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Africa
Regional Meeting
Kigali, Rwanda May 15 - May 17, 2024
Close to 200 participants joined Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace members for an important
policy meeting in Kigali this May. Officials from a number of African
governments and international policymakers met to discuss peace building
efforts in sub-Saharan Africa and to generate policy recommendations
for the inclusion of women in those efforts.
Angelina Muganza, Rwandan Minister of Gender and Women's Development,
opened the meeting with Ambassador Swanee Hunt, Chair of Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace. "Where Policy and Practice Meet" was the theme of the podium discussion
that followed, with remarks by Jos Hoenen, First Secretary of Women & Development
at the Royal Netherlands Embassy in Nairobi; Dick Goldman, Director of
USAID Rwanda; Aloisea Inyumba, Executive Secretary of National Unity
and Reconciliation Commission; and Sabine Sabimbona, Burundian Member
of Parliament. This assembly of policy makers, peacebuilders, and NGO
representatives and others was the culmination of the first Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace regional meeting.
A critical component of the day were roundtable discussions among
women peace builders, policymakers, and media representatives.
Each discussion focused on one topic and discussed it in detail,
reviewing questions and devising potential action steps on issues,
such as how best to promote the reconciliation and justice work
of national and international commissions; the models and methods
Burundian, Rwandan, South African, and Sudanese women have used
to gain political influence and achieve positions in government;
and how women peace builders can work with the media to highlight
their role as agents of change. These highly productive discussions
were followed by a reception at the home of US Ambassador to Rwanda,
George Staples.
During one of the round table discussions which focused on how
African women have gained political influence within their governments,
a Ugandan participant relayed her experience as a woman running
for office. Her first political race was for a position that had
been set aside for women, and did not command the same level of
respect among her male peers in government. Five years later, she
reports that she has the confidence and connections necessary to
run for a mainstream position, "where the power is." Since the
Waging regional meeting concluded, the election was held and she
won her new seat.
As part of the regional meeting, twenty women from Burundi, Rwanda,
South Africa, and Sudan came together for three days of workshops
and conversations about how their work as peace builders on the
front lines of conflict has progressed since they joined the Waging
network. Another 12 to 15 women from the Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia,
and Uganda joined them for the "Women as Partners for Peace Conference," an
independently organized gathering that provided networking and
training opportunities for women leaders.
The structure of the regional meeting was highly conducive to
productive discussions among Waging members. Each delegation presented
a review of their activities over the last year, and staff provided
an update of the work of Inclusive Security: Women Waging Peace in other regions around
the world. The deteriorating situations in Burundi, as well as
that in Sudan where a 37-year civil war continues, were reviewed.
Proposals for supporting the work of women peacebuilders in both
regions were drafted and approved.
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