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The Beyond Juba Project is a joint initiative of the
Refugee Law Project (RLP), the Human Rights and Peace Network
(HURIPEC), and the Faculty of Law (FOL), Makerere University.
The project builds on the participating organisations' work on
peace and conflict related issues in Uganda, and in particular
reflects the outcome of a three day stakeholders dialogue
under the same title which was hosted in Kampala by the three
collaborating partners in December 2006.
Uganda’s post colonial history has been characterised by
division and conflict. One of the most violent and
protracted of the conflicts is the 21 year war in northern
Uganda waged by the Lord’s Resistance Army/Movement
(LRA/M). The current peace talks between the Government
of Uganda (GoU) and the LRA/M, which are mediated by the
Government of Southern Sudan (GoSS), are welcomed as a
solution to attain sustainable peace in Uganda. However,
there are reservations about how the peace consultations are
proceeding, and some stakeholders feel that the discussions
around accountability and reconciliation may not result in
process that is sufficiently comprehensive in ensuring
sustainable peace in northern Uganda or in the country as a
whole. For reconciliation to be effective, the northern Uganda
conflict must be placed within a wider national context.
In the past there have been attempts to establish
transitional justice mechanisms for Uganda. They have not
related to broader political dynamics like decentralisation or
gender, however. Another challenge is that current
reconciliation initiatives like the Peace Recovery and
Development Plan (PRDP) view reconciliation in a localised
fashion and therefore only allocate a small part of their
budget to it. If the Juba Peace Talks offer hope for sustained
peace and create opportunities for meaningful national
reconciliation in Uganda, then considerable efforts to create
a climate conducive to change should be made.
One such effort is the Beyond Juba Project, a three year
project funded by SIDA and NORAD. The project constitutes of
three pillars: (1) In-depth consultation and training
with key stakeholders including different branches of
government, (2) research on critical legal, and psychosocial
issues for inclusion in the national reconciliation process
and (3) a multi-layered public information
campaign that reaches all sectors of
society. |
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The Beyond Juba Project aims to generate support for a
national reconciliation process in Uganda by demonstrating the
extent to which conflicts and their legacies are a national
problem and by assisting in the development of appropriate
transitional justice mechanisms with which to address these
legacies. |
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Uganda achieves sustainable peace. |
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- To persuade the legislative, judicial, and executive
branches of the GoU of the benefits of a national
reconciliation process.
- To generate widespread public awareness for the
potential contribution national reconciliation could play to
sustainable peace, and to engage the public in a
nation-building process.
- To create a more informed debate among donors about the
need for a national reconciliation process in Uganda.
- To help give direction and provide leadership to groups
seeking to promote a national reconciliation process by
developing specific proposals for context appropriate
transitional justice mechanisms.
- To ensure that these mechanisms allow both the GoU and
civil society to have ownership over and play a key role in
the process.
- To do this in a way which builds, rather than further
undermines, Uganda's sense of sovereignty.
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