Somali Federal and State Interior Ministries: How to Enable Popular Participation in Transitional Justice

After years of conflict and instability, Somalia is entering a period where transitional justice is possible. Three decades of experience in Africa shows that transitional justice processes are more likely to be effective if they are rooted in popular participation, particularly of victims/survivors and communities affected by violence.

While the Somali government has not yet launched a truth commission, prosecutions, reparations or other formal mechanisms usually associated with dealing with the past, different types of measures have emerged in the country that are precursors to – or even themselves forms of – transitional justice.

Drawing lessons from formal, state-led measures like the National Reconciliation Framework and non-formal, civil society-led measures like the Peace and Development Forum, this policy brief provides actionable guidance for the Ministry of Interior, Federal Affairs and Reconciliation and the Interior Ministries of federal member states on how to enable popular participation for a locally relevant and sustainable national transitional justice process.

This policy brief is also available in Af Soomaali.

For more information and publications on mainstreaming popular participation in transitional justice, click here.

 

Policy Brief - Somali Federal and State Interior Ministries - How to Enable Popular Participation in Transitional Justice - 2024