Central Asia

Promoting peace in Tajikistan

Encouraging secular-religious dialogue and peaceful behaviour

Conference participants in KayrakkumInternational Alert has successfully concluded two EU-funded projects in Tajikistan, one on secular-religious dialogue and the other on the promotion of peaceful behaviour among young people. We held conferences with local stakeholders in the country to review the successes, recommendations and lessons learnt from both projects.

Marc Fumagalli, Country Manager – Tajikistan
Mon, 03/09/2012

Training mediators in Kyrgyzstan

Alert helps train community mediators in conflict mitigation

Mediators from Toktogol district work on problem-solving as well as team and trust building skills through an exercise known as “the knot”International Alert recently oversaw the training of community mediators in Jalal-Abad province in Kyrgyzstan.

Kim Toogood, Senior Peacebuilding Trainer and Facilitator
Mon, 03/09/2012

Enhancing local conflict management capacity in South Kyrgyzstan

KYRGYZSTAN

The project is designed to address the immediate consequences of the June 2010 violence in Osh and Jalal-Abad and to create conditions for rebuilding inter-community relations in the South of the country. The first component of the project targets students in ethnically mixed universities – Osh and Jalal-Abad State Universities and the Osh State Law Institute. Through the provision of space for dialogue and support to joint initiatives, the project will reduce the tension between ethnic Kyrgyz and ethnic Uzbek students and will increase their knowledge and skills to manage conflict. About 120 students will improve their understanding of the needs of each community, build interpersonal relations and gain skills and understanding that will help prevent violence on campus.

As part of the project’s second component, Alert will assess the prospects for private sector involvement in peacebuilding and will identify possible areas for further engagement. Alert will also facilitate a lesson-sharing visit of representatives of the Caucasus Business Development Network (CBDN) to Osh and Jalal-Abad.  

The third component of the project links up grassroots work in the South with the National Dialogue Forum. Alert and civil society organisations engaged in confidence-building work will channel lessons learnt from community-level interventions to the high-level policy process.

Location

41° 58' 50.6172" N, 74° 44' 0.2292" E
Location : 
South Kyrgyzstan
Donors: 
DFID Kyrgyzstan

National forum for dialogue

KYRGYZSTAN

The project supports the formulation of a nationally-owned approach to peacebuilding through the establishment of a Nationali Dialogue for Kyrgyzstan. The Forum involves 30-35 influential, well respected and committed individuals, over a third of whom are women, from state institutions, civil society, religious authorities, academia and the private sector, including representatives of all major ethnic groups.

The main objective of the project is to conduct an informal high-level dialogue drawing on all sectors of society to exchange views about socio-political and other developments in Kyrgyzstan, with a view to enhancing understanding and contributing to a creative and peaceful resolution of the pressing issues facing Kyrgyzstan. It will be achieved through the inclusion of all major parties to the conflict in a dialogue process on peace and reconciliation, the facilitation and support to the formation of a broad consensus on the need to prevent escalation and to build lasting peace. A series of practical activities can also result from the process and are likely to include research, analysis and presentation of the conflict in its complexity that will allow for opportunities for conflict transformation and conflict prevention to be identified and explored.

More specifically, the project will produce the following outputs:

  • a National Dialogue for Kyrgyzstan will be established and its members’ capacities built;
  • tools or possible practical activities to support the dialogue process will be developed – these can include in-depth analysis of the peacebuilding and reconciliation needs and processes; conflict mitigation and prevention measures at the community level and promotion of the Forum’s work and key messages to the public.

Location

40° 41' 14.2836" N, 73° 13' 49.6704" E
Contact
Contact Title: 
Country Manager
Contact Name: 
Ljubomir Jandrijasevic
Location : 
Kyrgyzstan
Donors: 
Federal Department of Foreign Affairs of Switzerland, Political Divsion IV – Human Security

Policy dialogue initiative on youth and radicalism

TAJIKISTAN

The project is a follow-up to the pilot Zivik-funded project ‘Tajikistan Policy Dialogue Initiative’, which Alert implemented in 2009. It continues the policy dialogue set up within the framework of the first project and focuses on youth policies and the prevention of radicalism. One of the key outputs is a policy concept on the prevention of radicalism among youth, which will inform the overall strategy on secular state-religion relations developed with European Commission's funding.

