
Peter Everington obituary
Turning to his strong Christian faith, he felt a call to build bridges between Britain and the Arab world. This led him to switch his degree course to Arabic, and after graduation, in 1958, he became an English teacher in newly independent Sudan. Over an eight-year period, he worked in secondary schools in Port Sudan and Khartoum and at the Higher Teacher Training Institute in Omdurman, and he revisited the country many times subsequently.
While teaching in Northern Ireland prior to Cambridge, Peter had become involved in a movement called Moral Re-Armament (MRA), later renamed Initiatives of Change, which encouraged conflict resolution. Peter attempted this kind of work in Sudan – divided between the Muslim north and the Christian south – by supporting figures on either side who wanted to bring peace to the wartorn country.
One of these was Joseph Lagu, a guerrilla leader who later became vice-president of Sudan before going into exile in London. There, Peter and Lagu worked closely together from the mid-1980s onwards, supporting peacebuilding efforts. In 1996 Peter was awarded the Order of the Two Niles for services to Sudan.
Born in Hendon, then in Middlesex, to Stella (nee Hilleary) and Jack Everington, a lawyer, Peter grew up in Radlett, Hertfordshire, and went to Marlborough college in Wiltshire. He did military service in Hong Kong, and a stint teaching at Mourne Grange preparatory school near Kilkeel in Northern Ireland before going to Pembroke College, Cambridge.
Returning from Sudan to the UK in 1966, he decided to work full-time with MRA. In 1972, he married Jean Robertson, and they spent the first two and a half years of their marriage in Iran. Back in the UK from the mid-1970s, with the couple eventually settling in Acton, west London, Peter was involved over the next two decades in running a student exchange programme for the British-Arab Universities Association.
In 2017, a Khartoum-based cultural organisation published, in English and Arabic, a memoir by Peter entitled Watch Your Step, Khawaja: A British Teacher in Sudan 1958-66.
In recent years, Peter was a lay preacher at his local Anglican church, St Dunstan's. He also volunteered with Ealing and Acton Support Enterprise (Ease), a charity working with asylum seekers. A cricket lover, he was a member of the MCC.
He is survived by Jean and their son, John.
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The Independent
15 hours ago
- The Independent
As the world gets more dangerous – the UK has to build peace through aid as it prepares for war
The exchange of missiles and airstrikes between Iran and Israel was just the latest of conflicts whose horrors have plastered our screens for the past three years. Russia's war of aggression in Ukraine, the Hamas attack on October 7, and Israel's devastation of Gaza had already created a sense of chaos. Elsewhere civil war rages in Sudan and a miasma of gang violence has overtaken Haiti. With the US openly joining attacks on Iran, it appears to many that we are entering a new era of violent conflict and instability. But while the contours of these conflicts are relatively new, they do not represent a new trend. Even before the US bombing, or October 7 and its deadly aftermath, the number, intensity and length of conflicts worldwide was already at its highest level since the end of the Cold War. Last month we learned how much with the launch of the 19th edition of the Global Peace Index. The Index told us that more states are involved in armed conflict today than at any time since the end of the Second World War. There are 59 state-based conflicts raging around the world. From Sudan to the Sahel, Gaza to the Democratic Republic of Congo, violence is spreading, global cooperation is eroding and the institutions that have supported peace are being hollowed out. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the Index also tells us that the successful resolution of conflicts is at a 50-year low. In the last decade, just four per cent of conflicts have been resolved with a peace agreement. More than half of conflicts don't end at all, becoming frozen, with no resolution and a constant risk of renewed violence. These conflict zones are fertile grounds for extremist recruitment, threaten global food and energy supplies, and lead to displacement at historic levels. The UN now reports a record 122 million people are fleeing conflict and persecution. It is no coincidence that the top three nationalities arriving on small boats to the UK are from countries in conflict: Afghanistan, Syria and Iran. And yet, as global military spending is up to record levels, peacebuilding is in rapid decline. The UK is at risk of following this trend. While our military spending is rightly increasing, we are losing the very tools to prevent and de-escalate conflicts. In 2023 UK spending on peacebuilding had fallen to just 1 per cent of our total aid budget, a quarter of what it was in 2016. It is now threatened to be cut even further. In last month's spending review, the government announced the amount of aid funding that would go towards the Integrated Security Fund – the UK's main tool for conflict resolution – will be cut by a further 44 per cent. This is counterintuitive, given the government's focus on delivering value for money. It is much cheaper to steer communities away from violence than to respond to its devastating impacts. Last year, the IMF reported that the rate of return on conflict prevention, mediation, and peacebuilding could be as much as £100 for every £1 spent. The Kiel Institute found that terror attacks in recipient countries could be reduced by 10 per cent for a relatively modest $60 million (£44m). There are countless examples of the effectiveness of such work. The British NGO Conciliation Resources helped end a 30-year violent conflict in the Somali region of Ethiopia. Six years of patient negotiations between the government and the Ogaden National Liberation Front resulted in a peace agreement that cost the UK less than half the price of a Challenger 2 tank. Over the border in Somalia, support for political violence among young people dropped by 65 per cent, in part thanks to education and community action with UK support. In the southern Philippines, consistent UK