PEACE BUILDING
Youths across Africa have been urged to be critical thinkers and avoid being manipulated by wrong people if they want to be great future leaders in their communities.
Participants from different African countries paying their respects to the victims of the Rwandan genocide. (Credit: Steven Odeke) |
Participants at the conference are from Uganda, Rwanda, Kenya, Tanzania, Nigeria, Cameroon, Democratic Republic Of Congo, Burundi, Sudan, South Sudan, Zimbabwe and Rwanda.
From left, Shawgi Omer Nawai Ahmed (Sudan), Lokii Lokwaar Eliah (South Sudan) and Sawsan Musa Adam Abdul-jalil (Sudan) attending a session. (Credit: Steven Odeke) |
Right from the start of the conference Monday this week, facilitators
addressing the over 30 youthful participants have been making reference to
Rwanda’s dark past (1994 genocide), the Cambodian 1975 genocide and the
German-Armenian genocide. They have cited the infamous events as case studies of bloodbaths that involved
so many youths who had been brainwashed and misled by wrong people to commit
the atrocities that could have been avoided or prevented.
Ronah Amanyabyona, 21, is a Ugandan participant at the event. A volunteer at Youth Aid Africa with focus on
peace-building in Kampala,says “I have learnt a lot about being peaceful at heart
and relating with everyone regardless of their cultures. I believe lessons from
this conference will help me be an able leader in communities back home" .
Evelyn Kenyana,(25) a youth Development officer at Rwenzori Information Centers Network, had this ti say.“For a person who comes from an area that is recovering from conflicts in Kasese, I am being taught in this conference about reconciliation and transitional justice. Reconciliation is about forgiveness and I intend to impart that to the youth I work with and handle in post-conflict areas back home in Kasese district,".
Evelyn Kenyana,(25) a youth Development officer at Rwenzori Information Centers Network, had this ti say.“For a person who comes from an area that is recovering from conflicts in Kasese, I am being taught in this conference about reconciliation and transitional justice. Reconciliation is about forgiveness and I intend to impart that to the youth I work with and handle in post-conflict areas back home in Kasese district,".
Ugandan participants Ronah Amanyabyona and Silas Baryagasha looking at the wall
of fame at Kigali genocide memorial that has a list of genocide victims.
(Credit: Steven Odeke) |
One of the faciliators is Johnson Mugaga, division manager in charge of all
programmes at the National Unity and Reconciliation Commission (NURC). He led the participants through the causes and stages of genocide in Rwanda.
Mugaga says the manipulation of political crises and economic turndown by
leaders to scapegoat a vulnerable group, usually the minority, as is the case
in Rwanda, is what leads to so many conflicts. “There are always excuses that stimulate wars that the youth today must detect
and avoid. The Nazis blamed the jews for the loss of World War I and the
economic crisis of 1929 and the Rwandan government accused the Tutsi in Rwanda
for being part of the invading RPF forces in 1990. We all know what happened
thereafter." The two-week conference ends on March 9.
Adapted from The New Vision
By Steven Odeke Added 1st March 2018 12:42 PM
https://www.newvision.co.ug/new_vision/news/1472260/kigali-conference-african-youth-urged-critical-thinkers
By Steven Odeke Added 1st March 2018 12:42 PM
https://www.newvision.co.ug/new_vision/news/1472260/kigali-conference-african-youth-urged-critical-thinkers
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