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Myanmar: Supporting youth to build inclusive peace

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Promoting civilian and youth participation in conflict resolution is of vital importance to achieving sustainable peace in Myanmar. As the peace process itself is a long and winding road, empowering young people as well as other change-makers who can potentially find solutions to move the process forward is an important step.

Read the full story here.

People Choosing Peace: Shehu (Nigeria)

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Born into poverty in Kano, Nigeria, Shehu was recruited into a gang when he was just seven years old. Later, his friend convinced him to switch over to the gang he was in.

The gang was called Boko Haram. One night Shehu’s life changed. He saw his best friend die as a result of the violence he was involved in. This was when he decided to leave a life of violence behind. He decided to fight for peace.

Shehu wanted to help other vulnerable young people choose alternatives to violence. So he created a space where neighbourhood boys and gang members alike could come and learn the difference between boxing and fighting. A place where they could find common ground.

This is his story.

Olive oil company unites Cyprus with a ‘taste of peace’

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In 1974, Greece and Turkey both attempted to control Cyprus. Ever since the conflict, a 112-mile Green Line of ceasefire divides the island into the Greek side in the south and the Turkish side in the north. But two friends aren’t letting that stop them…

Read the full story here.

Beyond religion: Can faith be a force for peacebuilding?

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What do Desmond Tutu, Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King have in common? The iconic peacebuilders have also been religious leaders.

With many of the world’s current conflicts attributed to divisions between faiths, can religion alternatively be used to foster peace? Peace News Network attended the Pulitzer Center’s recent event, Beyond Religion, to speak with peacebuilders on how religion is being used in war zones to encourage reconciliation.

“I wouldn’t say religion in itself causes violent conflict,” says Oge Onubogu, from the United State Institute of Peace (USIP). “Having a lot of religious actors or people who practice different religions in a community, in a society is not a bad thing, but the inability to be able to manage those differences, the inability to manage that diversity effectively is what creates the challenge.”

Freelance correspondent and producer Danny Gold agrees.

“I’ve covered conflict a lot, especially ethnic and sectarian conflict, and one of the things you see is demagogues or leaders seize onto religion as a way to convince people to support them, but it’s really just about power for them, or about money or about control,” Gold says.

Gold points to the example of violent conflict in the Central African Republic in late 2013, which was understood in international media as conflict between Muslim and Christian groups.

“For the most part it wasn’t really a religious conflict,” says Gold. “It became a religious conflict because leaders exacerbated the religious divisions. They took advantage of the fact that maybe there were some differences in the communities that weren’t violent, but, once they saw that as an opportunity to rally people behind them and seize power, they used that to their advantage.”

But Onubogu says religion can also be used to unite people in reconciliation processes. USIP has been using religious connections as a key component bringing communities together in the middle belt region of Nigeria. In 1992, violent inter-religious conflict broke out in Kaduna State, killing over 2,000 people and and fueling distrust. In 2001 the neighboring Plateau State saw 5,000 people killed and 250,000 displaced.

“There was a lot of killing,” says Onubogu. “On both the Muslim side and the Christian side.

“We were able to work with clergies from the Christian side and the Muslim side,” says Onubogu. “To really understand what the drivers of the conflict were in their communities. And at the end of the day, this resulted in a peace pact in this community that ceased fighting, and this community has remained relatively stable for the past thirteen years.”

For Onubogu, and many peacebuilders, understanding a conflict and maintaining perspective is vital when looking at the relationship between religion and peace.

“I think we need to try to get to a point where we can put aside all our prejudices and we can put aside what we think about our religion, or the next person’s religion,” Onubogo says, “and just look at individuals as human beings.”

Youth gather for Latin American peace forum

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As part of its fifth iteration, the United Network of Young Peacebuilders (UNOY) brought 60 young peacebuilders together in the first Latin America regional Young Peacebuilders’ Forum in Bogotá this month. Countries represented at the regional forum, which ran from July 15 to 18, included young peacebuilders from Colombia, El Salvador, Honduras, Mexico, Venezuela, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Suriname, Brazil, Haiti, and Bolivia. Through this year’s theme— ‘Leaving No Youth Behind Through Resolution 2250 and Agenda 2030’— young peacebuilders chose to bring policy into action, to map youth engagement with Resolution 2250 and Agenda 2030, and to identify their significance for youth-led peacebuilding. The Young Peacebuilders’ regional forum followed in the spirit of this year’s High-Level Political Forum (HLPF), where 47 member states of the UN gathered in New York to discuss promoting equal and inclusive societies. Among other recommendations, young peacebuilders at the regional forum in Bogota invited their governments, INGOs, bilateral actors, and the private sector for increased efforts to foster youth inclusion in peace and development processes in Latin America, by emphasizing:

  • Zero tolerance on human rights violations: Migration crises, the rise of xenophobic regimes, and the increasing cases of assassinations of social leaders and human rights or environmental activists are some of the recent alarms of a region with a worrisome trend of human rights abuses. It is critical that governments, INGOs, bilateral actors, and the private sector in Latin America take a firm stand to include youth in all measures seeking to deescalate the deterioration of basic human rights in the region. This also includes guaranteeing the protection of young peacebuilders, and human rights or environmental activists whose lives are at risk for denouncing human rights violations.
  • Support greater funding for youth groups and youth-led initiatives at local levels, for example through supporting youth peacebuilder networks and fostering local youth leadership. This should include flexible funding structures needed to build organisational sustainability at local levels.
  • Support the establishment of inter-generational dialogue spaces to discuss challenges related to youth inclusion in peace and development processes. These dialogue platforms would enhance inter-generational participation in the policy making process and should be composed of elders, political leaders, policymakers, and youth representatives from all backgrounds—especially those most left behind.