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Inishowen Women's group celebrates €400,000 windfall 08.07.08

INISHOWEN Women’s Information Network (IWIN) is celebrating a grants windfall totalling more than €400,000 to further its work in cross-border reconciliation.
The group recently received word of a £250,000stg grant from the International Fund for Ireland and only yesterday learned of a €90,000 allocation from the Department of Foreign Affairs' Reconciliation Fund.
Both allocations are to help the Carndonagh-based network undertake a three-year project in association with the Mid-Ulster Women's Network in Derry.
The aim of the project is to conduct a survey of 90 women and develop their capacity to work within their own communities with people from different traditions.
Network co-ordinator Jacqui Rooney said the group was delighted with the funding.
"We are absolutely delighted that our project was chosen for the funding," she said.
She explained that the funding was awarded following the success of their ongoing pilot project involving 20 women in Inishowen and Mid-Ulster.
"As part of this three-year project, we will be looking at women's experience of the Troubles. It will include their own personal experiences such as remembering the checkpoints Derry and Strabane or maybe them still having a fear of driving into parts of the North with their Donegal-registered cars," she said. The 90 participants will be chosen from areas such as Inishowen, mid-Ulster, Derry, Lifford and Raphoe.
Ms. Rooney said the programme will run until 2011 and the group will advertise in the coming weeks for participants. Women will not receive a participation allowance but will receive allowances for childcare and/or travel, she explained.
Other beneficiaries of the Department of Foreign Affairs' latest allocation announced yesterday included St. Catherine’s Marching Band, Killybegs, €20,000; Creggan Youth Drop-In, Derry, €25,000 and the Pat Finucane Centre for Human Rights and Social Change, Derry, €25,000.
Foreign Affairs Minister Micheál Martin said the funding was designed to help the ongoing work of community-based groups who further the progress made in the peace process in recent years.
"These groups are giving young people the necessary skills to engage in reconciliation, while simultaneously developing links between communities across these islands," he said.
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