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Women plough the way to peace in South Sudan resettlement project

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Women plough the way to peace in South Sudan resettlement project

UN News
19 March 2020
By: 
Ox ploughs have been delivered to women's groups in Rumbek North to enable the cultivation of larger areas.
UNMISS
Ox ploughs have been delivered to women's groups in Rumbek North to enable the cultivation of larger areas.

Women who had been displaced by fightingin South Sudan are sowing seeds of peace, with support from the UN mission in the country,UNMISS.

They have been given ox ploughstowork the land, as part of a campaign to resettle returnees in the Rumbek North area who were uprooted during intercommunal clashes last year.

“We realized that household food security is one of the key factors for return and reintegration to be sustainable,” said CarolineOpok, a representative of the peacekeeping mission.

Rumbek North has beengreatly affected by conflict, displacement and food insecurity.

Due to persistent intercommunal violence, including cattle raids, revenge attacks and armed ambushes, many people in the region have been reduced to relying on relief aid.

Tired of depending on external assistance,and with oxen aplenty available, residents figured thathavingploughs couldimprove their situation.

“The challenge they reported was a lack of implements to increase their food production. That’s how the oxplough idea was born,” saidSamuel Owoko, a representative of Sans Frontieres Germany, the organization implementing the project.

Thetoolswere handed to women’s groups, as local tradition dictates that girls and women are the ones responsible for feeding their families.

Theywill be put to good use, according to Mary Agor, a local women’s leader.

“We have been using hand hoes, and with that you can only do so much. With these ox ploughs coming in, we shall cultivate bigger areas which will help us sustain our families throughout the long dry spell. We shall also have some surplus produce to sell at the market in Rumbek and thus make some money”, she said.

All that is requirednowis for their mento bring back the bulls todraw the ploughs.

Most of the time, male villagers bring their cattle and run into the wilderness as a way of fending off possible raids fromneighbouringcommunities. Now, their women want them back home and working.

“We are telling men that food security is the responsibility of theentire household, not just women”, said Ms.Opok, therepresentative.“We are encouraging men to bring out the bulls and put in the energy to work together with their women to expand the areas of cultivation”.

Ms. Agor, the women’s group leader, also had a message for the national authorities:“We want ourGovernment to make sure that there is enough security so that we can bring in our bulls and cultivate. Without peace, that will not be possible. Right now, the roads are full of armed youth. They should go away so that our men cansafely return with their cattle”.

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