandan Army, which is still tied to a personality cult in Museveni, Kenyan Army is largely national. Uganda Army is still evolving in as far as carrying national image and appeal are concerned. Indeed the soldiers in Uganda care so much about their country, but the regime will never allow them to express it and respond to the plunder and chaotic socioeconomic and political environment in which the dictatorship thrives best. They only wish that civilians make the changes possible on their behalf, instead. Morally, they are at par with oppressed civilians as for any professional soldier or as human beings with families and friends within the civilian population.

The general elections in Kenya, as a whole, has for long carried a sharp ethnic line - featuring Kikuyu verses rest of the country's tribes. The country's socio-economic and socio-political structures have for decades been aligned, according Tribes, with the Kikuyu taking the biggest share of every aspect of Kenya resources and good life. There has been hopelessness on the part of other tribes, owing to generations of poverty and marginalisation, where urban crime has emerged as major way of life for the marginalised youths.

Despite the awful conditions of life most Kenyans have gone through for centuries, their proactive, principled and bold tendencies have never been compromised, and always showed promise that one day they would liberated themselves from maladministration and nepotism.

The Kenya's revolutionary outcomes I see today are therefore not surprising. I have had a chance to interact with Kenya youthful activists, but one thing you can never take away from them is the zeal and courage, which are very characteristic of youth-hood. In Uganda such activism happens in isolation, one time in a long time. Universities and colleges, which were the brains of the whole country ceased to be, activism significantly declined, vibrant intellectual debates at universities went so low down the drain, and any political discussions are now highly compromised. The Mamdanis and Nsibambis have never been replaced. From here, other public sectors assumed dysfunctional states and private sectors suffer as a consequence. A country where youths once became national leaders at 30 during the pre-colonial and post-colonial eras, active drivers of country's development endeavours, is no longer the same. Museveni succeeded at shuttering social life of Ugandans through poverty and political alienation as tools of oppression. What we have in Uganda is rule by pensioners who have ceased to act visionary and representative of the country's future. Should the majority and corrupt members of parliament also decide that, there should no longer be retirement age for civil servants. Incidentally, the regime youths working for pensioner-politicians are shameless, celebrating the short term pleasures from regime handouts and unknowingly compromises their lifelong legacies of being champions of youth-hood they ought to have and be part of the good history of Uganda and democratic Africa. That is very possible, more so, now, when the regime can change anytime, any day and very soon.

Kenya is very impressive. Young people are very much at the forefront of change, and never succumb to tendencies of oppression that Uhuru regime tried to exhibit. The 2017 general elections were not only about the struggle for the structural and fundamental changes, but a desperate need to change the highly corrupt and gangster government of Uhuru Kenyatta.

As such, for the first time in Kenya history, the tribal factor counted was minimal, and Uhuru was bound to fall. In fact, the election defeat of Uhuru was bound to be a rebirth of Kenya. The active participation of youths and women was very spectacular. It was a true reflection of the need for structural reforms, to eliminate structural violence and achieve lasting peace for Kenya.

Particularly, the women; their socioeconomic and political liberation has been long overdue. Their enormous entry into the political arena marks the end of much dreaded cultural stereotypes against them. And a new Kenya, without Uhuru, was bound to break the myth of change-of-regimes as evil, and instead push for change as guarantor of new lease of life for citizens in neighbouring countries, and change as much desirable if national development is to be fast tracked.

The court decision on disputed elections was highly celebrated as victory for democratic governance in Africa. Kenya took the model role of revolutionarising the region from military dictatorship to democratic governance, and join Southern and Western African countries. It showed how strong-willed Kenyans are and independence judicial arm of government, which in countries like Uganda, is only a dream. The poor young lawyers are nurtured in the same sorry state of the legal environment and are recycled to become corrupt as part of the profession. Many Ugandans wished to be citizens of Kenya, to be led justly and genuinely and express their political will, which they lack. This showed how proud Ugandans are of Kenya. They would beg Kenyans to keep pushing for good governance; inspire them so that they can aspire to become the Kenya of today.

