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85-year-old widow recovers her grabbed land after daughter-in-law convicted

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By Witness Radio Team

Epronanci Eden’s prayers have finally been answered after her daughter-in-law was arrested and arraigned before the Chief Magistrate’s Court in Oyam District for assaulting her over land.

The court convicted and sentenced Joy Amolo to a caution, but the real victory for the 85-year-old widow was the return of her grabbed land.

The widow, the sole surviving child of her late father Okello Adong, had inherited a 50-acre large piece of land in Adebe Cell, Western Ward, Kamdini Town Council in Oyam District along the Gulu-Kampala Highway.

Blessed with 15 children, the mother had given portions of the land to her six surviving children, including five girls and one boy. However, the third last born child named Lawrence Opio, had become greedy and grabbed part of the land, thinking his mother was too old to fight back.

“I inherited a large piece of land in Kamdini Town Council along Gulu-Kampala Highway. Of course, I got married and produced 15 children, including eight boys and seven girls. When my husband, who was a soldier called Charles Edonga died several years ago, I decided to return to my father’s land,” says Eden.

Eden’s children grew up in Kamdini and the widow had given them portions of land where they could survive.

“But as they grew and became adults, my only surviving son became big-headed and he wanted now to own everything seeing that I’m already too old to face him,” says the widow, adding that she went through a lot of violence which was being perpetrated by both her son and the daughter-in-law.

With the help of the local leaders, the widow lodged a complaint at Kamdini Police Station in July 2024.

In August 2024, police leadership in Kamdini then referred the case to Redeem International, a nonprofit organisation that partners with local law enforcement to prevent violence and exploitation against widows, widowers and orphans.

“When we accepted the case in March this year and took it over, we supported the police in their investigations and in the process of the investigations, we found that the widow was assaulted by her daughter-in-law. Her son also took some pieces of land that belonged to the widow and he also started the process of titling the land in his name,” says Counsel Prossy Akello, an attorney working with Redeem International.

“So, when the mother objected, that is when now the son’s wife – the daughter-in-law – ended up beating her (Eden).”

In September 2025, Eden’s daughter-in-law was arrested for assault and occasioning bodily harm. She was arraigned before the Chief Magistrate’s Court in Oyam where she pleaded guilty as charged.

But then the clan leaders requested the trial magistrate to allow them first to mediate the matter since it was coming out as a result of a land dispute.

Counsel Akello says the parties were referred for mediation.  “On October 13, 2025, we came on the ground. We called the children of the widow plus the widow; the clan leaders were there. So, during the mediation, they agreed that yes, the widow was assaulted and the daughter-in-law actually asked for forgiveness,” said the lawyer.

The widow said she forgave her daughter-in-law. “I asked her to give me Shs300,000 UGX about 83.46 USD which I had spent on medical bills and she accepted. My son also agreed to return the three and half acres of land that he had earlier grabbed from me,” said the widow.

At this point, a team of lawyers at Redeem International, Lira Field Office, wrote to the Lira Zonal Lands office to stop the process of titling the land in Opio’s name.

“So, when we went back to court on December 10, 2025, of course, the daughter-in-law pleaded guilty and then she was convicted on her own plea and sentenced to a caution,” Counsel Akello says.

She adds: “And of course, she was cautioned not to come back and again disturb the mother-in-law and on December 18, 2025, we restored her back to the land.”

The widow is now overjoyed, grateful for the justice served and the return of her rightful property.

Nonetheless, the incident highlights the challenges faced by elderly parents in Uganda, who are often vulnerable to land grabbing by their own children. The widow’s courage in seeking justice and the swift action by the authorities have sent a strong message that such injustices will not be tolerated. The widow can now live out her remaining years in peace, knowing her land is secure.

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MEDIA FOR CHANGE NETWORK

Ugandan farmers take TotalEnergies’ pipeline to UK court

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Police apprehend a Ugandan activist during a protest against the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) plans in Kampala, Uganda, on 15 September, 2023. © Reuters

Four Ugandan farmers filed a case against the East African Crude Oil Pipeline (EACOP) at the UK’s High Court on Tuesday, seeking to have Ugandan constitutional, environmental and climate law applied to EACOP Ltd, the UK-registered company financing the project

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MEDIA FOR CHANGE NETWORK

Lawyers Move to Court to Stop New Luxury Tourism Projects in Maasai Mara

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A coalition of regional legal and environmental organisations has moved to court seeking to halt the approval and development of new luxury tourism facilities in the Maasai Mara National Reserve, arguing that the projects threaten one of the world’s most important wildlife ecosystems.

The petition, filed before the Environment and Land Court, seeks orders stopping further construction of high-end tourist accommodation within the reserve pending the determination of the case.

Those behind the petition include East Africa Law Society, Natural Justice, JustAct and Africa Centre for Peace and Human Rights, who have sued several government agencies and private investors involved in the developments.

