By James Owich, KAMPALA Uganda,
Israel
Up to 47 refugees living in Uganda died by suicide in 2024, a United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) report has detailed.
The
suicide cases were recorded between January and December 2024, according to the
UN refugee agency’s 2024 suicide dashboard published on January 10, 2025.
“Generally,
14 more deaths by suicide were recorded in 2024 compared to 2023 triggered by
family disagreements, financial problems, and lack of basic needs, domestic
violence, and previous mental illness as the leading causes.”
While
85 per cent of the suicide victims were males, 15 per cent were females, with
the average age of the victims being 34. During the same period, 141 refugees
attempted to take their own lives.
The
same data states that in 2024, a total of 59 deaths by suicide were recorded,
while 47 were refugees, and 12 are said to be Ugandan nationals.
Among
the methods used in most of recorded suicide cases by refugees were hanging by
rope, poisoning, ARV drug overdose, herbal concoctions, self-immolation, and
drowning, it says.
The
UN agency and its partners working to prevent suicide among refugees said the
tragic incident was triggered by family disagreements, financial problems, and
lack of basic needs, domestic violence and mental illness. Meanwhile, 14
refugees attempted suicide more than once.
The
report further indicates that at least 12 Ugandan nationals living near the
refugee settlement camps also killed themselves during the same period.
In
total, 59 suicide cases and 190 attempted suicide cases were recorded within
the refugee settlement camps in Uganda in 2024.
In
total, 176 refugees, attempted suicide that year throughout the 11 refugee
settlements across the country.
As
per the UNHCR 2023 Situation report, at the end of 2023, over 2.2 million
refugees were spread across the neighbouring countries of the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC), Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan and Uganda while another
2.2 million South Sudanese were internally displaced.
By
the end of 2024, Uganda hosted 41 percent of the South Sudanese refugees
in the region, Sudan hosted 30 percent, Ethiopia hosted 18.5 percent, Kenya 8
percent, and the DRC 2.5 percent.
Ms
Victoria Duite, the refugee welfare council II for Palorinya refugee settlement
in Obongi district says reduced food rations and the inability to access
employment opportunities to raise money to support their children to access
education, force women and men to escape back to South Sudan while others end
up resorting to suicide.
“The
lack of livelihood opportunities combined with reductions in aid increasingly
made it impossible for parents to find money to feed their children and keep
them in school is a very big driver to suicides,” Ms Duite said.
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