The changes in Kenya will have some interesting yet positive outcomes in the region, as the decline in wars and humanitarian crises which characterise the region from independence times. Since independence, the departure of imperialists has seemed to be more curse than a blessing. The promising African leaders turned rulers and dictators, worse than the foreign colonisers. They became new colonisers.

Therefore, the final nail in the coffin of bad governance in the region shall be realised, when the Uhuru leadership finally falls. This should the prayer for Africa from any lover of liberated minds and fully liberated Africa. However, with all these said, Uhuru must be congratulated for respecting the court decision, which any other person in his position would castigate and, instead, stick to power. Even possible influences from his counterparts - Museveni and others could be resisted! It is a legacy set, for which he can always be remembered for.


Saturday, September 16, 2017

Dhamma Book Publications in Africa

In this study efforts are done to communicate research problem clearly, with one of the sentences indicating the goal of the study._ Rationale statement reveals whether one was doing pure research or applied form._ The researcher shows how important this study is and a worthwhile undertaking._ Under significance of study, the researcher indicated major ways the research would impact other in parts or in whole._ For example, it was important to effectively use of research to improve public policy, enhance public services and contribute to quality of debate on how Buddhism has over decades spread to Africa._ However, this study goes forward to seek and reach consensus on the development of Buddhism in Africa.  Theories in this study are formulated to explain, predict and understand phenomena._ There were three key constructs investigated and made operational by the author, which included  –‘reason,_’ ‘strategies’ and ‘response.’_ 
In this book the study of Buddhism in Africa greatly envisages how it was organised, because it was on such a basis that quality performance and future relevance were either determined or guaranteed. Organisation development consisted of the following principles: an effort – 1) Planned, 2) organisation-wide, and 3) Managed from the top, to 4) increase organisation effectiveness and health, through 5) Planned interventions in organisation processes –using behavioural science knowledge._
The chapters of this thesis ranged from one to five. In this chapter one, the researcher presents the topic, background, research motivation, research measurement and justification. These sub sectors of the book provide direction of the study that all other chapters reflected on. In chapter two, researcher explores and identifies literature related to the study and indicated how they implied to it. Chapter three highlights and discusses the systematic procedures of finding answers to the study questions as a requirement in any scientific study. Chapter four shows the findings of the study, which are outcomes of vigorous research processes, with respect to the study questions.  And chapter five discusses the findings of the study, with arguments for and against with support of relevant literature. It also contained sections indicating corresponding conclusions and recommendations of the study. Ways to master challenges of propagating Buddhism for the future and progressive development of Buddhism on the continent are elaborately explained. The study aims at making contributions to Africa’s moral consciousness through crossdisciplinary approaches strengthening orientation towards social progress and appropriate utilization of resources and increase access to development opportunities. And as a moral guide, it suppors efforts to promotion of efficient operations and service delivery._ The concluding sections elaborates the researcher’s major findings and proposals for the future. The study is an outcome of the experiences and tangible efforts by unsung personalities to advance Buddhism and related practices in Africa, including the commendable responsibilities and contributions of resident and visiting religious_Buddhist missionary leaders and lay Buddhists in Africa. 



How to get involved:
- Donate towards Dhamma publication in Africa and completion of the manuscript, "Development of Buddhism in Africa."
- To express need to support Dhamma/Dharma publication in Africa, please do not hesitate to reach us by phone +256774336277 and/or mailto:dishma.imhs@gmail.com

Indigenous Psychology and Integrated Psychotherapy Development

INDIGENOUS Mental Health Services
It is IMI position that transforming communities comes with a lot of resistance engraved in the spiritual, cultural, mental, social, economic, and political set-up of nomadic. This, however, must be done carefully with the right human tools, with a clear understanding of pastoralists psychology and the need to preserve indigenous knowledge systems associated to it, from which the country thrives as a tourist destination point, basing on attractions from strong cultural traditional, arid landscape, featured wild animals, and how all are related.

