Statements
An appeal to the international community
from the World Council of Churches
Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia
Geneva, 3 August 2006
On 21 July 2006, I wrote a letter to the permanent members of the
United Nations Security Council amongst others, calling for an immediate
cease-fire, protection of civilians as prescribed by law, including
the Geneva Conventions and multilateral implementation of long-delayed
UN Security Council resolutions for peace in Lebanon, Israel and
the Occupied Palestinian Territories, including an urgent end to
the illegal 39-year occupation that is the vortex of the region’s
violent storms.
Despite this and other such letters by religious leaders, a major
tragedy continues to unfold in the troubled region of the Middle
East. A war of ominous dimension and of far-reaching consequences
is causing unimaginable and untold suffering to the people in Lebanon.
In a period of three weeks, over six hundred people have lost their
lives and over a million have been displaced. The television images
of corpses of little children and old women struggling to find their
way through the debris and rubble of their homes and a nation held
in fear are heart-wrenching. Much needed aid and assistance that
could be of help in these dire circumstances has been hampered and
is unable to reach those in need.
Yet these developments seemed to have no effect on the leaders
of countries like Israel, the United States and the United Kingdom.
We call on the Israeli government to give guarantees that humanitarian
organisations will be allowed unhindered access to those in need
of assistance. Dozens of villages have been flattened into ruins
by merciless bombings of the Israeli forces that are continuing
unabated despite promises of a temporary cease-fire.
In the circumstances, the World Council of Churches decided to
rush a pastoral delegation to Lebanon, but regrettably, due to security
concerns and difficulties of transporting them to the affected areas,
the visit for the time being has been put on hold.
The present disproportionate acts of violence of immense magnitude
can have no justification. It is indeed shocking and disgraceful
for world leaders to stand before the bar of public opinion and
announce in a most callous manner that fighting will continue till
strategic military objectives are met. In effect they are saying
more people can continue to be killed while they take their time
to settle their political differences.
Appeals for sanity and restraint by religious leaders and others
for the cessation of hostilities and an immediate cease-fire have
fallen on deaf ears. Once again the United Nations Security Council
has been paralysed by the power and politics of the dominant nations
and its charter undermined. This blind faith in military violence
to resolve disputes and disagreements is totally unwarranted, illegal
and immoral. It is not the way human beings should be approaching
just peace in the 21st century. It can never be too soon nor too
late to seek a cease-fire and a comprehensive peace. Our hearts
cry out to the leaders of the international community, especially
to those from the United States, Israel and the United Kingdom.
Recognising that humanitarian assistance cannot address the underlying
political conflicts, we appeal to them to do whatever is possible
to stop the bombings, negotiate a cease-fire and a comprehensive
peace settlement. We beseech them to trust in the promise of peace
for the alternative is horrors of war that we are witnessing today.
We pray for all the people of Lebanon, Muslims and Christians alike.
We pray for the people of Israel who have fallen victims to the
missiles that continue to be fired indiscriminately into their towns
and villages. To the Christians and churches in Lebanon we say,
"May (the Lord) strengthen you in his glorious might with ample
power to meet whatever comes with fortitude, patience and joy; and
to give thanks to the Father who has made you fit to share the heritage
of God’s people in the realm of light" (Colossians 1:11
–12).
Yours sincerely,
Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia
General Secretary
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