Thank you John A Jackson and Peter Odama for holding these discussions;I 
assumed this is the  kind of brainstorming sessions on development we could  
indulge in and get many on board in promoting the ideas that will  influence 
policy towards our side;I believe we need to  involve the district authorities 
as concerned citizens and  constructively engage with them what their 
priorities are. I  think the idea of a think tank and lobby for West Nile is  
good; we have to influence the policy makers, we need to  start with the local 
governments and push this through a  bottom-up approach. Someone, here needs to 
compile the  development ideas articulated here and take it up with the  people 
who can make things happen; there're many  competing  priorities, funding 
allocations are very  stringent and if we don't push hard then ours will fall 
far  behind on the priority list.

 As regards Peter's question,I tried to attach  the CAA Master plan  but the 
limitations on the size of messages we can post here does not permit me to do 
so, so I recommend you access and download it from 
here:http://caa.co.ug/index.php?option=com_phocadownload&view=category&id=18&Itemid=81,
 but I doubt if it gives you anything on the compensation methodology. Please 
note that this is a public document and anyone can access it, there is 
absolutely no restrictions in accessing it.

Regarding the web link dated 18 July 2013 you provided I can only comment that  
it is mainly a problem of working out the necessary  compensation package with 
the communities who are likely to  be affected by this project, but later 
events show that this  has changed since.

I haven't done any research on the issues regarding  compensation but the 
latest here is from 15 October 
2015:http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/Arua-airfield-land-owners-to-receive-compensation/-/688334/2913326/-/mfrwk3/-/index.html,
 you can read and research more on the latest information  and I certainly 
believe the district authorities may already  have the latest in this aspect. 
The story in the above link  seems to confirm that the 270 landowners  around 
Arua  Aerodrome are to receive Shs6.5b as compensation from the  Civil Aviation 
Authority (CAA) for their land offered for expansion and upgrading of the 
facility and the CAA Manager  of Up Country airports seemed to confirm that.

 As at that time, the residents had on September 27,2015  given a 10-day 
ultimatum to CAA to pay them or they withdraw  their offer of land but it 
appears the money issues  regarding compensation may afterall have been 
resolved  because I don't hear of it these days ?

 I think one of the prominent professionals in the legal  fraternity has been 
handling this case for the affected  communities and I would therefore not 
expect us to drag  their name here for customer-client confidentiality reasons !


Milton Anguyo
 
 Arua,Uganda

--------------------------------------------
On Fri, 8/4/16, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: WestNileNet Digest, Vol 92, Issue 8
 To: [email protected]
 Date: Friday, 8 April, 2016, 12:01
 
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    1. Analysis of issues (JohnAJackson)
    2. Re: Analysis of issues (Peter Odama)
 
 
 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 Message: 1
 Date: Thu, 7 Apr 2016 14:24:55 -0500
 From: JohnAJackson <[email protected]>
 To: "[email protected]"
 <[email protected]>
 Subject: [WestNileNet] Analysis of issues
 Message-ID:
    
 <CAAAQbE1_uhQ3RQD88L2PNWaTJ3QqHQeK7Mz+uWny7bSTZ=w...@mail.gmail.com>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
 
 Dear Milton Anguyo,
 I really like your technical analysis of the Arua airport
 physical
 structure. Big projects start from a concept paper that is
 distilled by a
 steering committee. Your analysis of the airport could
 simply be taken as a
 serious concept paper to stimulate further discussion with
 various
 stakeholders including our elected representatives from this
 region.
 
 Experience has taught us that a lot of mega projects take a
 long time to
 execute. First,  there is the lobbying processes that
 takes many years
 until we get a buy in from somebody who finally says, lets
 get this work
 done. Second, there is bilateral money hunting from a donor
 country, which
 in itself takes another many years. Third,  there is
 feasibility study that
 consumes another junk of time. Fourth, there is the start of
 actual project
 and construction phase that could take many years.
 
 Charles Male put it rightly, there has been serious brain
 drain from the
 region to the south or other parts of Uganda, DR Congo or
 South Sudan in
 search of jobs/basic survival. These migrations are
 inevitable human
 pattern of life that exists in almost every society. Human
 beings have been
 migrating in search of resources for thousands of years. We
 can only
 reverse this process by creating tangible attractive jobs
 that can retain
 people to stay in the region. To achieve this goal requires
 serious private
 investment either by the people from the West Nile region,
 foreign
 investment and revitalization of the economy that collapsed
 since 1970's.
 
 Although many of us have migrated to work in different
 places far from West
 Nile region where we were born, perhaps it would be very
 important for us
 to figure out some practical ways we can encourage each
 other and
 articulate strategies for serious economic development of
 the region.
 Assuming we had a consortium where we work and collaborate
 effectively as a
 team, we could augment the efforts of local leaders in the
 region. Bring
 strategic ideas of development to our elected
 representatives who can
 pursue some of these ideas with various ministries. If we
 have good plans
 we can bring forward to the government, a lot of things may
 get done. Mind
 you, the government has its own priorities. There have been
 some instances
 where money for development in this region was returned to
 the National
 Treasury because the money for projects was not used. 
 Perhaps if we all
 teamed up well and identified key projects that needs to be
 implemented by
 the local districts, we could avoid  money being
 returned to the Treasury.
 