Among the respondents are Marriott International, The Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, Minor Hotels, National Environment Management Authority (NEMA), Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) and the Narok County Government.

Narok Governor Patrick Ole Ntutu and the Maasai Mara National Reserve date in Narok County.
Photo| County Government of Narok / Maasai Mara National Reserve.

The petitioners contend that approvals granted for the tourism developments violated constitutional and environmental safeguards, arguing that the projects were allowed within ecologically sensitive areas meant primarily for wildlife conservation.

Court documents further claim that the developments sit close to critical wildlife habitats and migration routes linking the Maasai Mara ecosystem with Serengeti National Park.

This, according to them, potentially disrupts the annual wildebeest migration that attracts thousands of tourists every year.

They have asked the court to certify the matter as one raising substantial constitutional questions and refer it to the Chief Justice for the appointment of a five-judge bench to hear the case.

The latest legal challenge comes months after the planned opening of the luxury Ritz-Carlton safari camp sparked public debate, with conservationists raising concerns that the facility could interfere with wildlife movement near the Sand River.

At the time, the Kenya Wildlife Service dismissed claims circulating online that the camp had blocked the wildebeest migration, describing videos shared on social media as misleading.

“The Ritz-Carlton safari camp is situated within a designated tourism investment low-use zone, as provided for in the Maasai Mara National Reserve Management Plan, 2023-2032,” KWS said at the time.

The agency also maintained that camps established along the Mara, Sand and Talek rivers have historically coexisted with wildlife movements without obstructing migration.

Source: kenyans.co.ke

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More than 17,000 people in the Philippines face eviction from their ancestral land for a multimillion-dollar energy project.

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By Witness Radio Team,

In the Visayas and Mindanao regions, in the Iloilo municipality on Panay Island in the central Philippines, thousands of Indigenous Tumandok people face forced displacement as a major energy project advances through their ancestral territories.

The Jalaur River Multi-Purpose Project, a state-backed dam and hydropower initiative, has triggered fears of forced evictions affecting more than 17,000 people and has already submerged ancestral land belonging to Indigenous communities.

The Tumandok have relied on the river basin as burial grounds, fishing sites supporting their livelihoods, and sacred landscapes preserved through oral history and cultural tradition for decades.

In 2012, the Korean Export-Import Bank provided a USD 260 million loan to the Philippine government for a multi-purpose project on the Jalaur River. Authorities present the project as a long-term solution for irrigation, flood control, and hydropower generation, designed to benefit agricultural production across thousands of hectares of farmland. However, host communities say the development has come at a high human cost.

The dam project, which began in the 1960s, entered a new construction phase in 2012, triggering new waves of human rights violations, from attacks and killings to arrests, and is expected to reach full completion in 2027.

As construction progresses, Indigenous ancestral domains within the project-affected watershed—covering approximately 16,780 hectares in the Calinog component—are being impacted by the Jalaur River Multi-Purpose Project Stage II. Community leaders say this is displacing Indigenous families from their homes amid concerns over inadequate consultation and potential violations of Indigenous land rights and free, prior, and informed consent standards.

Article 19 of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples requires states to consult and cooperate in good faith with the Indigenous peoples concerned, through their own representative institutions, to obtain their free, prior, and informed consent before adopting and implementing legislative or administrative measures that may affect them.

Article 32(b) of the same declaration urges states to make consent the objective of consultation before any projects that affect Indigenous peoples’ rights to land, territory, and resources, including mining and other uses or exploitations of resources.

John Ian Alecianga, coordinator of the Jalaur River People’s Movement, says opposition to the project has drawn allegations of intimidation, killings, arrests, and a heavy security presence in affected communities.

“Mobilizing these indigenous communities to fight for their rights has come at a cost. Indigenous leaders and activists have been subjected to surveillance, harassment, and red-tagging due to their resistance to the dam,” John said in an exclusive interview with our team.

According to John, tensions escalated in December 2020 when a police attack in Tumandok communities killed at least nine Indigenous leaders and elders and led to the arrest of 16 others.

“The military was deployed, human rights were violated, many elders were killed, and others were arrested, escalating into what we call a massacre. A fake search warrant was used in a staged operation to enter the houses of the Tumandok leaders. This is how much the government has ignored the rights of the indigenous peoples from the project conception until the project implementation,” he said. “The event remains one of the most traumatic moments in the ongoing conflict around the project,” John added.

Despite pressure, Indigenous communities continue to resist eviction through local and international advocacy networks, calling for justice for those killed in 2020, recognition of their land rights, and immediate protection from further displacement.

“The people are resisting because land is their life. Without it, there will be no community. There will be no identity,” he said.

The Jalaur River People’s Movement also seeks accountability through international mechanisms, including engagement with South Korean institutions linked to project financing.

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