Prior to independence, communities in the Greater Horn of Africa were united by activism, solidarity and a clamour for freedom. But the models of leadership and governance that followed independence often led to widespread discontent among those communities. Most newly formed governments sought to quell this discontent through repression.
Repression often led to abuses, and where there was no repression, structural and institutional marginalisation led to disadvantage and exclusion, disfranchising whole communities from access to services, development and basic social rights. Often local discontent developed into conflicts orchestrated to turn one community against another.
Many conflicts, many causes
- Structural, institutional and policy marginalisation, where state policies and institutions deliberately ignore or withdraw the delivery of services to particular communities.
- Socio-politically exclusive dimensions that hinder inclusive representation for particular social categories such as: indigenous minorities, young people, or women.
- Dispossession of access to land and local productive assets where access to land and other resources is removed. This can be driven by acquisition, for example by governments, corporations and individuals, or as a consequence of economic projects.
- Radicalisation (cultural, political or sectarian) is a new, but increasingly significant, cluster.
The need for local involvement
This situation calls for practical re-discovery of local peace mechanisms, and local peace pillars on which restorative justice and sustained peacemaking dialogue could be re-founded. Practitioners and researchers alike need to re-think non-violent peacemaking from within. This will take a paradigm shift towards embracing new skills, redefined by a recognition that local communities have crucial roles and responsibilities in peacemaking.
The need for this has been recognised for a while. As an elder in a local peace forum highlighted:
"The problem is that peacemaking has become highly commercialised in our locality, just like the conflicts. The governments, NGOs and foreigners (meaning local external persons including non citizens as well) and also other local people who come to us want to spend money for peace and this spoils our peace. But if they leave us alone, we can deal with this (conflict) and there will be peace you will see, but they don't want to leave until their money is finished!" (Council Elder speaking to author in an interview, Mandera County 2013).
This was very instructive. It is time to put down externally designed tools and embrace more locally crafted techniques that resolve root causes of conflict while at the same time strengthening local peace infrastructures, thus providing basis for lasting peace.