Development cooperation between Iceland and Uganda
Iceland and Uganda have worked together in the field of development cooperation since 2000, first under the Icelandic International Development Cooperation Agency (ICEIDA) and later under the Ministry for Foreign Affairs when ICEIDA was integrated into the Ministry. The Embassy of Iceland in Kampala, the capital of Uganda, officially opened in 2004. To begin with, the focus was on fisheries, but soon attention was paid to other areas, especially education, water and sanitation.
In 2001, cooperation began with the Kalangala district, which consists of 84 islands in Lake Victoria. The cooperation with Kalangala resulted in the first steps of the district approach, which Iceland has since put a lot of emphasis on in its development cooperation. Cooperation with Kalangala district was concluded at the end of 2019 and positive results were achieved. For example, the percentage of primary school students who passed exams increased significantly during the period, and Kalangala, which used to be among the worst performing districts in Uganda, was among the 20 best performing districts out of 122 districts in Uganda in 2019.
In Uganda, Iceland currently works with the district authorities in two districts, Namayingo and Buikwe. Fishing is practiced in both districts, and Iceland's support is focused mainly on villages where fishing is an important source of income. The cooperation is mostly in two areas: education and water and sanitation. Efforts will also be made to increase support to the districts for climate related actions and the economic empowerment of women and youth. A key element in Iceland's approach is to improve governance and build the capacity of local governments to provide basic services to residents and implement their own plans for district development.
The focus of Iceland's bilateral development cooperation is to promote improved living conditions in its partner countries by supporting national plans and efforts to reduce poverty and improve social and economic living conditions in the districts supported by Iceland. Iceland's development cooperation in Uganda is in line with Iceland's priorities in bilateral development cooperation and is based on Iceland's policy on international development cooperation, which, among other things, emphasises human rights-based approach to development cooperation. Iceland's development cooperation in Uganda aligns with Iceland's policy in international development cooperation, Iceland´s Bilateral Development Cooperation Strategy and the Country Strategy Paper (CSP) for Iceland´s development cooperation in Uganda 2023-2026.
Project pillars in the district approach in Buikwe and Namayingo
All of Iceland's projects in Uganda contribute to the achievement of 10 of the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals in Uganda.
Cooperation with international organisations
United Nations Children's Fund - UNICEF
United Nations Development Programme - UNDP
United Nations Population Fund - UNFPA
GRÓ - International Centre for Capacity Development and Uganda
GRÓ - International Centre for Capacity Development, which aims to strengthen the capacity and expertise of individuals, organizations and institutions in developing countries through capacity building and training programmes in four thematic areas: gender equality, geothermal energy, land restoration and fisheries, has admitted fellows from Uganda who have graduated from all four programmes. Read more about GRÓ on the center's website.
Kalangala – a success story
A turning point was in Iceland’s development cooperation in Uganda when cooperation with Kalangala district by Lake Victoria was completed in the end of 2019. The islands are home to 70 thousand people on 84 islands. Iceland has from the beginning of the cooperation carried out development work in fishing communities. In Kalangala, Iceland has supported diverse projects since the inception of its bilateral development cooperation in Uganda, when the capacity of the local government was very weak. During the first years of the partnership, the focus was on fisheries but moved later to providing a holistic support to education, which reached all educational institutions on the islands, i.e. 26 primary schools, three secondary schools and two vocational schools at the secondary level.
The support included, among other things, improved equipment and construction of classrooms, teacher training, textbooks for all students, dormitories for children from remote islands, teachers' apartments, latrines in all schools and school meals cooked with energy-saving stoves for all students.
Emphasis was placed on the involvement of parents in school activities and in preparing school meals. Sports, music and drama were also supported. Iceland is the only donor country that has supported education on the islands.
In 2018, an external evaluation of the partnership in Kalangala was carried out.
About Uganda
Uganda is a mountainous and landlocked country lying astride the equator in the eastern part of Africa. The size of the country is 240 thousand square kilometers and it has borders with South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Tanzania and Kenya. Kampala is the capital and the estimated total population is over 45 million. The southern part of the country covers a large part of Lake Victoria, the second largest lake in the world, and one of the main sources of the Nile River. The nature of Uganda is extremely diverse, the climate is mild, and the country is among the most fertile countries in Africa. Uganda is nevertheless one of the poorest countries in the world, ranking 166th out of 191 countries on the United Nations Human Development Index. The nation is very young, and the annual population growth is 3.3%. About 46% of the population is under the age of 15 and 77% is under the age of 30. Most of the country's population lives on agriculture. Coffee, tea, cotton, tobacco and sugar are among the products grown for export, while bananas, corn, cassava root, rice, potatoes, beans and peanuts are among the main food types grown for domestic consumption.