Uganda
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Refugees and nationals by district
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Refugee population by district
Refugee settlements
Total refugees JSON 
1,462,164
Last updated 28 Feb 2021
Source - Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 
Total refugees by month JSON  .CSV 
Refugees by district JSON 
The category "Other" includes refugees in transit/reception facilities pending relocation to settlements.
Location name Source Data date Population
Yumbe Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  16.1%
235,797
Adjumani Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  14.9%
217,387
Madi Okollo & Terego Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  13.1%
190,964
Isingiro Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  9.9%
145,411
Kikuube Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  8.6%
126,326
Kyegegwa Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  8.5%
124,601
Obongi Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  8.4%
123,132
Kampala Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  6.2%
90,712
Kamwenge Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  5.2%
75,942
Kiryandongo Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  4.9%
71,157
Lamwo Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  3.8%
55,047
Koboko Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  0.4%
5,688

Refugees by country of origin JSON  .CSV 
Country of origin Source Data date Population
South Sudan Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  61.4%
897,184
Dem. Rep. of the Congo Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  29.2%
426,605
Burundi Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  3.4%
49,834
Somalia Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  3.2%
46,146
Rwanda Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  1.2%
18,029
Eritrea Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  1.2%
17,017
Sudan Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  0.2%
3,351
Ethiopia Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  0.2%
3,303
Others Office of the Prime Minister, UNHCR, Government of Uganda 28 Feb 2021
  0.0%
695


Host population by district JSON 
Location name Source Data date Population
Kampala 29 Jan 2021
  27.8%
1,709,900
Madi Okollo & Terego 29 Jan 2021
  12.5%
770,600
Yumbe 29 Jan 2021
  11.4%
699,300
Isingiro 29 Jan 2021
  10.0%
616,700
Kamwenge 29 Jan 2021
  7.7%
475,600
Kyegegwa 29 Jan 2021
  7.7%
475,600
Kikuube 29 Jan 2021
  6.1%
376,600
Kiryandongo 29 Jan 2021
  5.2%
322,300
Koboko 29 Jan 2021
  4.4%
267,700
Adjumani 29 Jan 2021
  3.9%
237,400
Lamwo 29 Jan 2021
  2.4%
145,400
Obongi 29 Jan 2021
  0.8%
50,300

  Interactive Maps and Data Visualisations
  Latest Documents
  Highlights
Local Economic Development Strategy Launch – Moyo and Obongi Districts On 20 November, with support of their local economic development partners, UNHCR and Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), the Moyo district and Obongi district are launching their Local Economic Development (LED) Strategy. Both these districts have had mass influxes of refugees over the last few years, with over 123,000 registered refugees in Palorinya settlement, Obongi. They have formulated their five year development plans under the Comprehensive National Development Framework with a vision to have a transformed population that is productive and prosperous by 2040. The main pillars of the LED strategy are enabling infrastructure, supporting local private sector development, upgrading human capital, attracting investment and changing attitudes towards local economic development. The inclusion of refugees in the district development plans marks a watershed in the humanitarian-development nexus, and provides stakeholders with a structure to transition towards resilience building interventions. Please find more information in the uploaded LED brochure and for further details contact Teresa Ongaro (Head of Field Office, Moyo, Uganda)
13 Nov 2020
Sectors
Refugee Response Plans (RRPs)
  Upcoming Events iCal Feed  Print 
  Uganda
Worldbank country facts
Capital
Kampala
Languages
en, sw
Population
34,856,813
Area
N/A
GDP
N/A
GDP growth
N/A
Income level
N/A
Gini index
44.3
Currency
UGX
Literacy rate
N/A
   Situations related to this Country
  • Uganda - Horn of Africa Somalia Situation

    Somalia is at the heart of one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world today. Twenty years of conflict and waves of drought have uprooted a quarter of the country’s 7.5 million people. As the region faces its most severe drought in 60 years, the Somali exodus is growing fast. The refugees urgently need medical aid and high-protein, high-energy food. They also need clean water, shelter and basic services in the camps.

  • Uganda - South Sudan

    As the protracted emergency enters its sixth year, the South Sudan situation remains the largest refugee situation on the African continent. There are over 2.2 million refugees in Sudan, Uganda, Ethiopia, Kenya and the Democratic Republic of the Congo and a further 1.8 million people displaced internally in South Sudan. The situation continues to be characterized as a children’s crisis with children constituting over 65 percent of the refugee population.

  • Uganda - Burundi Situation

    Over 300,000 refugees have fled Burundi to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda, Tanzania and Uganda since April 2015. The situation in Burundi remains complex; while refugees continue to arrive throughout the region, others are deciding to return home. The Burundi refugee response remains one of the most underfunding refugee situations in the world.

  • Uganda - DRC Situation

    The on-going conflicts in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) have caused and continue to cause internal and external displacement of populations. In 2017, some 100,000 Congolese fled to neighbouring countries as refugees, due to widespread militia activities, unrest and violence, joining the 585,000 already in exile. The security conditions in DRC, especially in the eastern and central parts have continued to worsen since the beginning of 2018. Because of this, the Congolese refugee population is now among the ten largest in the world. Nearly 55 per cent are children, many crossing borders unaccompanied or separated. Existing camps and sites in many asylum countries are saturated, and available basic services are stretched to the limit. The situation requires support, adequate resources and collaboration so that effective protection and assistance can be delivered efficiently to Congolese refugees.

  • Uganda - Eradication of Statelessness in the East and Horn of Africa, and the Great Lakes Region

    Highlighting statelessness in the 12 Member States of the ICGLR, and what is being done to eradicate it. Media coverage, testimonies of stateless persons, reports on the issue and all documents pertaining to the Brazzaville Declaration process can be consulted in English, French, Portuguese and Arabic.

  • Uganda - Regional Bureau for the East and Horn of Africa, and the Great Lakes Region

    In September 2019, with the aim of bringing decision making closer to the point of delivery, UNHCR opened its Regional Bureau for the East, Horn of Africa and Great Lakes Region (EHAGL). It is located in Nairobi, Kenya and covers 11 operations: Burundi, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda. Within the EHAGL region, two situations are managed by the Bureau: the South Sudan Regional Refugee Situation and the Burundi Regional Refugee Situation. The Bureau has accountability for strategic decision-making, regional prioritization, oversight of integrity issues, and quality assurance, and possesses the technical capacity to support country operations in a wide range of sectors such as education, child protection, economic inclusion and durable solutions.


  Links
Implementing with Partners Policies and Guidance
Regulatory framework of UNHCR-Funded Projects that UNHCR and partners should adhered to.
Refugees Self-Reliance Initiative
Promoting opportunities for refugees around the world to become self-reliant and achieve a better quality of life.
UNHCR Partnership Handbook_May 2019
The handbook is intended to provide guidance for Partners on engaging and working with UNHCR. It provides information on the policies, principles and collaborative arrangements for partnering with UNHCR to protect, assist and seek solutions for refugees and other Persons of Concern. The intended users of the handbook are managers and staff of Partner organizations who implement activities and projects in partnership with UNHCR. It also provides useful guidance for UNHCR staff who are directly involved in working with Partners. The content is applicable to all UNHCR Partners, with a focus on partnering with international and national NGOs