Uganda
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No relocation funds to ‘Mother’ districts till FY 2024/25

New cities include Mbale

Kampala, Uganda | THE INDEPENDENT |  Local Governments whose lower administrative units were annexed to create cities across the country will have to wait for another year to access funds for their relocation to new administrative headquarters. This comes nearly three years since the government started operationalizing 10 new cities in FY 2020/221 in a bid to extend urbanization, improve service delivery, and create more jobs for the populace.

The new cities are Mbarara, Arua, Soroti, Mbale, Gulu, Fort Portal, Hoima, and Soroti. However, the mother districts from, which the new cities were annexed have been stuck in their old administrative units sparking property rows between the city councils and district officials.

Paul Mwanja, the Commissioner of Infrastructure and Social Services in the Ministry of Finance, says that whereas the mother districts require Shillings 1 billion for their relocation, the government is currently financially constrained to fund the exercise. He says the government has now given priority to the relocation of mother districts and will budget for the funding in the 2024/25 Financial year.

Mwanja was speaking on Monday on the sidelines of the Local Government Budget Consultative Workshop for FY 2024/25 held in Gulu City where he represented Finance Minister Mathias Kasaija. He urged districts to prioritize funding preparatory activities such as physical planning, surveying, and mapping of the gazette jurisdictions, among others in readiness for their operationalization over the medium term.

Mwanja requested the various districts and city officials to compromise within this period on how to share the facilities as they wait for the government to remit funds for their relocation next year. The budget consultative meeting attracted several local government officials from Northern Uganda including District Chairpersons, Resident City and District commissioners, Chief Administrative Officers, Speakers, and Civil Society Organizations actors.

The Arua District Resident District Commissioner, Geoffrey Okiswa noted that the delayed remittance of funds for the relocation of district administrative Units was already affecting service delivery and asked the government to expedite the processes. He says many district local governments including Arua already have a huge “appetite” for relocating but can’t do so because of the lack of finances.

George Otto, a member of the Civil Society Budget Advocacy Group (CSBAG) says the government should prioritize the funding of the new administrative units it created in order to ease the provision of services. He notes that the majority of the new districts, cities, and sub-counties recently created lack substantive headquarters which has, in turn, affected service delivery.

Local government leaders during the meeting also presented the challenges they face that have over time affected service delivery. The Chief Administrative Officer of Pader District Robert Adebuason highlighted key challenges in the areas of dwindling government transfers, especially Uganda road funds to districts, cities, and Municipalities which has fallen to only 10 million shillings in the first quarter of FY 2023/24.

Others are the late approval of supplementary budgets especially capital development, wage, pension, and gratuity which were released late by three weeks to the end of FY 2022/23, insecurity in areas neighboring the Karamoja Sub-region, and inadequate wage bill. Delayed relocation of districts from city administrative units has caused rifts between the city councils and district officials over property sharing in the past two years. The Local Government Minister Raphael Magyezi however said earlier that the government will come out with a policy guideline on how the cities and districts will share properties.

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