KABAROLE DISTRICT TRAVEL INFORMATION
LOCATION
Kabarole district is located in the western part
of Uganda, some 320 km south-west of Kampala. Kabarole has a total
area of 1,844.25 sq km of which 137, 802 hectares is covered by
forests. Kabarole borders the districts of Bundibugyo in the west
and north, Kasese and Kamwenge in the south and Kyenjojo in the
East.
HEALTH
Kabarole district has three hospitals which are
government aided - Buhanga, Virika and Kabarole- all of them situated
in Fort Portal Municipality. They are referral hospitals and serve
five districts namely Kasese, Bundibugyo, Kamwenge, Kyenjojo and
Kabarole. But sometimes patients come from as far as Kibaale district
for treatment.
The district takes health as an important and sensitive
sector because it determines the productivity of the society.
Hence, with government support, it has opened up 17 health centres,
11 of them at parish levels. It has 13 health centres each manned
by a qualified medical worker.
AGRICULTURE
Agriculture is the heart of the district’s
economy. The district grows both food crops and cash crops. The
common food crops include maize, finger millet, beans, bananas,
cassava, yams, potatoes, cabbages and tomatoes.
Despite the fact that most farmers practice a subsistence
type of farming, there is always some surplus that is sold to
both internal and external markets.
The cash crops include tea and Robusta coffee which
contribute a substantial percentage to the
National economy. The district is also among the
few districts in Uganda which grow high quality tea, a huge percentage
of which is sold for cash.
Tea plantation in Kabarole District.
The land is very fertile and the Mountain Rwenzori ranges that
can be accessed from the district provide a favorable atmosphere
for farming.
Livestock is the second economic activity to crop
production. Cattle are the main livestock item but poultry and
goat keeping are widespread too. They provide a significant supply
of animal proteins and also serve as a source of income.
There is also pig rearing particularly in areas
with land shortages and around heavily populated centres.
The district also has benefited from the 1,187 colonial
coffee trees per sub-county from the Uganda Coffee Development
Authority to help revive coffee growing that had been affected
by the coffee wilt disease.
The agriculture sector is, however, affected by
the problem of low funding from the government, which has made
the extension services inefficient. Lack of hybrid seeds and fertilizers
as well as long distances to the market for some commodities are
also challenges in the agriculture sector.
EDUCATION
Just like other districts in the country, Kabarole
district has successfully increased the enrollment in primary
schools following introduction of the government’s Universal
Primary Education (UPE) programme.
Currently, the district has 119 primary schools, 24 secondary
schools, three teacher training colleges and one national technical
institute at Kichwamba.