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THE AFRICA PEACE FORUM
SOCIETY
At the end of 2005, a group of people of diverse origins got
together as the Africa
Working Group of the World Peace
Forum 2006, to illuminate the colours of
peace in Africa during the World Peace Forum
held in Vancouver in June 2006.

The group identified a number of needs for peace in Africa
and developed the program below, which has
been reproduced here for ease of reference:
ABOUT THE
AFRICA PROGRAM OF THE WORLD PEACE FORUM
2006
There is an urgent need
to foster a culture of peace in Africa where conflicts are resolved
by dialogue instead of violence. As a matter of priority, the
international community should adopt effective and legally binding
agreements of arms brokering with common standards on monitoring and
enforcement. There is an urgent need to consolidate our global
efforts in ending a culture of impunity and lay criminal charges
against those who export small weapons to conflict
areas.
The Africa Working Group of
the World Peace Forum 2006 will concentrate on three priority
areas:
- Education for peace,
- Health issues, and
- Justice in Africa.
Participants attending the Africa Working Group
activities will engage in discussions pertaining to the search for
peace in Africa and the quest for the African people to attain a
culture of peace and sustainable development.
HIV/AIDS affects a significant percentage of the African
population. Most of the people do not have access to adequate
medicine and treatment due to lack of disposable income. In our
opinion, industrialized nations must honor their pledge to
development and commit long-term development assistance that will
allow African countries to implement sustainable development plans.
There is a pressing urgency to restructure Africa’s judicial
system so that people's rights are protected by the state. If a
nation fails to protect the rights of its citizens, the
international community has the responsibility to protect citizens
whose lives are threatened by the state. Special attention should be
given to ethnic minorities and marginalized groups such as women,
youth and people with disabilities.
By creating societies based on the rule of law, we will be able
to reverse the brain drain that forces many African people to flee
their home countries in search of a better quality of life and
where individual freedoms are guaranteed regardless of their race,
color, gender, sexual orientation and place of origin.
The African Peace
Festival
As part of the lead up to the World Peace Forum 2006, the Africa
Working Group organized the first African Peace Festival on 6 May
2006 at the Ukrainian Cultural Center. The event brought together
grassroots African and peace activists, artists and NGOs to
celebrate and discuss peace and social justice issues in an informal
and upbeat setting.
Following the World Peace Forum 2006, the
Africa Working Group decided to stay together as the AFRICA PEACE
FORUM and subsequently registered as THE AFRICA PEACE FORUM
SOCIETY. The society's first event of 2007 was the
2nd annual African Peace Festival on 23 June at the Wise
Hall, in Vancouver, CANADA.
The African Peace Festival has been organized
around several main objectives:
To showcase local African artists, musicians, NGOs and
entrepreneurs in their work for peace and social justice in Africa
and North America;
To raise funds during each festival for grassroots humanitarian
projects in Africa;
To expose British Columbians to African culture and artists;
To unite and inspire the African diaspora to work together for
peace and justice on the African continent.
In 2008, the African Peace Festival (the
3rd since 2006) is supporting an initiative to raise
money for Kekelineva School for the Blind in Togo, which is in
danger of closing due to lack of funds. The project was started by
Lazare Hounnake, a successful musician and former student of
Kekelineva, based in Vancouver. He can be contacted for more
information at 604 876 7757.
The 3rd annual African Peace Festival will be held on
5 July 2008 at the Roundhouse in Vancouver, CANADA.
For more information about performing, renting a table or
volunteering, please Email Jenny Francis at jenois@telus.net. The Africa Peace
Forum Society will also be meeting regularly, to determine and plan
future directions, including planning the 2008 African Peace
Festival.
Call 604 677 3249 or email jenois@telus.net for information
about upcoming meetings.
Let’s work together for peace and justice in
Africa!
Click on the link, To
read the original objectives of the Africa Program of the
World Peace Forum 2006.
Read an article about Betty Bigombe, Lead
Mediator for the Conflict raging on in Northern
Uganda. Ms. Bigombe was featured in
Uganda
Rising, a video that was shown and discussed as
part of the Africa Program of the World Peace Forum.
Click on the link to continue
to participate in the vision of the Africa Program of the World
Peace Forum 2006 online. Allies and friends are
welcome and encouraged to
participate!
Reach Members of the Africa Working Group
of the World Peace Forum 2006.
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