First Assignment
I spent the summer working with International Justice
Mission (IJM) in Gulu, Uganda. IJM has 17 field offices that seek to transform
the justice systems in Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia. IJM Gulu
provides free legal work for widows and orphans who are victims of property
grabbing. Due to living in a post-conflict zone, many women and orphans have
been driven off their land by family members, neighbors, or the Lord’s
Resistance Army (LRA). Without their land, many women have no means of
provision for themselves or their families. Thus, to protect women in Northern
Uganda requires protecting their land rights. IJM has been fighting diligently
for four years in Gulu and has helped numerous widows and orphans.
I was
in Uganda for almost two months and spent much time traveling to and from work
on the back of a small motorcycle referred to as a “boda boda” and eating
ground maize called “posho” with “g-nut and greens” soup. More importantly,
however, I spent two months interviewing and meeting with the widows with whom
we work to hear their stories and prepare reports for our attorneys to take to
court.
I was
also assigned a project for the office involving Domestic Violence (DV) in
Northern Uganda. According to studies, over 70% of women in Northern Uganda
face DV in one form or another during the course of their lives. DV constitutes
a form of discrimination and oppression in Uganda, specifically Northern
Uganda. The predominant ethnic group in Northern Uganda, specifically in the
cities of Gulu and Amuru, is the Acholis. Acholi women live with an
inordinately high risk of being a victim of DV due to the Acholi custom of
treating a wife as property, the prevalence of alcoholism in Acholi men, and
the harsh realities of living in a post-conflict zone. Thus, I wrote a memo on
the affects of DV on women and how that could be combatted in Acholi culture.
Before
this summer, I had very little interest in DV. However, after the research I
did in order to complete this project, my life has forever been changed. I have
already found places to volunteer in Virginia this year and am thrilled to see
the impact that this summer will have on the course of my life.
Second Assignment
IJM has two offices in Uganda, Kampala and Gulu. The Gulu
office serves the Gulu and Amuru districts in Northern Uganda. In Gulu and
Amuru, IJM focuses on cases of land grabbing that impact widows and orphans.
IJM seeks to restore the property, liberty, and security of land grabbing
victims in Uganda by working alongside local leaders.
My second major assignment of my internship involved
studying succession law in Northern Uganda. Succession law concerns “the
transmission of the rights, estate, obligations, and charges of a deceased
person to his or her heirs.” Succession law can be referred to as inheritance
law.
Uganda's 1995 Constitution guarantees that "[a]ll
persons are equal before and under the law" and "shall not be
discriminated against on the ground of sex....” Further, the Constitution also
provides "[w]omen shall be accorded full and equal dignity of the person
with men." However, both statutory and Islamic laws in Uganda support
inequality in inheritance.
Often distribution of estates upon a father or husband’s
death is left to clan elders, religious leaders, or relatives. In these cases,
a widow may not have a voice in deciding who gets the property. Unfortunately,
many religious leaders, clan elders, and relatives do not know and do not
follow the succession laws of the land. Because many people do not know the
laws of succession in Uganda, the property is often distributed based on
customary law, or the traditional law of the tribes and clans, which calls for
property to be passed down from one generation to the next through male
descendants.
When a woman marries, she becomes the property of the male
by the paying of the bride price to a woman’s family. By treating the woman as
property, the male’s clan can deny her inheritance rights when the man dies and
can condition her continued occupancy of the land to her willingness to marry a
male member of her deceased husband’s clan. Thus, under customary law if the
clan does not follow succession law, the only way a woman can inherit her land
is to remarry a male member of her deceased husband’s clan. Unfortunately, a
woman may have to share the land with other women as customary law allows men
to marry more than one woman. Thus, when the husband dies, the woman inherits
only a portion of the property in accordance with the number of wives the man
had before his death.
Under Ugandan law, the closest male heir is the administrator
and successor of the deceased husband’s land. Therefore, many women do not own
property and have no land of their own. Because of the lack of land ownership,
a woman often endures abuse and may be driven off the land by her deceased
husband’s relatives. A woman may lose not only her land, but also her children.
Unfortunately, the Constitution of Uganda and the Succession Act of 1972 as
written do not always protect a woman and her inheritance.
This post was written by a Center for Global Justice student intern. The views expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect those of Regent University, Regent Law School, or the Center for Global Justice.
This post was written by a Center for Global Justice student intern. The views expressed in this post do not necessarily reflect those of Regent University, Regent Law School, or the Center for Global Justice.
Lovely. Great effort. We have thousands of women who lose out and no one's really reaching to them for justice. They mostly just suffer in silence.
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