HOW YOU CAN BE INVOLVED
As client
As volunteer
As service activity sponsor
As client sponsor
As fundraiser
As donor/funder
As ambassador
As development partner
As friend
Visit us
Visit our blog www.integratedmhi.blogspot.ug
Visit our facebook page: www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
HOW YOU CAN REACH US
Telephone: +256774336277 or +256752542504
Email: waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk or dishma.imhs@gmail.com

 Mental Health Services

Mental Health and Governance in Uganda

MENTAL HEALTH GOVERNANCE
Psychologically, the ekimeza (round table discussions) offered an opportunity for frustrated and disappointed citizens to vent such psychopathological conditions off –which alone was therapeutic as affected participants will leave the forum calmer and feeling better than they came –having ‘blown’ out the toxics of anger on those leaders that betray their people. In the same way as earlier noted above, the need for identification can have significant influence on stability of the state once that state fails to respect such a need.  But according Whitman (2005:2), the objective of policy was to preserve and increase the relations (like ekimeza) we value and to exclude or reduce the relations we hated. Preserving hate feelings only generated conditions for conflict rather than peace.

Good governance catered for citizens’ cultural (leadership), political (decision making),  economic rights (access to development opportunities) and safety concerns –which if the government of Uganda had valued as one way to grant wellness and peace to a society that deserved such rights, violence would not have occurred. True measure of good governance was its ability to deliver development based on realizing people’s humanrights.  Indeed, the cultural-led violence was merely a spark that triggered the silence conflicts of economic deprivation, ineffective representation, and hopelessness of life under the sets of political, economic and security rights or concerns of the people of Uganda, as the case in point.

It can be submitted, now, that there is  need to let ebimeeza (plural) flourish at all leaves as forums to brainstorm societal problems, for problem-solving, for venting and psychological healing or peace and for enabling policy reform and formulation for the benefit of the common man, and for healthy relationship building as meaningful avenues for good governance and peace-building. However, more research is needed to define and set limit of the ekimeza/group discussions so that, while it assumes the rights and freedoms of assembly, information and expression, and appreciative of its responsibilities to society and governance, it knows it limits for orderliness Uganda and common good of its people.

HOW YOU CAN BE INVOLVED
As client
As volunteer
As service activity sponsor
As client sponsor
As fundraiser
As donor/funder
As ambassador
As development partner
As friend
Visit us
Visit our blog www.integratedmhi.blogspot.ug
Visit our facebook page: www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
HOW YOU CAN REACH US
Telephone: +256774336277 or +256752542504
Email: waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk or dishma.imhs@gmail.com

Disability Programme at IMI

DISABILITY Services
Society and economics influence one another. While society evolves and sees the need to value, hoard and cost resources for status reasons, the consequential inequalities between the ‘haves’ and ‘don’t-haves’ create new conditions of instability whose failure to address, further create the different forms of disability simultaneously –escalating ignorance, poor physical, mental and heightened levels of instability within the socioeconomically lowly communities.
Disability is known to be more mental than physical as a well adapting mental faculty has the means to overcome challenges at physical level. Disability is relative and minimal bit of it may be motivating rather than socioeconomically challenging.
"Poor socioeconomic conditions are the greatest causes and predictors of disability, preventable illnesses and early deaths."

