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Uganda widow wins compensation after fight

In Kasana, Uganda, Joyce Birabwa is using her share of the compensation for her husband's death to generate rental income to support her children, ages 3 and 5.
(Robyn Dixon / Los Angeles Times)
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KASANA, Uganda — When Joyce Birabwa’s husband was killed in a suicide bomb attack in Mogadishu, 1,000 miles away, her whole world fell apart.

Left to raise two children alone, Birabwa barely had time to grieve before discovering her in-laws had plans that would leave her penniless.

First, they grabbed the land and cows her husband, Eriya Kabuye, kept in a rural village outside the central Ugandan town where the couple rented a house.

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And then there was the compensation for the 2010 death of Kabuye, 27, a Ugandan soldier who served in an international peacekeeping force in Somalia. Her brother-in-law claimed the entire $50,000 payment and she learned about it only when a relative heard him boasting about the money in a local bar.

In Uganda, a conservative, God-fearing society, women have few financial protections or rights. A 1904 inheritance law provides only 15% of a man’s estate to his widow if he leaves no will; it hasn’t been amended in more than 40 years. The law also gives a man’s home and land to his sons or brothers.

So when her brother-in-law seized all her husband’s land and 12 cows, “there was nothing I could do,” Birabwa said. But after a grueling two-year struggle, Birabwa eventually did manage to receive $24,000 in compensation from AMISOM, the African Union force fighting Al Qaeda-linked rebels in Somalia.

“We haggled over it for a very long time. I just wanted to end it. I was fed up,” she said, explaining why she accepted less than half of the $50,000.

Birabwa’s mother, Jane Nakiganda, 48, incandescent with rage when she heard that her daughter’s in-laws were planning to grab the compensation, was responsible for getting the initial tip and urging her daughter to react.

“I said, ‘We are not going to take this lying down.’ I said, ‘Don’t just sit there. Get out and get what’s your right.’

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“I’m old enough to have seen things like this happen all my life,” Nakiganda, 48, added. “When a woman loses her husband, she’s the one who suffers.”

Uganda, like many other African nations, remains a largely male-dominated society, in which a widow is “left at the mercy of her husband’s line and his heir,” according to a 2010 study by academics Florence Asiimwe of Uganda’s Makerere University and Owen Crankshaw of the University of Cape Town in South Africa.

A U.S. State Department human rights report on Uganda for 2011 says nearly half the nation’s widows are dispossessed of all or some of the family property after their husbands die.

The dominance of conservative religious groups, including the Catholic Church, Uganda’s largest, has helped suffocate efforts at reform. Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, a conservative traditionalist who has been in power since 1986, also has quashed efforts to pass laws protecting women.

Last month, he dashed the hopes of activists with an attack on a proposed bill that would grant women equal rights in marriage and divorce. The legislation, recently debated in parliament, has failed to pass since the 1960s.

In a statement to party lawmakers, Museveni supported traditional inheritance and divorce laws.

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“I do not like women who pollute our women emancipation movement by introducing elements of mercenerism [sic] in marriages,” he said, referring to the provisions that would allow women to claim a share of marital property after divorce. Cooking and cleaning shouldn’t entitle them to marital property after divorce, he said.

“The greatest point in all this is not to antagonize our pre-capitalist traditional societies with the ultramodern liberal ideas of the elite,” Museveni said.

The bill would also prohibit the compulsory payment of goats and cows in exchange for a bride; prevent forced marriages; ban “widow inheritance,” in which a woman can be forced to marry her brother-in-law; and outlaw marital rape. Museveni argued that Uganda was not ready for many of the proposed changes.

“To go into marital rape will involve us [in] litigations for which we have no witnesses,” he said.

Rita Aciro of the Uganda Women’s Network said women have been struggling since the 1950s for laws providing equality in marriage, divorce and inheritance.

“In Africa, and Uganda in particular, people want to use religion and culture and male dominance to undermine the rights of women, particularly in the home sphere and the domestic sphere,” Aciro said.

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She said many Ugandan women in traditional rural settings are unaware of the rights they do have. “Because of our socialization, many women still believe that they’re lesser beings than men in terms of power relations.”

With two children, ages 3 and 5, Joyce Birabwa has already spent all but $4,200 of her share of the compensation, buying land and building four houses, which are nearly complete. She plans to live in one and rent out the others, bringing in about $190 a month, enough to support her family. Next, she says, she hopes to open a beauty salon.

“I’m sure the project will help the children. They won’t go without meals,” she said.

That’s better than many Ugandan widows have it, she said.

“It would have been worse if I hadn’t received a single penny. At least I got something.”

robyn.dixon@latimes.com

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