The project promotes participatory planning approaches, fosters social inclusion of youth and mitigates the tension between the secular authorities and the religious communities. The project facilitates dialogue on the critical issue of youth, religion and radicalism at a policy level, enhances dialogue and interaction between secular and religious youth, raises the awareness of youth on religion, democracy and tolerance, and enhances their participation in policy-making processes.

The project is organised around two strands of activity: policy development and youth participation. Within the first strand, a policy working group is tasked to develop a concept paper on the prevention of radicalism among youth and advocates for its endorsement by the State Committee on Youth Affairs, Sport and Tourism. Within the second strand, secular and religious students take part in a student camp on youth participation and the prevention of radicalism, and in student debates discussing policy solutions and needs for state support to youth policies.

Location

38° 34' 50.9124" N, 71° 57' 53.4348" E
Contact
Contact Title: 
Country Manager
Contact Name: 
Marc Fumagalli
Location : 
Tajikistan
Project Partners: 
Youth and Society, Khujand

Dialogue for a policy on the relationship between the secular state and religion

TAJIKISTAN

The rise in religious radicalism, combined with other social and economic issues, is contributing to tension in communities, and may even be utilised to foment widespread unrest in Tajikistan given the right triggers.

However, a major exacerbating factor is the government’s response and policy towards religion and religious organisations, which risks alienating these communities. Religious values and communities can play an important role in promoting democracy, tolerance and peace, and as such, religious leaders are important actors in civil society with a great deal of influence over their constituencies.

This project aims to harness the potential of religious leaders for their peacebuilding role, to foster positive relationships with State bodies that define policy towards religion and to improve that policy in a way that reduces tensions within and between religious and secular communities. It does so by combining the peacebuilding expertise of International Alert with those non-governmental actors that participated in the Tajik peace process, building on existing capacities and the positive Tajik peace-making experience.

This project is funded by the European Union.

Locations

38° 44' 0.6648" N, 70° 46' 41.9484" E
38° 19' 27.912" N, 72° 33' 44.9928" E
Contact
Contact Title: 
Country Manager
Contact Name: 
Marc Fumagalli
Location : 
Tajikistan
Project Partners: 
Public Committee on the Development of Tajikistan

Central Asia

Central Asia

Background of the conflict and Alert’s engagement

Location

United Kingdom
40° 26' 49.0092" N, 65° 55' 4.6884" E

Increasing youth’s resilience to radical ideas in Tajikistan

A draft policy concept on the prevention of radicalism among youth

A draft policy concept on the prevention of radicalism among youth in Tajikistan was presented this week at a Forum organised by International Alert in partnership with the Committee on Youth Affairs, Sport and Tourism of the Government of Tajikistan. Over 60 government officials, political party leaders, civil society representatives, students, religious scholars and other key experts joined in constructive discussions on policy steps to increase youth’s resilience to radical ideas.

Marc Fumagali
Fri, 24/12/2010

Peacebuilding in Kyrgyzstan

From national level dialogue to grassroots work

Since the widespread violence broke out in the south of the country in April and June this year, International Alert has sent staff members to Kyrgyzstan on three separate missions in the past two months. Their purpose was assessment and to start to engage in face to face meetings with politicians, religious leaders and leaders of civil society groups from all sides of the conflict. On this basis, we have put together a comprehensive peacebuilding plan for the country with three key strands:

Simon Tiller
Fri, 27/08/2010

Rebuilding interethnic relations among students in South Kyrgyzstan

Enhancing local conflict management capacities

Kyrgyzstan is slowly moving forward after the June 2010 violence in the south of the country that left hundreds dead. On 10th October, parliamentary elections were held in a peaceful manner and characterised as relatively fair. 56 per cent of those with the right to vote went to the polls and cast their vote for one of the 29 parties contesting the 120 seats in the Parliament. According to the OSCE and European Parliament election observers, the elections ‘constituted a further consolidation of the democratic process’*.

Ilina Slavova
Wed, 27/10/2010

Students plan confidence-building projects in South Kyrgyzstan

Learning about conflict and peace at Alert’s student camps

Over 120 students from three ethnically mixed universities in South Kyrgyzstan recently learned about conflict prevention and started planning for projects aimed at increasing confidence between their peers of different nationalities.

Ilina Slavova
Sat, 27/11/2010
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