-Jacob Waiswa
Pilot project for the mentally and physically challenged
Purpose:
The purpose of this project to promote mental health seeking behaviours of mentally challenged members of the community through family/homebased interventions in order to increase access to mental health services and support mental adjustment, recovery, reduce vulnerability and achieve sustainable mental wellbeing.
Main Activities:
-Creating awareness
-Conducting research to know existing mental health problems and inform stakeholders
-Identify partners to support activities
-Identify households that need mental health services
-Conduct mental health assessments for respective households
-Develop interventions for respective households
-Conduct training for field workers
-Allocate resources and coordinate management of interventions
-Daily-weekly-monthly and annual monitoring and evaluations by field staff and organisations
-Share reports with stakeholders and seek their input in next phases of interventions
Specific Actions
-Family visits for general conversations to understand psychological concerns of respective family members and how they affect entire family
-Identify and restore family structures that are psychopathological
-Discuss new old and new family structures with first respective family members and later common roles and responsibilities towards new healing family structures.
-Monitor adaptations to new family structures for 6 to 12 months
-Align and strength community and institutional linkages mentally well families.
-Reconcile family members with missed growth and development stages
-Establish reward systems from within family to keep it developing
-Enact situations to elicit family based solutions under conditions of difficulty
-Supervise daily affirmations to new
-Identify and incorporate nutrients for mental strength
-Identify and incorporate physical exercises for mental and physical strength
-Identify common family roles and responsibilities into new family mental health structure.
Expected results
-Attain an understanding of each family member’s mental health and sources of mental and shared knowledge of how each family member should be handled to achieve individual mental development and wellbeing
-Discard of old relationship treatment patterns that were maladaptive
-Adoption of new relationship patterns that support mental wellbeing of respective family members.
-Realise individual roles and responsibilities for respective family members towards the mental wellbeing of the entire family unit.
-Assertion of each ones identity in the new roles and responsibilities
-Development of individual goals away from environment for personal fulfilment
- Ensure collective support for each other’s new roles to be practiced over time
-Knowledge of supportive links outside family setting that can be sought to support new family mental health structure
-Motivation to seek support both from within and outside family structure to support new family mental health view
-Motivation to take steps towards ones emotional, physical, social and spiritual needs with implication to mental wellbeing
Changes overtime
Discernment abilities of each family member to feed into the mental wellbeing of the family unit.
Happy family life that reinforces healthier family relationships
Development of strong family character that is stronger against external shocks
Better problem-solving mechanism with openness and input of respective family members
Development of appropriate goals for better life outside family(school, work and social relationships)
Greater concentration levels at work
Greater productivity and rewards (academic and occupational)
Better and supportive relations outside family life
Greater positive sense of self and togetherness as family (positive identify)
Complementary and supplementary support to each family members who need it for the greater family life
Easy assimilation of trauma and mental healing in future in current and future trauma encounters.

Addressing widespread socioeconomic conditions which impact most on individuals and their families, with emphasis on families that have been hit most, through reliefs such as;
- Reading materials,
- Breakfast to starving women and children,
- Clean water
- Infections prevention kits
- Toilet facilities
- Pads for girls
- Vocation skills training
- Clothes
- Medicine
- Sanitation facilities
- Longterm rehabilitation of those facing addiction to alcohol and other drugs
- Demystify maladaptive religious and cultural dogmas as well as physio/yoga for the physically challenges yet impacting mental wellness.
- Agroforestry (fruit trees)
- Subsistence agriculture for families without food
- Commercial agriculture for livelihood development of families in need
Environmental impacts or benefits the project might have:
- Inaccessibility to safe and clean water, proper food diet and proper household incomes are the greatest challenges to families affected by mental problems, which in many respects are influenced by climate change. Therefore initiatives to preserve the environment and restore degraded cover are one significant motivation for the project. Demonstrations shall be established and seedlings given at affordable price for value addition to this particular activity, in order for families to be actively responsible to the environment by way of agroforestry and fruit tree growing that support efforts to promote food security and agriculture related employment for the majority of women and youths. And institute and promote policy of planting 30 trees for every one cut down.

