Sierra Leone
(November 17, 2010) – Led by Rotary
Peace Fellow Richelieu Allison, a peace
caravan on November 10 began its journey
through four countries in West Africa to
promote cross-border dialogue and
grassroots peace building.
The Rotary West
African peace caravan, which consists of
two large buses with 40 participants, is
traveling to border towns in Sierra
Leone, Liberia, Guinea and Ivory Coast
to help resolve deep rooted disputes and
increase the involvement of local people
in the peace building process.
The caravan
embarks at a critical time in the
region’s history with renewed optimism
for peace and democracy. Guinea held its
first democratic election since the 1984
military coup earlier this month. In
neighboring Ivory Coast, peaceful
elections also took place, and Ivorians
will choose their new president in a
run-off election later this month. Once
a beacon of prosperity and stability,
Ivory Coast plunged into instability
when northern rebels took up arms in
2002, and elections were postponed many
times since 2005.
“Like all West
Africans, we are hoping that the recent
elections in Ivory Coast and Guinea will
help stabilize the Mano River Union
(MRU) and ease our political and
economical troubles,” said Allison. “We
are praying that the results will be
peacefully accepted. However, a lot
still needs to be done and elections are
just a piece of the bar.”
The peace caravan,
which will include workshops and peace
vigils along its journey, is sponsored
by the Dutch charity Interchurch
Organization for Development Cooperation
(ICCO) and supported by Rotary Clubs in
Sierra Leone and Liberia.
“Rotary is fully
committed to promoting peace,” said
Sheila John, president of Rotary Club of
Freetown. “The Rotary peace camp and
caravan is working toward bringing
together youth leaders, government
representatives and traditional leaders
from post-conflict and fragile states in
West Africa, including Sierra Leone.”
The first stop of
the caravan was Monrovia (capital of
Liberia) where it was greeted by Joseph
Boakai, Vice President of Liberia and
past President of the Monrovia Rotary
Club; Francis Kaikai, Head of Civil
Affairs of the UN Mission in Liberia;
John Ballout, member of the Liberian
Senate, and members of the Monrovia
Rotary Club.
Bloody civil wars
ravaged Sierra Leone and Liberia in the
1990s, which claimed the lives of more
than 200,000 and further displaced three
million people, many of them into
neighboring countries
“There is still a
need to ensure that the people continue
to reconcile their differences,” said
Allison, a native of Liberia. “I saw
summary executions. I witnessed the
recruitment of my friends who, as young
as eight, were sent to the battlefront,”
he recalls.
In 2006, Allison
graduated from Rotary’s Peace and
Conflict Studies certificate program at
Chulalongkorn University, in Bangkok,
Thailand. Determined to put into
practice what he learned, Allison
returned home to continue to work with
the West African Youth Network (WAYN), a
group that mobilizes and trains young
people to restore peace and human rights
in West Africa.
Rotary
International President Ray Klinginsmith
notes that 516 Rotary Peace Centers
alumni, including 54 Africans, already
are making a difference in grass-roots
efforts and key decision-making
positions in governments and
organizations around the world.
“It is this
growing network of peace fellows like
Richelieu Allison, who has returned to
his homeland and is applying directly
what he learned, that makes me believe
that peace is possible, and that
Africa will have a peaceful and
prosperous future,” said Klinginsmith.
The Rotary Centers
for International Studies in peace and
conflict resolution were launched in
2002 to help the next generation of
government officials, diplomats and
humanitarian leaders develop the skills
needed to reduce the threat of war and
violence worldwide.
Through a
worldwide, competitive process, this
program awards full scholarships to up
to 100 Rotary Peace Fellows each year.
Fellows embark on one-to-two years of
study to earn a master’s-level degree or
a professional certificate in peace and
conflict studies at one of six Rotary
Peace Centers at leading universities in
Argentina, Australia, England, Japan,
the United States and Thailand. To learn
more visit:
www.rotary.org.
Visuals
(stills and videos) are available at:
www.thenewsmarket.com/rotaryinternational.
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Rotary is an
organization of business and
professional leaders united worldwide to
provide humanitarian service and help to
build goodwill and peace in the world.
It is comprised of 1.2 million members
working in over 33,000 clubs in more
than 200 countries and geographical
areas. Rotary members initiate community
projects that address many of today’s
most critical issues, such as poverty,
disease and illiteracy