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The Forum for Peace and Reconciliation is being established by the Government in accordance with their intentions as expressed in the Joint Declaration, for as long as is necessary, to consult on and examine ways in which lasting peace, stability and reconciliation can be established by agreement among all the people of Ireland, and on the ...
In 2011, Khaled Abu Awwad was awarded the UNESCO-Madanjeet Singh Prize for the Promotion of Tolerance and Non-Violence for "his efforts to promote tolerance, peace and non-violence through his work as a peace activist and leader in the reconciliation process between Palestinians and Israelis." [17] The Gwangju Prize for Human Rights 2011 in Korea.
The recommendations resulting from the popular consultations held early 2015 were compiled into four thematic reports and were put forward for debate at the Forum in four thematic sub-committees (Peace and security, Justice and Reconciliation, Governance and Economic and Social Development) and at plenary sessions.
Mar. 2—LIMA — The mural outside the Center for Peace and Reconciliation invites passersby to write on the wall: "I inspire peace in my community by ___." For John Foster, the answer comes ...
The National Commission for Reparation and Reconciliation (Comisión Nacional de Reparación y Reconciliación) existed in 2007, [4] and the Special Jurisdiction for Peace was created in 2016. [5] Congo (Democratic Republic) A peace agreement in 2004 mandated the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (DRC) which issued an administrative report in ...
A lifelong campaigner for peace and justice, Una O’Higgins O’Malley was a founding member of the Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation. Una’s father, Kevin O’Higgins, was Minister for Justice in the first government after partition. He was shot dead in 1927 by anti-treaty forces on his way to Mass.
Irish Forum for Peace in Sri Lanka is a non-governmental organization based in Dublin, Ireland that has been established by Dr Jude Lal Fernando, a Sinhalese academic and social activist to reports on human rights violations in Sri Lanka and war crimes in Sri Lanka.
The operation of the Forum was based on the Forum for Peace and Reconciliation (FPR), with an independent secretariat headed by the Assistant Secretary from the Department of the Taoiseach, and membership consisted of representatives from the Oireachtas and nominees based on the 1997 general election.