HOW YOU CAN BE INVOLVED
As client
As volunteer
As service activity sponsor
As client sponsor
As fundraiser
As donor/funder
As ambassador
As development partner
As friend
Visit us
Visit our blog www.integratedmhi.blogspot.ug
Visit our facebook page: www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
HOW YOU CAN REACH US
Telephone: +256774336277 or +256752542504
Email: waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk or dishma.imhs@gmail.com

Public Mental Health and Governance in Uganda



We yearn to survive, to feel secure, to find pleasure, and overcome pain from the day of coming into existence. There are specific needs to achieve those goals, such as food, water, medicine, social and professional support, renewable environment resources, and their continuous and anticipated access. Because they are survival, security, social, pleasure needs, we realize the right to access them and the responsibility and duty to work towards their realization. When these rights are not achieved at the moments they are most needed, the individual will be overwhelmed to levels when he or she cannot cope, which subsequently disrupts rational clues of achieving them or even any such hope, belief, and abilities to do so. Without interventions to address rising vulnerability of the individual, the cognitive, emotional, physical, social, spiritual and environmental connections are impaired yet are the ones responsible for his or her existence and achievement of the greatest of that person’s goals. There are specific references given to cases of mental illness that develop –one after the other –leading to total mental breakdown. Each of these cases ought to be addressed in singularity in new environments that accelerate healing, until the point the individual relearns the old environment and develops healthy coping mechanism to live and attain development goals there. This organization suggests th creation of a mental health infrastructure that creates contact with vulnerable groups and boosts their recovery while building their strength of coping and resilience to overcome their obstacles to expressing and obtaining their needs and rights. The infrastructure will be able to spot their unmet needs in some development time and process better the unhealthy mental attachments and images, provide natural means of negotiating access to natural needs and rights, enable such accesses to individuals who show natural effort and negotiation mechanism around challenges to expressing and realizing their needs and rights while using successful individuals to inspire others, until we achieve levels when the individuals can fix own challenges, express desires in most healthy way possible, seek assistance where they are trapped, and become responsible to themselves and society to achieve their aspirations. In doing so, the infrastructure will enable realization of people who are empowered and mentally well –sustainably.
HOW YOU CAN BE INVOLVED
As client
As volunteer
As service activity sponsor
As client sponsor
As fundraiser
As donor/funder
As ambassador
As development partner
As friend
Visit us
Visit our blog www.integratedmhi.blogspot.ug
Visit our facebook page: www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
HOW YOU CAN REACH US
Telephone: +256774336277 or +256752542504
Email: waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk or dishma.imhs@gmail.com

Psychological Trauma Project in Uganda

PSYCHOLOGICAL TRAUMA HANDLING SERVICES

The project provided knowledge on interventions necessary to proactively manage trauma as first aid package to individuals; to mental health workers who time and again face trauma cases; and to institutions and organizations with interest in the subject of trauma interventions. The project helped to strengthen the mental health infrastructure to support sustained healing of traumatized families. It recognised and catered for the diverse approaches employed to manage trauma with a special emphasis on terrorism; both professionally or institutionally structuralised and unprofessionally or non-institutionalised. Their overall outputs and outcomes got highlighted. The study served as referral point for researchers and the general readers, and went a long way to guide them in the management of both natural and artificial disasters. While this study limited itself to affected families, it inspired researchers to cover psychological trauma and interventions among members of the security forces, medical personnel, and other service providers such as the media fraternity and general community, who were vulnerable to psychological trauma. Thereafter, appropriate interventions were designed to effectively and efficiently manage the different contexts it (trauma) occurred.

