Global appeal to churches on fragile Sudan peace process
-22/05/06
Leaders of the Worl
Global appeal to churches on fragile Sudan peace process
-22/05/06
Leaders of the World Council of Churches (WCC) today issued an urgent appeal for the churches and international community to urgently refocus efforts to safeguard the fragile peace process in Sudan.
And they warned of the risks of an “ominous humanitarian crisis of gigantic proportion” if those responsible for crimes against humanity in the Darfur province are not brought to justice.
“There is a real danger of renewed conflict unless the churches of Sudan, the ecumenical fellowship and the international community together respond to the political and economic challenges and move from monitoring to action,” the executive committee emphasized in a statement on Sudan agreed during its meeting at Bossey, outside Geneva.
“States can no longer hide behind the pretexts of sovereignty to perpetuate human rights violations against their citizens and live in total impunity,” the statement notes, referring to the decisions of the WCC’s recent 9th Assembly on The Responsibility to Protect.
Welcoming the UN Security Council Chapter 7 Resolution adopted on 16 May 2006, the executive committee encourages the UN to take “urgent and decisive” action to ensure Sudanese civilians are protected.
The statement also calls on African and other states involved in the peace process to bolster the implementation process of the Sudan comprehensive peace agreement signed in 2004 and to hold the parties accountable to that agreement.
The WCC condemns the “atrocities committed on innocent Sudanese civilians, particularly women and children, by parties to the conflicts,” and refers to the systematic killings, rape, displacement and looting that have characterised the armed conflict in Darfur as “crimes against humanity, by some even considered as ‘genocide'”.
The human suffering and humanitarian emergency which result “pose a serious challenge to the international community that has a moral responsibility to bring the perpetrators to justice,” the committee states.
The WCC has a long-standing involvement in efforts for peace in Sudan, and recently appointed a new special representative to facilitate ecumenical efforts for reconciliation and rehabilitation in the region.
Since 2004, the WCC has worked through the ACT (Action of Churches Together) International alliance and with the Catholic Caritas network as part of a major international church response to the humanitarian crisis in Sudan’s Darfur province.
An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 348 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican, independent and indigenous churches representing more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church.
[Also on Ekklesia: Mennonites and other churches step up Darfur relief; African churches urge UN peacekeeping role in Darfur; Darfur peace agreement is still fragile, say churches; Avoid needless Darfur suffering, say church aid agencies; Churches and NGOs rally for Darfur as crisis deepens]
Global appeal to churches on fragile Sudan peace process
-22/05/06
Leaders of the World Council of Churches (WCC) today issued an urgent appeal for the churches and international community to urgently refocus efforts to safeguard the fragile peace process in Sudan.
And they warned of the risks of an “ominous humanitarian crisis of gigantic proportion” if those responsible for crimes against humanity in the Darfur province are not brought to justice.
“There is a real danger of renewed conflict unless the churches of Sudan, the ecumenical fellowship and the international community together respond to the political and economic challenges and move from monitoring to action,” the executive committee emphasized in a statement on Sudan agreed during its meeting at Bossey, outside Geneva.
“States can no longer hide behind the pretexts of sovereignty to perpetuate human rights violations against their citizens and live in total impunity,” the statement notes, referring to the decisions of the WCC’s recent 9th Assembly on The Responsibility to Protect.
Welcoming the UN Security Council Chapter 7 Resolution adopted on 16 May 2006, the executive committee encourages the UN to take “urgent and decisive” action to ensure Sudanese civilians are protected.
The statement also calls on African and other states involved in the peace process to bolster the implementation process of the Sudan comprehensive peace agreement signed in 2004 and to hold the parties accountable to that agreement.
The WCC condemns the “atrocities committed on innocent Sudanese civilians, particularly women and children, by parties to the conflicts,” and refers to the systematic killings, rape, displacement and looting that have characterised the armed conflict in Darfur as “crimes against humanity, by some even considered as ‘genocide'”.
The human suffering and humanitarian emergency which result “pose a serious challenge to the international community that has a moral responsibility to bring the perpetrators to justice,” the committee states.
The WCC has a long-standing involvement in efforts for peace in Sudan, and recently appointed a new special representative to facilitate ecumenical efforts for reconciliation and rehabilitation in the region.
Since 2004, the WCC has worked through the ACT (Action of Churches Together) International alliance and with the Catholic Caritas network as part of a major international church response to the humanitarian crisis in Sudan’s Darfur province.
An ecumenical fellowship of churches founded in 1948, today the WCC brings together 348 Protestant, Orthodox, Anglican, independent and indigenous churches representing more than 560 million Christians in over 110 countries, and works cooperatively with the Roman Catholic Church.
[Also on Ekklesia: Mennonites and other churches step up Darfur relief; African churches urge UN peacekeeping role in Darfur; Darfur peace agreement is still fragile, say churches; Avoid needless Darfur suffering, say church aid agencies; Churches and NGOs rally for Darfur as crisis deepens]