backing for the Bangsamoro Peace Process has stabilised the region, reduced terrorist incidents, and helped create the conditions for development and growth. At the Nato Summit, our allies agreed to increase defence spending to a record 5 per cent in response to the increasing threat from Russia to Europe. This is right. But we should be strengthening all the tools in our arsenal to respond to conflict – including peacebuilding and conflict resolution. For a tiny fraction of our defence budget, we can reduce the risk to global supply chains, curb the rise of extremist groups, and prevent more desperate people from needing to flee to Europe. This is a view shared by leading military, intelligence, and political leaders who signed an open letter to the Prime Minister last month. Directors general of MI5, former army chiefs, and parliament's chairs of the defence and international development committees all agree: if we lose our work on conflict prevention, we'll be facing global insecurity with 'one hand tied behind our back.' This work is not charity, it's a strategic investment in the UK's future. The events in Iran demonstrated the world is becoming more dangerous. If we don't invest now, we'll pay for it later, in human suffering, instability, and rising security costs. Now is not the time to step back, it is the time to lead. Alex Ballinger is the Labour MP for Halesowen and a member of the Foreign Affairs Select Committee


The Guardian
2 days ago
- The Guardian
Peter Everington obituary
My friend Peter Everington, who has died aged 90, was in his second year studying classics at Cambridge when the Suez crisis came to a head in October 1956. The perceived arrogance and deceit driving Britain's involvement in the invasion of Egypt shocked him deeply, and prompted him to rethink the direction of his life. Turning to his strong Christian faith, he felt a call to build bridges between Britain and the Arab world. This led him to switch his degree course to Arabic, and after graduation, in 1958, he became an English teacher in newly independent Sudan. Over an eight-year period, he worked in secondary schools in Port Sudan and Khartoum and at the Higher Teacher Training Institute in Omdurman, and he revisited the country many times subsequently. While teaching in Northern Ireland prior to Cambridge, Peter had become involved in a movement called Moral Re-Armament (MRA), later renamed Initiatives of Change, which encouraged conflict resolution. Peter attempted this kind of work in Sudan – divided between the Muslim north and the Christian south – by supporting figures on either side who wanted to bring peace to the wartorn country. One of these was Joseph Lagu, a guerrilla leader who later became vice-president of Sudan before going into exile in London. There, Peter and Lagu worked closely together from the mid-1980s onwards, supporting peacebuilding efforts. In 1996 Peter was awarded the Order of the Two Niles for services to Sudan. Born in Hendon, then in Middlesex, to Stella (nee Hilleary) and Jack Everington, a lawyer, Peter grew up in Radlett, Hertfordshire, and went to Marlborough college in Wiltshire. He did military service in Hong Kong, and a stint teaching at Mourne Grange preparatory school near Kilkeel in Northern Ireland before going to Pembroke College, Cambridge. Returning from Sudan to the UK in 1966, he decided to work full-time with MRA. In 1972, he married Jean Robertson, and they spent the first two and a half years of their marriage in Iran. Back in the UK from the mid-1970s, with the couple eventually settling in Acton, west London, Peter was involved over the next two decades in running a student exchange programme for the British-Arab Universities Association. In 2017, a Khartoum-based cultural organisation published, in English and Arabic, a memoir by Peter entitled Watch Your Step, Khawaja: A British Teacher in Sudan 1958-66. In recent years, Peter was a lay preacher at his local Anglican church, St Dunstan's. He also volunteered with Ealing and Acton Support Enterprise (Ease), a charity working with asylum seekers. A cricket lover, he was a member of the MCC. He is survived by Jean and their son, John.


BBC News
4 days ago
- BBC News
Kenya's William Ruto to build huge church at State House
Kenyan President William Ruto says he is building a church at the presidential residence in Nairobi that he will pay for himself - and says he has nothing to apologise for."I am not going to ask anyone for an apology for building a church. The devil might be angry and can do what he wants," President Ruto said on statement alone has angered Kenyans already frustrated with his style of leadership and what they regard as the entanglement of the state and the BBC has asked the government for comment. It is not clear who Ruto was referring to as "the devil" in his comments at state house, but he says nothing will stop the project from going Friday one of Kenya's leading newspapers - the Daily Nation - published architectural designs showing a large building with stained glass windows and capacity for 8,000 paper questioned whether the project was in keeping with Kenya's secular constitution. There has also been criticism of the cost, estimated at $9m (£6.5bn) at a when time many Kenyans are struggling with the rising cost of living. Ruto said he would pay for the church out of his own pocket, however that raises the question of whether he has the right to build such a large structure on state-owned an open letter, one MP said Kenya was not a Christian state andbelonged to people of all diverse East African nation is also home to many of followers of Islam, Hinduism and traditional African religions - as well as some agnostics and atheists. There is no mosque or temple at the presidency."I did not start building this church when I entered the State House. I found a church but one made out of iron sheets. Does that look befitting for the State House?" a defiant Ruto told politicians at a meeting he hosted on Friday. You may also be interested in: How African popes changed Christianity - and gave us Valentine's DayWhy Kenya's evangelical president has fallen out with churchesGhana to investigate ex-president's controversial $400m cathedral project Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica