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In Uganda, people with disabilities are largely overlooked by humanitarian aid

Rights
Uganda

Thousands of refugees with disabilities have been excluded from food aid. This silent crisis is worsening every day.

Three people, two women and a man, are sitting in a circle on plastic chairs, talking.

Nina* during her interview for HI’s survey. | © HI / 2025

More than 1.9 million people have found refuge in Uganda, fleeing conflicts in South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Sudan. But since May 2025, a massive reduction in food aid from the World Food Program (WFP) has disrupted their daily lives.

A study carried out by HI among 1,280 refugees living with a disability in eight camps across the country reveals the scale of the tragedy: 42% of households with children with disabilities and 35% of people with disabilities have been excluded from all food aid.

Thousands of people without resources

This exclusion is the result of a new categorization system introduced to address the drastic reduction in funding. Under this system, refugees are now classified by "priority", and those with the lowest priority - grouped in category 3, which represents 63% of refugees - no longer receive any food support.

In camps that are no longer accepting new refugees, the situation is even more alarming: more than half (54%) of households with children with disabilities and 52% of adults with disabilities are completely left out in the cold.

Lives turned upside down overnight

In Nakivale, Jeanne*, 55, fled the DRC with her husband and their children, where she was injured by bullets and sexually abused. Jeanne now has difficulty getting around and is undergoing rehabilitation. Their meager income, derived from a small solar panel used to charge the neighborhood's telephones, now only allows them to eat once a day - sometimes less. The children have had to leave school to work in the fields.

In Kyangwali, Paul*, 45, who has paralysis, lives with his wife and their three children. Since the end of food aid, he has been unable to repair his tricycle, which is essential for his mobility. His wife can no longer look for work, having become his sole caretaker. The family survives only with the help of neighbors or by begging in the markets.

Like them, 31% of category 3 refugees say they have no way of coping with the situation. The rest try to survive by precarious means: 30% turn to agriculture, 20% do casual labor, and 11% resort to so-called "negative" strategies, such as begging or selling their basic possessions, with some even considering returning to dangerous areas.

A silent but massive crisis

Behind these percentages are thousands of people in need, already scarred by trauma, whose daily lives have been plunged into extreme poverty. Nearly 9 out of 10 refugees living with a disability and excluded from aid express the wish to appeal, but most will not be able to receive help until new funding is allocated.

While new refugees continue to arrive - more than 118,000 between January and July 2025 - only 12% of the funding needed for the year has been secured to date. In the meantime, entire lives are frozen in anguish and hunger.

* First names have been changed to ensure safety and anonymity.

Date published: 07/16/25

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