HOW YOU CAN BE INVOLVED
As client
As volunteer
As service activity sponsor
As client sponsor
As fundraiser
As donor/funder
As ambassador
As development partner
As friend
Visit us
Visit our blog www.integratedmhi.blogspot.ug
Visit our facebook page: www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
HOW YOU CAN REACH US
Telephone: +256774336277 or +256752542504
Email: waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk or dishma.imhs@gmail.com

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

IMI Sponsored Information - SunSystems Hotel Management System

Internationally Digitised Hotel
Computerised Hotel Management System 

SunSystems Hotel Management System is a new generation of hotel management software for Windows. It is a complete solution, beginning with reservations, checkIn/checkOut, and ending with billing and tax reports. Other privileges; you can make reservations, indicates current stays, gives restaurant orders and prices prints invoices and receipts, gives clients' financial statements, shows status of rooms and calender of days lived, provides for staff shift management, provides for computerised stock management of hotel, shows purchase orders made by hotel, provides for management of vendors and suppliers, gives timely reports about all transactions, has emailing system, gives client invoices and many more from the system. The user interface is highly optimised for high speed in put and the prevention of common mistakesIt is designed for use of multiComputers, and contains reliable and secure authorisation levels. The program can be set up for any currencies, taxes and gratuities. Payments can be accepted by cash, credit cards and checks.


For order call:
Uganda: Jacob +256774336277
Tanzania: Kotecha +255713376155
Or email: Jacob, mailto:waiswajacobo@yahoo.co.uk
Kotecha,
mailto:jiten.kotecha@gmail.com 


Tuesday, August 29, 2017

Call for Development Partners to Support Mental Health Development

IMI Founder, Father Luzindana (Leader of Catholics Youth Department in Uganda) and Rotarian Eddie Mutebi (Director, Union of Community Development Volunteers -Uganda) in a Partnership Meet 2016

Integrated Mental Health Initiative (IMI) was started in 2015 as a community based organisation  that designs, integrates and applies programs that promote mental wellbeing.

It would be a great pleasure for us and our beneficiaries if you shared information about this organisation with humanitarian foundations and ministries as well as development students and workers to support this organisation, which applies psychological approaches  for mental wellbeing, peace and development. And also develop ways to strengthen peace and development initiatives through sustainable efforts.

We are supporting this organisation to succeed in Uganda and Africa. We also welcome volunteers who can come, support, and give it a stronger foundation. You can also like our Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/integratedmentalhealthinitiative
Or
www.integratedmhi.blogpot.ug

We will be grateful if you helped promote it there and in case we are needed there to come learn from you or share our expertise, or otherwise wish to hear more information from us, please do not hesitate to let us know.

Monday, December 5, 2016

Kasese Massacres Cannot Be Justified At All!

There are always alternatives, but the war culture in these people resisted. How can a weak person fail to negotiate if you have all the money, all the weapons, all the technical people -local and international, to consult and have a peace settlement! Do we care to take deep insights before or after the tragedy? We should be able to get unbiased answers, free from Egos! Surely, there is nothing inevitable, nothing Divine or natural about justification of Kasese massacres! Remember, we have had same massacres before in this country that help us understand how humans can stop being humans, deliberately and later unconsciously. There was much in common with the senseless killings in #SouthSudan. And somebody simply sits back, relaxes and be happy about that, as job well done? What a world! And, therefore, there are completely no justifications that can be imagined for the killings, unless there is something seriously wrong also with the person doing so. You know we all die for once and for good. It is not a holiday or leave from work. The fact that no one is immune to death should make us have a heart for others, show some love and care, and some empathy where sympathy fails! But that ease of conducting so much killings show something terribly wrong that must make everyone worry about the kind of people in our amidst and the future with them. If a sobber man is found fighting a drunkard, what difference does it make of the two? Even mad men and wild animals are tamed! These massacred victims are humans like those who claim to love their lives more, and were entitled to life and emancipation and become civil citizens that could live happily in peace with the rest of the Ugandans! Much us it is said that, a seed of violence has been planted by those massively killed, like for so many killings that have happened in this country, what happened in Kasese were new seeds planted of future killings, immediately after harvesting all those lives. Who know who the future killings could affect. Nothing prophetic about this! It is a natural law and justice! Architects are in 'good' moods about job 'well done', a victorious 'war' and 'worthy' for a professional soldier (a Noble protector and servant of the people) to 'die' for. Even war has rules that we didn't see in Kasese killings! What sort of soldiers does Uganda have!?? Are Ugandans safe!?? And what can they hold of the future??? Then, what message do we send to the rest of the World, that we operate in as a unit??? There is nothing surely to boast about, be proud about or to celebrate about these massacres, really! Who can you be to do that, like yourself you kill at will and have mandate to kill fellow humans with ease, as though oneself (killer) is immune to death at any other single moment? Really, we need to have some respect for life, humility before others (servant leadership, regardless) and show a difference between levels of civilisation and animal nature in us, much as we all have the elements to kill by our natural design. Let's be a little bit human for the beginning, at least.  May the people of Kasese live to see the true judgement, justice happen and peace return to the land, country and region, already in fear or threatened!

