Mediation Plus – the community mediation service for Eastbourne and Wealden – are
celebrating the successful launch of a school mediation project in Uganda
following the training of the projects’ Executive Director last
autumn.
Early
last year Mediation Plus were approached by Geoff and Geraldine Booker, founders
of the Quicken Trust - a small Hailsham based educational charity which began
its work on the Kabbudu Development Project, Uganda in 2000 after a chance
visit. They had secured funding from the 'Commonwealth Professional Fellowship'
to support Enoch Kagoda, Executive Director of the project to come to the UK and
attend training and also to promote their work.
Geraldine
said “‘When we first visited, the villagers of Kabubbu had no clean water
supply, no electricity and no access to education or health care. They lived in
poverty and destitution, surviving on subsistence farming and casual work
breaking stones in a quarry. This job was done by women. They were paid £2.50 a
week. Many children had been left orphaned by AIDS or malaria. The villagers saw
themselves as ‘The Forgotten People’."
Enoch
was keen to learn about mediation as he could see the value of peer mediation
groups within the school and also wanted to use the skills within his role as
director of the project and also within his community. After a week shadowing
the Mediation Plus management team, where he was able to gain more knowledge on
setting up mediation programmes, he completed their accredited mediation training where he was one of 12 participants from a wide variety of professional
backgrounds.
Enoch
said of his experience “It was a privilege for me to be able to get that kind of
training from the UK. The support and encouragement I received contributed
greatly to me being able to complete the course. The course was informative,
interactive and the class size was just optimum. I liked the way the
facilitators handled the learning materials. They were also friendly as well.
The skills passed on were appropriate and make a trainee be able to handle a
mediation process.”
Since
returning to Uganda in November, Enoch has already started to implement his new
skills and started the Trust High School Peer Mediation programme, as well as
using the skills in his daily work for the project. Following the successful
launch, Mediation Plus will be welcoming school Headmaster Ben to Hailsham in
May to undertake their next mediation training course and advance the use of
mediation in Kabubbu even further.
Mediation
Plus Training Manager Joan Eades said “We are delighted that we have been able
to help develop and promote mediation in this exciting new way and that the
skills we teach our volunteer mediators here are now being used to such good
effect as far away as Uganda. The success of our training has been evident in
the professional and confident way that our mediators provide our services
locally, and we have always believed there were many more individuals and
organisations that could benefit from this knowledge. We are really looking
forward to welcoming Ben in May and developing our work with the Quicken Trust
even further.”