| Interpeace Platform 4 Dialogue and Peace goes national in Liberia |
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April 2009 - Joint Programme Unit for UN/ Interpeace Initiatives (JPU) expands across Liberia while Nimba County programme continues
Working closely with the Peace Building Office to create synergies with other initiatives The Joint Programme Unit for UN/Interpeace Initiatives (JPU), an operational arm of the UN supporting peacebuilding initiatives in the field using the Interpeace approach, has been working closely with the Peace Building Office of the Ministry of Internal Affairs in Liberia to plan the national roll out. The focus has been to tailor the programme so that it will also work in synergy with other peacebuilding actors across the country. This has been achieved while meeting the overall objectives of the programme - to increase positive social and political cohesion by building the capacity of both state and non-state players to resolve conflicts.
8 partners selected for implementation The programme will be implemented across Liberia by a team that is 100% Liberian. In order to foster national ownership, the team is partnering with 8 civil society organizations for the national implementation.
The partners are:
An approach that will create a sustainable infrastructure to building lasting peace in Liberia By partnering with 8 civil society organizations, the programme will be tapping directly into existing local knowledge and skills. The programme will also contribute to the development of local capacities by creating an arrangement that allows for the transfer of knowledge and skills to the Ministry of Internal Affairs and to the 8 partners and therefore into civil society. The approach, methods, and tools, including the Interpeace approach to research and dialogue for peace, will be shared thereby helping to create a sustainable Liberian infrastructure capable of building lasting peace.
Dealing with conflict through dialogue and collaborative action The planned impact of this two year initiative is that there will be better capacity amongst both state and non-state players, and at all levels of society, to deal with conflict through dialogue and collaborative action. Drawing on the experience of the Nimba pilot project last year and over 15 years of Interpeace fieldwork it is expected that at the end of the two years there will be:
The national programme is a result of the success of the Nimba County pilot
Interpeace approach was credited for being multi-faceted and also participatory in Nimba Speaking at a pre-County Conference meeting on behalf of Nimba Superintendent Robert Kamei County Inspector, Honorable Thomas Q. Suah indicated that unlike other interventions, Interpeace's approach had a distinct quality, its methodology being not only multi-faceted but also participatory.
Call for extension of the Nimba project During the Conference the citizens of Nimba County in Liberia also expressed their great satisfaction with Interpeace's work and requested for the project to be extended beyond the original deadline.
The Ministry of Internal Affairs working on specific recommendations The Ministry is considering the best way to follow up on some of the recommendations that came out of the Nimba County Reconciliation Programme, for example the designing of fast track initiatives that would be deployed on the ground to help avoid losing the momentum for peace developed in the Pilot initiative. |