Friday, June 25, 2010

Southern Sudan Refugees returning home

By Paul Ndiho
June 28, 2010

This month (June), the World observed World Refugee Day. In Sudan, this day could not have come at a better time. Tens of thousands are returning home after more than two decades in refugee camps.
Southern Sudan's returning refugees are a success story for a country coming out of decades of civil war. According to the United Nations, over 450-thousand people fled south Sudan during Africa's longest civil war there. In 2005, the North and South peace deal paved the way for the 100-thousand refugees that have returned to Southern Sudan. Frantz Celestin, with the International Organization for Migration, says IOM is helping to resettle returnees.
"IOM has assisted about 100,000 IDPs to go back to the various places of origins within S Sudan, and we've always worked with the UNCR to resettle about 40,000 refugees, and these refugees were outside of Sudan and the surrounding areas, such as Ethiopia, in Kenya and Cairo in Egypt and various areas."


Refugees coming home face the challenge of reintegration. Christine Lindio is a young mother of two, who was living as a refugee in Uganda. Lindio and her family returned to southern Sudan at the beginning of 2009. She now owns a plot of land, and is pleased to be farming in her homeland.
"I am back home now, I have land and I can cultivate it the way I want, because the land belongs to me."
Tailor Joseph Juma has set up business under a thorn tree on the road from Uganda, where he also lived as a refugee. He says he was helped by the UNHCR's livelihood project, which taught him tailoring. Now he can support his family and pass on his skills to others.
"Proud of being at home and my future is OK this time, because as everyone knows that Sudan has been recently electing a leader, we have been for elections. So if the election which means there is something good coming, so as there is something good coming so we expect good governance and my future with good governance will be OK. I will never be a refugee again my life and my family life in future will be so fine.”
Noriko Yoshida, with UNHCR, the U.N. refugee agency in South Sudan, says that UNHCR has projects aimed at helping refugees to prosper.
"It is very important for UNHCR to insure the sustainability of the returnees, to achieve this it is very, very important to have the participation of returnees. In this context, UNHCR is implementing different projects in high return areas such as livelihood and training programs."
Celestin says that his group is also working to reverse Africa's brain drain, to help people in the Diaspora, and especially women, play a role in Africa's development.
"Women play a very important role in the development in any community, and IOM realized the importance of including everybody in our programming and various programs that we have we make sure that women play an important part of it."
Community-based reintegration projects such as schools and health clinics are providing basic services and livelihood opportunities in areas of high return in Sudan. With the elections now behind them, people in Sudan can focus on next year's referendum on independence for the south.

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

MO IBRAHIM FOUNDATION ANNOUNCES DECISION NOT TO AWARD 2010 IBRAHIM PRIZE

By Paul Ndiho
June 16, 2010
A foundation that gives a $5 million prize for good governance in Africa says it will not honor anyone this year. The Mo Ibrahim Foundation said in a statement Monday that following its deliberations, the Prize Committee informed the Board of the Foundation that it had not selected a winner.
This year the Prize Committee told the Board that there had been no new candidates or new developments and that therefore no selection of a winner had been made.
The Ibrahim Prize recognizes and celebrates excellence in African leadership. The prize is awarded to a democratically elected former African Executive Head of State or Government who has served their term in office within the limits set by the country's constitution and has left office in the last three years.
Responding to the Prize Committee's decision, Billionaire Sudanese businessman Mo Ibrahim, said in a statement “The Board respects the decision of the Prize Committee not to select a winner for the 2010 prize. The Prize Committee, which is independent from the Board.
"We have full respect to the people you mentioned. Some of those people are personal friends. There is no issue of disrespect here."

Committee members did not give a reason for their decision, citing the confidentiality of their discussions. Ketumile Masire , a board member said, Ibrahim founded the world's largest individual award as a way to encourage good governance on a continent often plagued by bad governance and corruption.
"This year, the prize committee has considered some credible candidates. However, after in-depth review, the prize committee could not select a winner."
Mo Ibrahim made it clear when he set up the prize three years ago that there may be years when there would be no winner. This year, the Ibrahim committee considered more than ten African leaders who had left office between 2006 and 2009. In 2008, the prize went to former Botswana President Festus Mogae, who was honoured for steering his country along a stable, prosperous path and for leading the fight against AIDS. Former Mozambique President Joaquim Chissano won in 2007 for leading his country to peace and democracy after years of civil war. Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, a Ghanaian, chairs the prize committee. The winner receives $5 million over 10 years and then $200,000 a year for life, with another possible $200,000 a year for 10 years for "good causes" that he supports

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

ICC CONFERENCE IN UGANDA

By Paul Ndiho
June 8, 2010
Representatives from over 100 member states that are signatory to the International Criminal Court, or ICC, gathered in Uganda's capital, Kampala, to discuss the court's future, and propose changes to its founding treaty, the Rome Statute. The Ugandan parliament recently passed an ICC bill, making it one of only a handful of African countries to have ratified the Rome statute.
Over a decade ago, world leaders gathered in Rome to establish the International Criminal Court. The court investigates and tries cases of war crimes and crimes against humanity. U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon says the court needs universal support:
"For the International Criminal Court, we have reached the need to progress. We need to have universal membership for the ICC, therefore I add again, for those countries who have not signed yet, you should ratify the ICC as soon as possible."


