BUSIA DISTRICT TRAVEL INFORMATION
BUSIA DISTRICT
The district is bordered by Bugiri district to the
west, Tororo district to the north and the Republic of Kenya to
the east. Busia district, which is at the Uganda-Kenya border
in the eastern region, was originally part of Tororo district.
It became a district on March 20 1997. The district has a total
road network of 710 km composed of 30km of tarmac roads and 56
km earth / gravel. Community roads cover about 200 km, while feeder
road coverage is 251.3 km or 62 percent of the district, according
to January 2003 figures from the district’s Works department.
Busia District has a total land area of 743 sq. km, of which 611.3
sq. km. is arable land. The average farm size is 2.5 ha, and commercial
agriculture uses up to 0.5 percent of this land.
POPULATION
According to the 1991 housing and population census,
Busia district had a total population of 163,597. This was composed
of 79,218 males and 84,379 females. The preliminary results of
the 2002 housing and population census indicate that the district
has a total population of 227,561, of whom males are 109,960 and
females 117,601 .
The main languages spoken in Busia are Samia-Lugwe, Ateso, Swahili,
Lugisu, Japadhola, Lusoga, Luganda, Lugwere and Ngakarimojong.
AGRICULTURE
The major crops grown in Busia include millet, maize,
ground nuts, cassava, cotton, sweet potatoes, soya beans, coffee,
and sorghum.
HEALTH
The district does not have a hospital, which means
it has to depend on neighbouring districts for secondary health
care services. This calls for an efficient referral system (e.g.
radio communication, ambulances, etc), which are all lacking.
There are 18 health centres in the district. Of them, Masafu and
Busia are categorised at Health Centre IV; Dabani, Busitema, Buteba,
Bulumbi, Lumino, Lunyo, Buhehe and Masaba as Health Centre III.
Hasyule, Buwembe, Lunyo, Bumunji, Lumino, Sibona, Habuleke and
Busime are
Health Centre II.
It is estimated that only 37 percent of the entire district population
was with in a radius of less than 2 km from a health facility.
The furthest some people have to travel to get to a facility is
10 km.
The district has 246 functional boreholes and 113
protected springs. Safe water coverage is 51.6 percent in the
district and 44 percent in rural areas. These statistics were
based on the assumption that one borehole water point serves 300
people and one protected spring services 150 people. Average walking
distance to the nearest source of water is 0.5 km during wet season
and 3 km during the dry season. It is further estimated that 56
percent of the rural population is within a distance of less than
0.5 km and 88 percent within a distance of less than two kilometers
from a water source for human consumption. 79 percent of the urban
population is within a distance of less than 0.5 km from a water
source for human consumption.