Monday, May 21 2012

Partly Sunny Dublin Hi 17 °C | Lo 9°C

National News

Peace group helps combat gangs

A group of Irish peacemakers has helped resolve gang warfare in disaster-hit Haiti

A group of Irish peacemakers has helped resolve gang warfare in disaster-hit Haiti

Sunday January 22 2012

A group of Irish peacemakers has helped resolve gang warfare in disaster-hit Haiti.

Members of Glencree Centre for Peace and Reconciliation travelled to the Caribbean nation, parts of which were destroyed in the devastating 2010 earthquake.

Former UVF paramilitary Martin Snodden was among those who encouraged gang lords in one of the country's poorest and most dangerous slums to decommission their weapons.

Irish charity Concern invited them to work with Haitian peace-building group 3PSM in St Martin, where 70,000 people live in severe poverty and children as young as 11 are initiated into gangs.

They used the Northern Ireland peace process as an example of how conflicting communities can live without violence.

Glencree international programme director Ian White, who first visited Haiti in 2004 and has returned numerous times, said methods for achieving peace are the same the world over.

"For a peace process to work you don't have to trust each other, you just have to trust in the process," said Mr White.

"We wanted to open up dialogue between these people who hate each other."

As the annual Haiti Week in Ireland begins tomorrow, when organisations try to raise awareness of the poverty-stricken country, Mr White said people should put themselves in the shoes of those living out there.

He said he understood why members of the community were forced to join gangs.

Press Association

 
 

Video Highlights

(video)

Cameron rejects Megrahi probe plea

Former Libyan intelligence officer Megrahi was sentenced to life in prison for the 1988 bombing of a US airliner over the Scottish town which claimed 270 lives.He was later diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer and controversially released from prison in August 2009 with an estimated three months to live.But Megrahi, who always proclaimed his innocence, proved medical experts wrong and finally lost his cancer battle in Tripoli yesterday at the age of 60, his son said.

(video)

'Ring of fire' eclipse

The annular eclipse, in which the moon passes in front of the sun leaving only a golden ring around its edges, was visible to wide areas across Asia.

(video)

Lockerbie bomber dies

Megrahi was sentenced to life in prison for the 1988 bombing of a US airliner over the Scottish town which claimed 270 lives. He was released from jail on August 20 2009 on compassionate grounds after being diagnosed with terminal prostate cancer and sent home to Tripoli with an estimated three months to live. The decision by Scottish Justice Secretary Kenny MacAskill to free the only man convicted of bombing of Pan Am flight 103 provoked an international storm. His death at his Tripoli home at the age of 59 was announcedby his son, Khaled. The bombing of the American plane, travelling from London to New York four days before Christmas, killed all 259 people on board

View more



Highlights

Independentwoman.ie

Independent Woman

A fresh, fun site featuring celeb gossip, fashion, beauty, love & sex, and health & fitness.

Findajob.ie

Job search

Search for jobs by keyword, category, or location.

College

Third Level College

Diploma, Degree, Postgraduate and Professional Courses

Yourlocal.ie

Directory

Wherever you are... Find what you're looking for on Yourlocal.ie.

GrabOne

GrabOne

Daily Deals: Find the best things to do, see and eat in Ireland