The ICC has focused on African conflicts. ICC prosecutor Louis Moreno Ocampo says his mission is to end impunity in Africa.
"There were millions of victims in Africa, and they were ignored, there were other priorities. The world ignored, and did nothing to stop the genocide in Rwanda. The world ignored the Congo war, 4 million people died. The world let Somalia go to chaos, and that was a problem. I would not have brought this experience in my court, that's why we are caring about the victims in Darfur, in Congo, in Uganda, in central Africa Republic, and now in Kenya. We will do justice for them."
In Uganda, the Court has four outstanding arrest warrants for top-level members of the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA), including its leader Joseph Kony. Ocampo says special forces need to be deployed to capture the rebels.
"The problem is that Joseph Kony is a run-away militia, so I don 't think arresting is a police operation's required, it's a special force operation, and Congo was not able to do it in those moments. So I hope that we can galvanize efforts to implement a special force to arrest Joseph Kony in the near future."
In 2006, Thomas Lubanga was surrendered to the court by the Congolese government. His trial has been delayed because the prosecution had withheld evidence from the defense. Jean-Pierre Bemba and two other Congo rebel leaders are also being scrutinized by the ICC, as is former Liberian President Charles Taylor and Sudanese president Omar al-Bashir. Claudio Cordone, Amnesty International criticizes major powers such as China, Russia and the U.S., for refusing to participate in the International Criminal Court.
"Powerful governments, despite their rhetoric - they often speak about the importance of human rights and fighting impunity - and when it comes to the crunch then they actually apply double standards."
Delegates at the Kampala conference are discussing proposals giving the International Criminal Court powers to probe state aggression, as determined by the United Nations Security Council.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

CHILD SOLDIERS RETURNING TO NORMAL LIFE

BY Paul Ndiho
June 3, 2010

A series of civil wars in Chad has led to thousands of children being caught up in the conflict, mainly in the country's eastern region. Estimates put the number of child soldiers in the country at more than 10,000. Reporter Paul Ndiho looks at how some former child soldiers are trying to return to normal life.
Child soldiers in Africa have captured world attention. In Chad, thousands of children are kidnapped by armies and forced to fight. Many were already orphaned by years of civil war, and they find a new kind of family in the military. A new UN report says children are still being recruited and used in combat by Chad's government and rebel forces. Some children are abducted -- others join voluntarily. Anthony Lake is UNICEF's executive director:
"Children forced into unimaginable servitude by adults who regard them not as human lives to be nurtured but as objects to be used for unspeakable purposes."
In 2007, an agreement was signed between UNICEF and the government of Chad to step up efforts to get children out of armed groups and back into society.



"There is a proportion of these people who have actually been trained to kill. A proportion of them actually killed enemies. It's very difficult to overcome the psycho- social aspect of this trauma and get them back to a normal life that was poor."
Under the agreement, the National army now vets all recruits. Those identified as being under the age of 18 are sent to rehabilitation centers in the capital Ndjamena. There, these former child solders receive education and psychological care, and are taught new skills to help them integrate back into society. So far, more than 800 children have gone through this process. The former child solders carry the burden of separation from families and are often plagued by horrendous memories. Former child soldier Dowa Samna:
"During the six months we were tortured on the side of the road, I was hurt here and here and here and on my arm. I was also hurt and injured on my head."
Nineteen year-old Souleymane Adoum Izak now works at a hotel in N'Djamena, a huge change from the seven years he spent fighting with a rebel group in eastern Chad. He says that when he first joined the armed group, most of the rebels were aged between 10 and 14. He has found his second home here at the rehabilitation center, but normal life remains a huge challenge.
"Because you're young and you're trained and you spend all your time with rebels, you still feel the need to fight all the time, even though you're a civilian. You always feel the need to fight with people."
Human rights activists say that returning to normal life is very difficult for former child soldiers. Souleymane and others like him now have a new take on life. Employment is key - being able to earn a living and take care of basic needs. But even as these former child soldiers attempt to fit back into society, social workers say their psychological return to normal life can be a far longer journey.