
News
WCC appeals to international community for Lebanon cease-fire
August 8, 2006
An appeal to "do whatever is possible to stop the bombings, negotiate
a cease-fire and a comprehensive peace settlement" has been addressed
today by the World Council of Churches (WCC) general secretary Rev. Dr
Samuel Kobia to "the leaders of the international community, especially
to those from the United States, Israel and the United Kingdom".
The WCC appeal also calls on the Israeli government to "give guarantees
that humanitarian organisations will be allowed unhindered access to
those in need of assistance".
"Our hearts cry out to the leaders of the international community",
says Kobia, who describes the current fighting as "a war of ominous
dimension and of far-reaching consequences" that is causing "unimaginable
and untold suffering to the people in Lebanon".
While "a major tragedy continues to unfold in the troubled region
of the Middle East", the world sees the "shocking and disgraceful" spectacle
of world leaders announcing "in a most callous manner that fighting
will continue till strategic military objectives are met".
What they are really saying, Kobia alleges, is that "more people
can continue to be killed while they take their time to settle their
political differences". And affirms that "blind faith in military
violence to resolve disputes and disagreements is totally unwarranted,
illegal and immoral".
Judging that the present "disproportionate acts of violence of
immense magnitude can have no justification," he notes that the
United Nations Security Council "has been paralysed by the power
and politics of the dominant nations and its charter undermined".
The WCC general secretary offers prayers for "all the people of
Lebanon, Muslims and Christians alike" and "the people of Israel
who have fallen victims to the missiles that continue to be fired indiscriminately
into their towns and villages".
The WCC is working on putting together a pastoral delegation to Lebanon,
an initiative that is on hold for the time being given security concerns
and logistical difficulties.
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