 While we all recognize manpower development short comings in
 the region,
 the big question for all of us to think about is how do we
 come together to
 support the efforts of the people on the ground who are
 trying their best?
 In this forum, we have expertise from various disciplines.
 if we could form
 a consortium (resource pool) of consultants,this would be
 extremely useful
 to this region we all belong to even we though we do not
 live it everyday.
 JJ
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 ------------------------------
 
 Message: 2
 Date: Thu, 7 Apr 2016 16:32:58 -0700
 From: Peter Odama <[email protected]>
 To: A Virtual Network for friends of West Nile <[email protected]>
 Subject: Re: [WestNileNet] Analysis of issues
 Message-ID:
     <CAAxi7y=a4cz2rg-f0c25yruk1tzr-ugbrzkg--xfcs1tj_z...@mail.gmail.com>
 Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
 
 #Milton is there way to get to know and access as a national
 company the
 concept paper and master plan with the cost of compensation
 of land owners
 on this plot......it appears both political will and lack
 compensation has
 hit a snag.
 
 Some investors through local companies networks and proper
 MoU signed with
 government could easily invest and with an aim of future
 returns of
 investment, only if government is  open to such moves
 publicly ...read this
 
http://www.monitor.co.ug/SpecialReports/Arua-airport-project-stalls-over-land-conflictShut-gateway/-/688342/1918210/-/item/0/-/uk25lh/-/index.html
 
 Odama
 On Apr 7, 2016 10:25 PM, "JohnAJackson" <[email protected]>
 wrote:
 
 > Dear Milton Anguyo,
 > I really like your technical analysis of the Arua
 airport physical
 > structure. Big projects start from a concept paper that
 is distilled by a
 > steering committee. Your analysis of the airport could
 simply be taken as a
 > serious concept paper to stimulate further discussion
 with various
 > stakeholders including our elected representatives from
 this region.
 >
 > Experience has taught us that a lot of mega projects
 take a long time to
 > execute. First,  there is the lobbying processes
 that takes many years
 > until we get a buy in from somebody who finally says,
 lets get this work
 > done. Second, there is bilateral money hunting from a
 donor country, which
 > in itself takes another many years. Third,  there
 is feasibility study that
 > consumes another junk of time. Fourth, there is the
 start of actual project
 > and construction phase that could take many years.
 >
 > Charles Male put it rightly, there has been serious
 brain drain from the
 > region to the south or other parts of Uganda, DR Congo
 or South Sudan in
 > search of jobs/basic survival. These migrations are
 inevitable human
 > pattern of life that exists in almost every society.
 Human beings have been
 > migrating in search of resources for thousands of
 years. We can only
 > reverse this process by creating tangible attractive
 jobs that can retain
 > people to stay in the region. To achieve this goal
 requires serious private
 > investment either by the people from the West Nile
 region, foreign
 > investment and revitalization of the economy that
 collapsed since 1970's.
 >
 > Although many of us have migrated to work in different
 places far from
 > West Nile region where we were born, perhaps it would
 be very important for
 > us to figure out some practical ways we can encourage
 each other and
 > articulate strategies for serious economic development
 of the region.
 > Assuming we had a consortium where we work and
 collaborate effectively as a
 > team, we could augment the efforts of local leaders in
 the region. Bring
 > strategic ideas of development to our elected
 representatives who can
 > pursue some of these ideas with various ministries. If
 we have good plans
 > we can bring forward to the government, a lot of things
 may get done. Mind
 > you, the government has its own priorities. There have
 been some instances
 > where money for development in this region was returned
 to the National
 > Treasury because the money for projects was not
 used.  Perhaps if we all
 > teamed up well and identified key projects that needs
 to be implemented by
 > the local districts, we could avoid  money being
 returned to the Treasury.
 >
 > While we all recognize manpower development short
 comings in the region,
 > the big question for all of us to think about is how do
 we come together to
 > support the efforts of the people on the ground who are
 trying their best?
 > In this forum, we have expertise from various
 disciplines. if we could form
 > a consortium (resource pool) of consultants,this would
 be extremely useful
 > to this region we all belong to even we though we do
 not live it everyday.
 > JJ
 >
 >
 > _______________________________________________
 > WestNileNet mailing list
 > [email protected]
 > http://orion.kym.net/mailman/listinfo/westnilenet
 >
 > WestNileNet is generously hosted by INFOCOM http://www.infocom.co.ug/
 >
 > The above comments and data are owned by whoever posted
 them (including
 > attachments if any). The List's Host is not responsible
 for them in any way.
 > _______________________________________________
 >
 >
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