African Migrants Return Home to Develop Social Programs

An increased number of Africans living abroad are returning home to help foster development in their native countries. For one woman, that means transforming education in Uganda to turn underprivileged youth into future leaders.

by Lindsay Stark

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by Jackee Batanda Reporter
Thursday - January 13, 2011

KAMPALA, UGANDA – After living in the United States for 15 years, Ayele Egbuson returned to Africa in 2005 determined to change Uganda’s education system.

 

Egbuson says a lack of programs for secondary school students is driving a host of social problems in her home country, including high rates of unemployment and teen pregnancy. So she returned to Uganda and founded Hope for Better Future in March 2006 to help students from underprivileged families continue their education past primary school.

 

"They made me realize my dreams."

Today, the organization sponsors 55 students, five of whom have made it to the university level.

 

“It is because of HBF that I am studying,” says Coretta Nakalembe, an HBF scholarship recipient. “Having education is the best gift one can receive from someone, so I must admit that I got the most expensive gift anyone should have received.”

 

Egbuson says she knows she is part of a growing phenomenon in which the African Diaspora – migrants of African descent living outside the continent – is returning home to initiate development projects. HBF focuses on what Egbuson saw as the greatest need in her community – helping underprivileged girls to attend secondary school. In Uganda, 63 percent of girls attend primary school, but just 7 percent go on to secondary school. Egbuson says she returned to Uganda to help girls receive a better education, but not just in academics. Egbuson is determined to help give girls the social skills they need to become leaders, too.

 

Uganda is one of the seven African countries that is actively engaged in the African Diaspora Program, an initiative launched by the World Bank in September 2007 that encourages migrants to give back to their home countries. Kofi Anani, a World Bank operations officer, says Africans choosing to return home hold positive development potential to help combat what he called the “brain drain,” referring to the skilled, educated and qualified human resources that frequently leave the continent.

 

According to the International Organization for Migration, an estimated 30,000 African professionals leave the continent each year. In Uganda, as many as 50 percent of all college-educated citizens live overseas, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. By comparison, the OECD reports that just 5 percent of skilled citizens from Brazil and India choose to take their skills abroad.

 

For Egbuson, the desire to return to Uganda was based on a drive to promote education. Uganda’s Universal Primary Education Act, which provides free primary education for up to four children per family, was passed in 1997, with a promise that a Universal Secondary Education Act would follow soon after. By 2005, when Egbuson returned to Uganda, it had not yet been created.

 

Two years later, a similar act that guaranteed secondary education for limited costs was made into law, but Egbuson says the system is flawed and still too expensive. School fees remain high and exceed the 4 cents per child per day that the government provides. Across Uganda, the inability to pay school fees accounts for 62 percent of dropouts, according to the Ministry of Education here. Pregnancy is the second-highest cause for dropout, according to the Ministry of Education. Uganda reports the fourth highest fertility rate, or number of children born to the same woman, in the world.

 

HBF aims to reduce these figures by paying school fees based on students’ financial needs. Egbuson says HBF also makes special provisions for girls. Because most school-aged girls are expected to do all the household chores and babysit, HBF ensures that its scholarship recipients are admitted to boarding schools so they can focus on their studies.

 

In all, 70 percent of HBF scholarships go to young women. Egbuson says she is tired of seeing families choose to educate sons while they force daughters to drop out or to marry young because of limited finances.

 

Tags: African Diaspora, Education, Girls, Uganda
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