Why 10,000 Ugandans are eagerly serving in Iraq
Thousands of men and women from poverty-stricken Uganda risk their lives
for $600 a month
By Max Delany
The Christian Science Monitor
Kampala, Uganda – Under a relentless equatorial sun and the gaze of her
Zimbabwean instructor, Juliet Kituye quickly reassembles her AK-47. Next
to her, a young man in a ripped red T-shirt discharges imaginary rounds
at an invisible target.
On a disused soccer pitch in the suburbs of the Ugandan capital,
Kampala, 300 hopefuls are being put through rudimentary firearms
training. Many of the recruits are raw and their drills occasionally
lurch towards slapstick. One trainee lets the magazine slip out of his
automatic rifle and onto the red earth, someone else about turns right
instead of left. All of them share the same dream, however: going to
Iraq.
As President Barack Obama announces plans to withdraw US troops from
Iraq, thousands of young Ugandans are increasingly desperate to be sent
to the war-torn country. Already, the Ugandan government says there are
more than 10,000 men and women from this poverty-stricken East African
nation working as private security guards in Iraq. Hired out to
multibillion-dollar companies for hundreds of dollars a month, they risk
their lives seeking fortunes protecting US Army bases, airports, and oil
firms.
The war in Iraq is the most privatized conflict in history. Since theinvasion in 2003, the US Department of Defense has doled out contractsworth an estimated $100 billion to private firms. Covering a vast rangeof services from catering to dry cleaning to security, one in every fivedollars the US spends in Iraq ends up in the pockets of the contractors,according to a report by the Congressional Budget Office. Increasinglythese jobs have been outsourced to developing countries.
It is clear why the US contractors came to Uganda. As an impoverishedformer British colony, the country is awash with unemployed andEnglish-speaking potential recruits. Its pliant government was an earlymember of President Bush's "coalition of the willing," and with alingering 20-year insurgency, it also has a glut of experienced armyveterans, who made up the initial contingent of Ugandans in Iraq.
More important, hiring Ugandans is cheap. Since the first Ugandans weresent to Iraq in late 2005, competition from other developing countriesin Africa and the Indian subcontinent has seen the government cut theminimum wage from $1,300 to $600 a month. That compares with the $15,000that one industry insider estimated an American guard could make eachmonth. Nevertheless, competition is fierce, and for those Ugandans wholand a job, Iraq can prove a bonanza.
Paul Mugabe is back in Uganda for a month. For the past year, thesinewy, nervous young man has been guarding the American CampDiamondback at the airport in the northern Iraqi town of Mosul, and soonhe will be heading to Baghdad.
"It's not like Uganda. You sweat and sweat and sweat," says Mr. Mugabe,a former soldier in the Ugandan Army. "It is the most dangerous place inthe world. It's even worse than Congo."
With the money he's earned during those 12 months, back in his villageMugabe has built himself two houses, bought a bar, and increased theherd of cows his father left him to 30.
"You should see the size of my banana plantation," he smiles. When hereturns from another year in Iraq, he should have saved enough money tocover a wedding and the traditional bride price needed to find a prettywife, he says.
But despite his nascent business empire and hopes of love, the fact thathe is putting his life on the line to help US companies make massiveprofits is not lost on him. "If I am earning $600 a month and thesecompanies are making billions, it is not fair," he says.
For Uganda, however, another country's war on a continent far away hasproved to be lucrative. "The Iraq opportunity brings in about $90million dollars, whereas our chief export, which is coffee, brings inaround $60 or $70 million a year," says the former state minister forlabor, employment, and industrial relations, Mwesigwa Rukutana, nowminister of higher education. That figure is mostly made up ofremittances.
But domestic criticism has been fierce, with some equating the system tohuman trafficking or slavery. Reports of abuse, ranging from poorconditions and changeable contracts to sexual assault, have appeared inthe media.
"Unlike in the past when there was the slave trade, no company comeshere and recruits anyone against their wishes. It is willing worker,willing employer," Mr. Rukutana says. "If anyone thinks the conditionsthere are bad or that he is going to be exploited, no one is compellinghim to go." Rukutana says that only one Ugandan has been killed in Iraq,while others say more have died.
If anyone understands some of the hardships of working in Iraq and theindustry it's spawned, then it is Moses Matsiko. Mr. Matsiko has spentnearly four years working for a US firm in Afghanistan and Iraq. In late2006, a convoy he was escorting through the town of Fallujah wasambushed. He was shot seven times but survived. Two American colleagueshe was with were killed.
But far from shy away from the dangers of Iraq, Matsiko has embraced itsopportunities. In 2007, he started his own company to train and sendguards to Iraq and now has over 1,200 in the country.
"My experience in Iraq is that despite having been shot seven times, itis very great," he says. President Obama's withdrawal plans have cast ashadow of doubt over his future business plans. But that has just forcedMatsiko to start looking opportunities elsewhere.
"If all goes well, then I hope to be sending people to Afghanistan inthe near future," he smiles.