‘We need people to heal’: after 10 years of conflict South Sudan’s women seek peace
The country's first decade has been marked by civil war, sexual violence and poverty. But women are working to gain justice for victims and hope for change
When Gloria Soma left university in Tanzania in 2013, she decided to head for the homeland she had never really known. Her parents had left southern Sudan in the early 1990s and she had grown up in refugee camps overseas, first in Uganda during the hard times" of the Lord's Resistance Army, and then in Kenya. While she was immersed in her studies, the Republic of South Sudan was born, the 193rd country to join the UN. And she wanted to go.
It was quite exciting for me because I thought that ... I would go back and there were going to be many opportunities and it would be a peaceful place for everyone to live in," says Soma. There was already some sense of belonging. Because, as much as I had stayed most of my life in the east African region, there'd always been [the question of] where do you belong?' There was that bit of me [that felt] finally, we are going to belong somewhere'. But it didn't happen."
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