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Can Pokémon get the World to Care about Syria?

Pokémon Go became a global craze this year, but one artist from Aleppo, Syria, asked: Could Pokémon get the world to care about Syria?

Khaled Akil took AFP images of children in Syria and superimposed characters from the game creating Pokémon Go Syria, to remind the world that not all children are playing.

“It’s hard when you see a kid, and instead of going to school he is just standing in a shelter – shaking,” Mr Akil told Peace News.

“No matter which part of the city, or opposition, or regime – a kid is a kid, he’s an innocent.”

Mr Akil said he was overwhelmed with the response to his work, and that he didn’t anticipate this much global focus when he released the series.

“The role of any artist is to express his or her feelings, through art, and basically that’s what I felt, Mr Akil said.

“I did not aim to get anything out of it – it was just what I felt.”

Mr Akil has fled to Turkey because of the war, but he said he hopes to return to his homeland.

“For Syria I hope this war will end soon,” he said.

“Sooner or later, I and other Syrians will return back, and we will build it again.”

To see more of Mr Akil’s work, visit his website here.

Why did Colombia Reject Peace Deal?

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A historic peace agreement was reached this week between the Government of Colombia and the FARC-EP, offering an end to the longest-running armed conflict in the Americas, but the accord was rejected by the Colombian people.

A national vote saw the peace agreement rejected by a narrow margin. The pre-count reported the “no” vote at 50.22 percent, ahead of the “yes” vote at 49.77, from 99 percent of the polling stations, according to Colombia’s election authority.

Voters turned to social media to explain their reasons for voting down the peace accord. Many argued that they supported peace in Colombia, but that the terms of the agreement were too lenient on the rebels involved. Voters like Jorge Eduardo Arango were angered by comments that Colombia had voted ‘against peace’.

“Saying that No vote is against peace is like saying that Si vote is against justice. Both inappropriate,” Mr Eduardo Arango said.

Another voter explained “We didn’t vote no to peace. If it were that simple, everyone would vote for yes. We voted no to corruption and injustice.”

Many also voiced their disappointment with the result. Bogotá resident and reporter Mayra Báez Jimeno tweeted: “I keep seeing the data of the vote from the towns that HAVE lived war. They are all up 80% yes. I feel like we failed them.”

The war between the Colombian government and the rebel group FARC-EP (Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia – People’s Army or Fuerzas armadas revolucionarias de Colombia) has raged for 52 years, spanning several generations.

Approximately 16.9% of the population in Colombia are direct victims of the war, and between 1958 and 2013 an estimated 220,000 people died (177,307 civilians and 40,787 fighters). More than five million civilians were forced from their homes between 1985 and 2012 – the world’s second largest population of IDPs. The negotiations that eventually led to the peace agreement began in 2012, and took a pain-staking four years to complete.

The peace accord was signed on Monday, September 26th, in Cartagena, by Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos and FARC leader Rodrigo Londoño (known as Timochenko). The success of the accord hinged on how the state choose to address the needs of people affected by the civil war, and the deal divided voters (only a 40 percent turnout) almost evenly. The ballot was heavily shaped by politics in the country. President Santos campaigned for the accord’s approval, while his main political rival, former president Álvaro Uribe, campaigned against it. Uribe, and other critics claim the deal favors FARC leaders, pointing to guerrilla warfare tactics FARC used in the conflict.

Chief negotiator for the Colombian government, Humberto de la Calle, said that the accord was the best possible, although it required compromise from all parties.

“Surely the accord we’ve achieved isn’t a perfect accord,” he said. “We all probably would have wanted something more. We here at the table would have wanted something more. But the accord achieved here is the viable accord, the best possible accord.”

Under the peace accord, the FARC would have transitioned to a political party, and be given a limited number of non-voting representatives in Congress. Rebel commanders would eventually be allowed to run for office (as full representatives) if they were cleared of any criminal charges and war crimes. The FARC promised to demobilize and disarm its 7,000 fighters, monitored by the United Nations, within 180 days. A smaller ELN rebel group is still active in the country, as are right-wing paramilitary groups.

The European Union had announced they would suspend the FARC from their list of terrorist organizations, and representatives from the US said the status of FARC would be reviewed by the US State Department.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry traveled to Cartagena ‎for the signing of the peace accord earlier in the week, and met with victims of the conflict. He said that Colombia had many challenges ahead, but that the peace accord marked the beginning of many opportunities.

