The Catholic Church in
Eastern Africa to spearhead disarmament
Participants of the Inter-Diocesan Conference on Cross-border Peace and Evangelisation, Lodwar in Kenya |
Bishops and participants attending the 6th Annual
Inter-Diocesan Conference on Cross-Border Peace and Evangelization held at St.
Teresa Pastoral Centre, Turkana, Kenya have resolved to begin a peaceful
disarmament process of small arms and light weapons mostly used by pastoralists
around Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia and South Sudan borders.
Rose Achiego – Nairobi, Kenya
In a press statement issued to the media this week, Kenya’s
Bishop of Maralal Diocese, Virgilio Pante, who is also the Chairperson for the
Kenya Conference of Catholic Bishops (KCCB)-Commission for Refugees, Migrants
and Seafarers announced that that the process of peaceful disarmament would
soon begin. The initiative would be an effort to wean-off pastoralist
communities of their small arms that have caused so much havoc and suffering in
the border areas of Kenya, Uganda, Ethiopia and South Sudan.
Church committed to disarmament
“We will no longer remain silent. We will no longer remain
indecisive, and we will no longer be fearful. We are committed to highlighting
the suffering caused by small arms in the daily lives of our people,” said
Bishop Pante. He was flanked by the Bishop of Lodwar, Dominic Kimeng’ich, who
is the Vice Chairperson of the KCCB-Commission for Refugees, Migrants and
Seafarers.
According to the Bishops, peaceful disarmament can only be
done in an environment of trust, collaboration and commitment for the respect
and protection of human life.
Governments need to provide alternative livelihoods
While acknowledging the efforts of the governments of Kenya,
Uganda, South Sudan and Ethiopia in their continuous peacebuilding initiatives
both at the national level and across the borders, the Bishops of Maralal and
Lodwar called on governments in the region to do more in sensitising pastoral
communities on the need to embrace peaceful co-existence and peaceful
disarmament.
“The governments should ultimately provide alternative
or complementary livelihoods for the citizens living in the conflict-affected
areas,” Bishop Pante and Kimengi’ch said
Religious leaders and civil society should address the root
causes
The Bishops further other invited religious leaders and
members of Civil Society Organisations in the region to identify and address
the root causes of what has been ailing communities of the border areas over
the years.
They also called upon grassroots communities to collectively
reject the attraction of armed violence as a solution to their problems.
“We encourage you to work with all stakeholders to reaffirm
the value of human life and work together to counter the pervasive culture of
violence. It will be for the benefit of all of us to commit to peaceful
disarmament,” the prelates said.
Small arms in the hands of communities have caused
destruction
As reported by Regional Centre for Small Arms (RECSA) the
region hosts 8 million out of an estimated 36 million small arms and light
weapons. The weapons are in the hands of civilians.
As a result of the endemic conflicts, the border regions
host the highest number of refugees and displaced persons on the African
continent.
The proliferation of small arms heighten insecurity
According to the statement, demand for Small Arms and Light
Weapons is driven by the ineffective provision of security by governments,
commercialisation and politicisation of livestock raiding, marginalisation by
governments, a need for the disarmed to rearm; and, cultural practices.
The proliferation of these small arms has caused thousands
of deaths and injuries, displacement and forced migration of people, hampered
development, loss of hundreds of livestock among pastoralist communities,
heightened insecurity, loss of productivity, reduced economic output and
insurgencies.
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