Christian peacemakers say Bush and Blair responsible for abduction of colleagues in Iraq
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Christian peacemakers say Bush and Blair responsible for abduction of colleagues in Iraq
-08/03/06
Christian peacemakers in Iraq have said that the root cause of their colleagues abduction “is the
U.S. and British-led invasion and occupation of Iraq.”
In a statement following the airing of a new videotape showing members of Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) abducted in Iraq on November 26, 2005 on Al-Jazeera television, members of CPT said they continue to pray for their safe and speedy release so that they may return to their families and carry on their peaceful work on behalf of all Iraqi detainees.
This past weekend marked the 100th day since the peacemakers disappeared in Baghdad.
“In vigils around the world, people came together to honour our missing colleagues and to call for their safe release” the statement said.
“We also hold in our hearts the families of 14,600 Iraqis currently detained illegally by the Multinational Forces in Iraq who likewise await the release of their loved ones. These detainees are being held without formal charges, without access to their families and legal advisors, and without recourse to a fair and
open judicial process.”
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“In the latest video we were so glad to see Jim Loney alive. We were so glad to see Harmeet Sooden alive. We were so glad to see Norman Kember alive. We do not know what to make of Tom Fox’s absence from this video. However we do know what motivated Tom and his colleagues to go to Iraq. Tom wrote on the day before he was taken, “We are here to take part in the creation of the Peaceable Realm of God. …How we take part in the creation of this realm is to love God with all our heart, our mind and our strength, and to love our neighbours and enemies as we love God and ourselves.
“Many Iraqi friends and human rights workers welcome CPT as a nonviolent, independent presence. Iraqis have asked us to tell their stories in our home communities, to share with them our own experiences of peacemaking, to assist them in building nonviolent institutions in Iraq, and to accompany them as they seek justice for detainees and others suffering from the oppression of Iraq. We seek to promote what is human in all of us and so to offer a glimpse of hope in a dark time. This hope springs from our own faith tradition. We have witnessed a similar hope within the faith traditions of the people of Iraq.
“We believe that the root cause of the abduction of our colleagues is the U.S. and British-led invasion and occupation of Iraq. Many in Iraq have experienced this long war as terrorism. The occupation must end. Work
towards this is being coordinated by the Global Call for Nonviolent Resistance to End the Military Occupation of Iraq. The next events in this global campaign are scheduled in cities around the world for March 18-20,
which marks the third anniversary of the attack on Iraq. We urge citizens everywhere to join this effort to end the occupation.”
Christian peacemakers say Bush and Blair responsible for abduction of colleagues in Iraq
-08/03/06
Christian peacemakers in Iraq have said that the root cause of their colleagues abduction “is the
U.S. and British-led invasion and occupation of Iraq.”
In a statement following the airing of a new videotape showing members of Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) abducted in Iraq on November 26, 2005 on Al-Jazeera television, members of CPT said they continue to pray for their safe and speedy release so that they may return to their families and carry on their peaceful work on behalf of all Iraqi detainees.
This past weekend marked the 100th day since the peacemakers disappeared in Baghdad.
“In vigils around the world, people came together to honour our missing colleagues and to call for their safe release” the statement said.
“We also hold in our hearts the families of 14,600 Iraqis currently detained illegally by the Multinational Forces in Iraq who likewise await the release of their loved ones. These detainees are being held without formal charges, without access to their families and legal advisors, and without recourse to a fair and
open judicial process.”
Related Articles
“In the latest video we were so glad to see Jim Loney alive. We were so glad to see Harmeet Sooden alive. We were so glad to see Norman Kember alive. We do not know what to make of Tom Fox’s absence from this video. However we do know what motivated Tom and his colleagues to go to Iraq. Tom wrote on the day before he was taken, “We are here to take part in the creation of the Peaceable Realm of God. …How we take part in the creation of this realm is to love God with all our heart, our mind and our strength, and to love our neighbours and enemies as we love God and ourselves.
“Many Iraqi friends and human rights workers welcome CPT as a nonviolent, independent presence. Iraqis have asked us to tell their stories in our home communities, to share with them our own experiences of peacemaking, to assist them in building nonviolent institutions in Iraq, and to accompany them as they seek justice for detainees and others suffering from the oppression of Iraq. We seek to promote what is human in all of us and so to offer a glimpse of hope in a dark time. This hope springs from our own faith tradition. We have witnessed a similar hope within the faith traditions of the people of Iraq.
“We believe that the root cause of the abduction of our colleagues is the U.S. and British-led invasion and occupation of Iraq. Many in Iraq have experienced this long war as terrorism. The occupation must end. Work
towards this is being coordinated by the Global Call for Nonviolent Resistance to End the Military Occupation of Iraq. The next events in this global campaign are scheduled in cities around the world for March 18-20,
which marks the third anniversary of the attack on Iraq. We urge citizens everywhere to join this effort to end the occupation.”