Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

NCC Executive Board Asks Urgent Intervention in the Sudan

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NCC Executive Board Asks Urgent Intervention in the Sudan

    AllAfrica.com, Africa
    May 19 2004

    NCC Executive Board Asks Urgent Intervention in the Sudan

    National Council of Churches USA (New York)

    PRESS RELEASE
    May 19, 2004
    Posted to the web May 19, 2004

    Chicago, Ill

    Urgent intervention to stop the killing in Sudan was the call of the
    National Council of Churches USA Executive Board in a resolution
    adopted unanimously today during its spring meeting here May 17-18.
    The Board committed the NCC and its member churches "to intensifying
    their efforts" to stop the apparent attempt at ethnic cleansing in
    Darfur, western Sudan, that already has claimed tens of thousands of
    lives and displaced a million people, and that risks deepening to
    genocide.

    It condemned the involvement of all parties perpetrating genocide in
    the Sudan and called upon the government of Sudan to bring an end to
    this practice immediately, including stopping attacks by its military
    and proxy militia against civilians in Darfur.

    And it called on the U.S. government "to continue to press the
    Sudanese government to bring to a halt this unfolding horror and to
    support appropriate diplomatic, humanitarian, conflict resolution and
    peace enforcement efforts by the United Nations to these ends."

    Today's resolution also called upon the international community and
    non-governmental organizations to investigate and monitor reports of
    crimes against humanity being committed in Sudan.

    Among those voicing passionate support for the action was Bishop
    Vicken Aykazian of Washington, D.C., Ecumenical Officer of the
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America. It is estimated that 1.5
    million Armenians perished between 1915-23 in the Armenian Genocide,
    and that a million were deported forcibly.

    "My family is victim of the first genocide of the 20th century,"
    scattered to the far corners of the earth, said Bishop Aykazian. "I
    am very much concerned when I see that people in other nations now
    are being massacred as well ­ in Sudan, simply because they are
    black. Ten years ago, in Rwanda, in front of the civilized world, one
    million people were slaughtered. The same thing is happening now in
    Sudan. The NCC must take this very seriously and do something." On
    April 23, the NCC sponsored an observance of the 10th anniversary of
    the Rwandan Genocide, held in Los Angeles and featuring Samantha
    Power, who won the Pulitzer Prize for her book ''A Problem from
    Hell': America and the Age of Genocide.'

    She and other speakers noted that despite the world's pledge to
    'never again' allow genocide, the world is not stepping up
    effectively to stop the killing in Sudan.

    "Knowing the history of genocide in the 20th century, beginning with
    the Armenian Genocide through the Jewish Holocaust and ending with
    the Rwandan Genocide, we are appalled that this legacy of death and
    destruction should be carried into the 21st century," the Board
    stated.

    Today's resolution by the NCC's Executive Board, whose 80 members are
    delegates from the Council's 36 Protestant, Orthodox and Anglican
    member churches, reaffirms and extends the Board's extensive 2002
    resolution on the continuing crisis in the Sudan.

    In today's action, the Board also commended actions already taken by
    member communions and recommended that they prayerfully consider
    further actions that they might take, individually and together as
    the NCC, conducive to the establishment of peace in Sudan.

    NCC General Secretary Bob Edgar urged U.S. churches not to let
    current preoccupation with Iraq, the elections, the Middle East and
    the U.S. economy distract them from action on Sudan. "This is an
    urgent moment," he said.
Working...
X