In a future post-conflict Syria, crucial and responsible economic investments will be key for peaceful coexistence

Responsible investment has a vital role in securing peace post-conflict- Adam Aston

On need to contemplate a post-conflict strategy in Syria… taming circles of violence after progress?
Consider this excerpt: “War and peace are linked inextricably by economic development. Often, even when the shooting stops, long-term peace is impossible without economic development. Yet investment will not flow where conflict lingers. This grim Catch-22 has resurfaced lately with the unfolding catastrophe in Syria. Day by day, the death toll, physical destruction, and refugee displacements mount.



The disaster is creating countless long term, chronic woes too. The destruction of 3,600 schools, for instance, in Syria has swelled by two million or so the global tally of young people forced out of school by armed conflict to some 50 million overall.

In Syria and elsewhere this creates a pool of underemployed youth, and a potential time bomb of social unrest.”
Guardian Sustainable Business in association with the UN Global Compact. Paid for by the UN Global Compact.
Source: https://www.theguardian.com/sustainable-business/responsible-investment-role-peace-post-conflict?CMP=share_btn_tw

Seeking answers for grieving parents in Nigeria

Chibok and the scourge of enforced disappearance

Toyin Ojora-Saraki Founder-President, The Wellbeing Foundation Africa writes in advocacy for missing- enforced disappearance of the Chibok girls of Borno State, and the need for collective action…




See- “As we mark the International Day for Enforced Disappearances this week, the Wellbeing Foundation Africa continues to advocate not only for the secure release of the Chibok girls, but for all access to safe and quality education for children to be protected. We also call for the health and wellbeing of all retrieved girls, and indeed all displaced persons, to be compassionately and appropriately managed by Governments, NGOs and other international organisations who have all committed to protecting the safety, sanctity and dignity of mankind everywhere.




Through the use of public health records, we can monitor and evaluate the health and psychological condition of every released victim of enforced disappearance in Nigeria – not only to ensure they are physically well, but in order to identify needs, and ensure they receive any and all necessary psycho-social support.”
Full report: Source: http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/11833210