Dekha Ibrahim Abdi is a peace practitioner based in Mombasa, Kenya, working as a consultant to government and civil society organisations. Mombasa is the second largest City in Kenya, lying on the Indian Ocean. The Republic of Kenya is a country in East Africa. It is bordered by Ethiopia to the north Somalia to the northeast Tanzania to the south She is currently a trustee of Coalition for Peace in Africa (COPA) and of NOMADIC, a pastoralist organisation based in Wajir. Wajir is a town in North Eastern Province, Kenya. It is headquarter of Wajir District. She is a founding member of the Wajir Peace and Development Committee, the Coalition for Peace in Africa, and ACTION (Action for Conflict Transformation). Dekha has worked as consultant trainer on peacebuilding and pastoralists’ development with many local and international agencies: in Cambodia, Jordan, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Africa, Netherlands, Israel, Palestine, Zimbabwe, the UK, Uganda and Kenya. She is an Associate of Responding to Conflict and has previously worked as RTC's Trainer and Learning Coordinator. Responding to Conflict ( RTC) is a Non-governmental organisation based in Birmingham England.
In 2007 she was honoured with the so called Alternative Nobel Prize presented at the Swedish Parliament by the Right Livelyhood Award Foundation to those "working on practical and exemplary solutions to the most urgent challenges facing the world today" The Jury commended her "for showing in diverse ethnic and cultural situations how religious and other differences can be reconciled, even after violent conflict, and knitted together through a cooperative process that leads to peace and development". The Right Livelihood Award, established in 1980 by Jakob von Uexkull, is an award that is presented annually usually on December 9 to honour those "working on