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Episode details

World Service,04 Nov 2017,26 mins

Uganda’s Refugee Entrepreneurs

Global Business

Available for over a year

Uganda has taken in more than a million South Sudanese refugees. Many have lost almost everything. So how do they get back on their feet? For some of them the answer is to set up a small business. But doing that in a refugee settlement, when you have no capital and many of your customers have no money, is no easy task. Yet markets are sprouting up across the refugee settlements of northern Uganda. There are stalls selling eggs, vegetables, mobile phone cards, jeans; and there are even hairdressers and photocopying services in small shacks, where both the refugees and the local Ugandan population can trade. So how have these places come to existence? How have they grown out of what very recently was untamed African bush land? As John Murphy discovers, it's a story of entrepreneurship, sacrifice, taking a gamble and simple necessity. Produced and presented by John Murphy Photo: 22 year old Aida who sells avocados, onions and bananas, to make money to pay for further education and training. Credit: BBC

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