Nonviolence International is proud to announce our fiscal sponsorship partnership with Green Foster Action Uganda (GreFA), a youth-led organization working at the intersection of democracy, human rights, climate justice, and environmental protection. This partnership reflects a shared commitment to nonviolent action as a strategic and essential tool for social change in contexts marked by political repression, environmental harm, and structural inequality.

Nonviolent Action in Practice
GreFA emerged from lived experience and collective resistance, bringing together young activists dedicated to protecting democracy, human rights, and the environment. The organization challenges corporate and political practices that exacerbate climate injustice, food insecurity, energy poverty, and economic vulnerability. Their approach is practical, locally grounded, and community-led, empowering people to confront social, economic, and environmental challenges in their own contexts. Key strategies include:
- Mobilizing, educating, and organizing youth and grassroots communities
- Conducting nonviolent campaigns, demonstrations, petitions, and protests
- Strengthening community capacity in civic engagement and nonviolent resistance
- Supporting peaceful advocacy campaigns and movement-building initiatives
GreFA’s work gained national visibility through the Stop EACOP campaign, opposing the East African Crude Oil Pipeline. Communities along the pipeline route faced displacement, environmental degradation, and food insecurity, yet their voices were marginalized in decision-making processes.
Through peaceful demonstrations, petitions, community dialogues, and coordinated public actions, GreFA enabled young people and rural communities to safely participate and demand accountability. These disciplined, people-led actions generated media attention, national awareness, and meaningful public pressure, demonstrating that nonviolent strategies can influence both local and international decision-makers.
Nonviolent action strengthens solidarity, exposes power imbalances, and allows communities to confront extractive systems while safeguarding dignity and safety. GreFA believes that lasting climate justice and systemic change require organized, people-powered action.
Climate and Democracy Work in Uganda
Uganda is a challenging environment for activists. Strict laws limit assembly and protest, while dissenters face harassment, politically motivated arrests, torture, surveillance, and intimidation. Large-scale extractive projects, including EACOP, cause environmental destruction and threaten livelihoods, while silencing those who expose harm. For GreFA, defending democratic space is inseparable from advancing climate justice. They equip youth and grassroots communities to speak truth to power, build collective power, and demand accountability, transparency, and sustainable practices.

Training Young Activists
GreFA sees young people as leaders in climate justice and democratic renewal, so part of their work includes training young people to engage safely and effectively in nonviolent resistance. Programs include:
- First Exposure Trainings (FETs): Introduce principles of civil resistance, strategic leverage, and risk assessment
- Training of Trainers (ToT): Deep skills in campaign design, facilitation, coalition-building, and safety protocols
- Ongoing mentorship and coaching to sustain leadership and campaign effectiveness
To date, GreFA has trained over 300 youth activists and community groups across Uganda, fostering civic engagement and accountable governance alongside climate action.
To find out more about the organization you can access their website here.
Also, please consider supporting them with a one time donation, or becoming a monthly donor here. Together, we are committed to strengthening nonviolent movements that defend human dignity, protect the environment, and imagine a more just and democratic future.