FOR GOD AND MY COUNTRY

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Addressing Global Problems at Family Level-A Case of an Abused and Neglected African Child

Family mental health is critical determinant of future of wars, turmoil and their consequences while parenting justified parenthood through realization of noble roles in respect of child development and growth that features child re-socialization and projection to independence, learning to co-exist peacefully with family members and society, and problem-solving to achieve defined goals in life.

As the family continues to play its development role -both moral and physical support in the life of a child, the community too begins to identify its development concerns and expectations of that child. This, though, as for families, can be for the good or worse. Responsibility on the part of the family and community and eventual decisions made, thus, contribute to mental wellness of the child, free from abuse and neglect.


For example, absence of love, trust, and feeling of security on the part of the child influence later development outlooks and, in years to come, it is society that either benefits or suffers. Some of the outcomes can be aggressiveness, fears, anxieties, and broken ambitions that, with time, go behavioral in the forms of substance abuse, irrational alliances or relationship to seek security, underachievement, anti-social behaviors, authoritative and abusive parenting, poor role modeling of parents –as some turn criminals, prostitutes or get diseased; and breakdown of the social fabric with violence in homes and in the wider society.
From the level of a family such outcomes later are manifested in communities -at places of work or in very important political positions -and these become corrupt national leaders, or military aggressors of nations in which masses suffer from acts of violence and psychological trauma.

The challenges of children growing in broken families include; the big burden to achieve life goals on their own -with no hope of parental intervention; no guidance to making wise health decisions, to ensure personal safety and healthy social assimilation.

That, generates high pressure and chronic stress to achieve, to break development barriers mentally, socially and institutionally; and child develops along the fear of dropping out of school due to inability to pay fees on his or her own –catapulted by failure to concentrate and excel academically, to attain a good career, inability to solve problems associated with choosing and having healthy relationships, and inability to manage chronic stress that characterizes his or her family environment –which shapes child's future into adulthood and in responsible social positions that the future provides. The child continues to live a life without social support and lack of confidence to seek it to viably building resilience required to succeed in life.

It was concluded from an intervention in the life of an abused child that the amount of resilience resulting from positive reinforcement from friends, teachers and inspiring leaders or roles models from media products, supported adaptability or coping -and some kind of positive spiritual inclinations greatly catapulted abused and neglected children through traps of childhood suffocation, underachievement, psycho-pathological enclaves and demeaning parental hostilities. It should be noted that involvement of in godly activities worked best for them in situations –where the victim trusted no one -including those who really loved them.

In addition to community intervention at village level, or at national level, or regional and global forces of peace restructuring, reconciliation and actual provision of physical needs to children goes a long way towards pacification of the individual or society, ensuring access to development needs and support information to successful yet sustainable human development –as critical means to control and prevent global wars and psychological trauma.

Graduate Peace and Conflict Studies Program
Makerere University
P.O. Box 7062, Kampala-Uganda
jwaiswa@arts.mak.ac.ug

A case for digital mental health services in Uganda

By  Jacob Waiswa Buganga, Wellness and Recreation Facility Kampala, Uganda Development and growth of cities, countries, and regions have cau...

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