Before landscape restoration intervention measures started on the ground, casual workers were mobilized and sensitized on landscape restoration measures especially on radical & progressive terraces, tree planting, gully rehabilitation, riverbank protection and other Soil and Water Management Measures in 5 villages of Murunda Sector: Karumbi, Satinsyi, Kajugujugu, Nyenyeri and Karuruma.
The community was empowered to apply adaptation measures on climate change including trees planting, terracing and water harvesting techniques.
Categories identified include people with disabilities, historically marginalized peoples, genocide survivors and other vulnerable groups. There is a plan to help them graduate out of poverty. The plan includes prioritizing them during job recruitment in the Sebeya project, sensitizing them to save some of the money earned and set up small businesses, helping them to identify plots for use in small scale agricultural activities and enterprises and giving them livestock.
Awareness meetings have been conducted in Murunda Sector with local leaders to discuss their role in community landscape restoration approaches.
Appropriate sites for tanks installation for rain water harvesting were assessed in Kajugujugu, Karumbi and Nyenyeri in Murunda sector in Sebeya up-stream Catchment.
Villages and cooperatives leaders were mobilized on the adaptation measures relevant to farm productivity and household income generation and were requested to mobilize the farmers in their respective villages and cooperatives to use them. This kind of Training of Trainers (ToT) methods was used because it was not possible to organize community meetings due to COVID- 19.
Five best performing crops were identified in Karumbi, Nyenyeri, Kajugujugu, Karuruma and Satinsyi of Murunda sector of Rutsiro District. Those crops are: Peas, Irish Potato, Beans, Maize and Wheat. In Bambiro village of Muhanda Sector in Ngororero district, three crops: Maize, Irish Potato and Beans were identified. 650 Farmers/Households adopted resilient measures in Murunda Sector of Rutsiro district.
Community mobilization activities within Rubavu, Rutsiro, Nyabihu, and Ngororero districts of Sebeya Catchment encourage community members to actively engage in the participatory planning of landscape restoration and integrated water resources management measures.
Nyiranzabarantuma Claudine, a Rubavu resident taking part in the construction of radical terraces, tells of how the Sebeya catchment landscape restoration and soil erosion control measures such as terracing, agroforestry, and buffer strips contribute to protecting their crops, their domestic animals and even their own lives. She says every rainy season they were victims of Sebeya floods. "Today, we hope that when the project is completed, excess run-off water will no longer be the cause of production losses or deaths," says Claudine.
For Mwanzimwabo Aloys, a resident of Ngororero, income earned through participating in the Sebeya Project matters greatly to him. But, he insists, the opportunity to be involved in activities designed to save the lives of his community matters more. "We have participated in several meetings about this project at different levels where we’ve learned about its objectives and engaged in the planning and implementation process. We were able to ask questions and receive corresponding answers, share our suggestions, which were valued. Today, there is a good, common understanding of the project. We feel fully engaged in executing and maintaining the project's activities," says Aloys.
As far as community mobilization and engagement are concerned, RWARRI has conducted several meetings with local authorities, farmer representatives, and agriculture promoters at the district, sector, cell, and village levels where interactions focused on raising awareness of the Sebeya catchment restoration leading to gaining community members full engagement and feelings of ownership. As a result, community members are mobilized to engage in measures to control erosion by creating trenches, constructing radical and progressive terraces, planting agroforestry trees, planting grass for soil protection and fodder for animals and maintaining existing drainage canals.
Farmers are mobilized to adopt climate-smart agriculture practices such as applying organic manure, mulching, crop rotation, planting on time as well as measures such as rainwater harvesting. Through this engagement farmers have developed increased respect for authorities, Farmer Field School facilitators, agriculture promoters as well as experts in agriculture and livestock husbandry, seeing them as partners in improving their livelihoods and well-being.