“Peace is hard work,” he said. “Anybody can pick up a gun, blow things up, hurt other people, but it doesn’t take you anywhere. What life is really all about is trying to build community and trying to help make life better for everybody around you.”

“Think of the violence that has taken so many lives and held Colombia back from growing, developing, and becoming a country that lives in peace and stability every single day.”

What is Peace Journalism?

Have you noticed that news media often cover war and violence, but rarely peace and reconciliations?

“Very rarely do I see things which I think are balanced,” Peace Process Consultant Paul Clifford said in the film Peace Journalism in the Philippines.

“The media unfortunately, in many instances, I think have got sucked into this notion that it’s all about the war on terror,” he said.

But a new style of conflict reporting is emerging. Peace Journalism is a way of reporting war in a way that aims to balance sensationalist stories.

Dr Johan Galtung founded the field of Peace Studies, and has been working on Peace Journalism since 1960. It is now taught, and practiced, world-wide. He said Peace Journalism is a way of “counter-acting” mainstream media.

“Above all,” he told Peace News, “telling the positive stories.”

The field is about approaching war-reporting with peace in mind, according to leading figures like Dr Jake Lynch from the University of Sydney’s Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies.

“There are many different ways of reporting conflicts,” Dr Lynch told WACC Global.

“What we say is that in some cases you can report them in such a way as to create opportunities for societies at large to consider and value non-violent responses to conflict.”

Dr Julia Hoffmann told UPeace that journalists do have an impact on conflict, and that cannot be ignored.

“Journalists are party to the conflicts they cover – whether they want to [be] or not,” she said.

Peace Journalism is not always easy. Dr Annabel McGoldrick, from the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies, admitted it can time-consuming.

“Reaching people in remote areas and hearing what they have to say is, by definition difficult,” she said in her film with Dr Lynch, Peace Journalism in the Philippines.

“It can’t be done every time something happens.”

But it is possible.

Dr Steven Youngblood, director of the Center for Global Peace Journalism, said that the style of reporting isn’t just relevant to reporting on direct violence, and can be applied to any form of conflict. Peace Journalism can even be used to cover domestic politics, including elections.

His advice for applying Peace Journalism closer to home?

“Don’t just report about polls and surveys – and this is a big problem with American media, who particularly in this election cycle (with Donald Trump) have become obsessed with polls and so on,” he said.

“We wouldn’t suggest that you don’t report polls and surveys, but that when you over-report them as a consequence you end up under-reporting issues that really matter to the public.”

Peace Journalism means less sensation, and more context, so citizens can understand the bigger picture and make informed decisions.

Can Theater Help Resolve Conflict?

While much of the world’s focus on conflict is on the most violent stages and the immediate peace negotiations necessary to stop war, there is very little attention paid to preventing violent conflicts before they start and making sure conflicts that have ended do not start again.

One powerful way peace-builders are promoting non-violence and re-uniting divided groups is through theater.

In South Sudan, international organisation Search for Common Ground is using participatory theater to diffuse tensions between groups in refugee camps.

The beauty of participatory theater is that the issues dealt with come from the communities watching, and are very relevant for the audience.

“In this type of theater you speak to audiences and learn about the problems that exist within a community,” said Search for Common Ground actor Micheal Franco Ladu Wani.

“Then you put it into a form of drama and present it as a subject to the audience, allowing them to provide solutions, instead of bringing your own solutions to them,” he said.

In Yemen, theater has been a useful tool on the ground, despite horrific conditions. Entrenched violence, and the direct impact on children in particular, is a major concern in Yemen, with one English teacher from Sana’a saying that the “school environment and community as a whole are overwhelmed with violence”.

However puppet shows and games have proven to be effective in addressing the social norms of violence in schools, and encourage children to look for non-violent solutions in their everyday encounters.

“We are working in education, working with community dialogue, working with awareness raising and on child protection, working with youth, trying to maintain that social cohesion, trying to focus people’s energy at a local level, at a very local level,” said Search for Common Ground country director Shoqi A. Maktary.

“In such an environment, where people hear the aeroplanes circling around their heads, and they still go to school, they still have fun in the school and learn something – that means a lot,” he said.

Footage courtesy of Search for Common Ground.

The Other Refugee Crisis

While we often hear of Syrian refugees migrating to Western countries, mainstream media rarely covers the story of those refugees in developing countries, such as Uganda from South Sudan. Peace News reporter Ochan Hannington spoke to South Sudanese refugees who have fled, and brings us their stories.