Women in IDP camps speak out on Uganda peace process
Source: CARE International - UK
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KAMPALA, UGANDA - As the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) and the government of Uganda debate a return to the negotiating table to resolve their conflict of more than 20 years, women living in camps for internally displaced persons (IDPs) in northern Uganda are raising their voices: "Come to a compromise and sign the peace agreement so people can return home."
CARE International, a humanitarian agency working in 30 IDP camps in northern Uganda, recently conducted a survey on the peace talks among 75 women in six camps in Gulu district, one of the most war stricken areas of the country.
"These women are the most affected by the conflict and they have a critical role to play in ending it," says Kevin Fitzcharles, CARE International's country director in Uganda. "It is their children and grandchildren, their brothers and sisters who are still with the LRA, so their voices carry the power to help bring peace to their communities and must be taken into account by all parties."
United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 mandates that women be effectively represented in peace talks yet women's representation during the peace negotiations has been limited to one person on the LRA peace team. Nearly 90 percent of the women surveyed stressed the need for women to participate in the peace talks, with more than 80 percent of respondents citing the need for at least some representatives to be drawn from women living in affected communities.
One respondent said "the people who are there [at the talks] haven't seen what we have seen." Another added that "women need to go [to the talks] to say [the] real situation." The report states that at a minimum, there should be one affected woman on the peace negotiating teams who represents the views and aspirations of her peers.
Respondents were concerned that political and financial interests are getting in the way of peace. One woman said "Â…politicians [are] trying to say they did this or that, to win favor, but not because they have the interests of the community at heart."
The majority of the women interviewed also proposed that the international community be more directly and actively engaged in supporting the negotiations.
One respondent said "without the support of the international community, the peace talks won't succeed."
For more information or interviews:
CARE's country director Kevin Fitzcharles and conflict and reconciliation advisor Richard Bussinge are available for interviews on the ground in Uganda. Contact Amber Meikle meikle@careinternational.org or +44 207 934 9348
[ Any views expressed in this article are those of the writer and not of Reuters. ]









