FOR
PERSONAL, NON-COMMERCIAL USE ONLY
Pax
Christi UK, Press
Release
August 2 ,
2002
Support
Grows for Declaration on Legality and
Morality of War with Iraq
Since its public
launch in mid-July, the Christian Declaration questioning the
morality and legality of war against Iraq has gained widespread
support. The initial 100 signatories included Archbishop Rowan
Williams, Anglican Bishops John Perry and Peter Price, Roman
Catholic Bishops Malcolm McMahon, Thomas McMahon and Edwin
Regan and academics and theologians from around the country.
A further 2500 signatures* of support have been received from
churches based groups, academics and individuals. Pax Christi
UK, the organisers of the Declaration report that they have
received much encouragement for the initiative. Many people
said that had been looking for an alternative voice to that
being offered by our political leaders and hope that the Declaration
will generate serious reflection among decision makers. The
Declaration appears to have captured the energy of convents,
parishes, religious communities and families. It states: " It
is deplorable that the world's most powerful nations continue
to regard war and the threat of war as an acceptable instrument
of foreign policy, in violation of the ethos of both the United
Nations and Christian moral teaching. The way to peace does
not lie through war but through the transformation of structures
of injustice and of the politics of exclusion, and that is
the cause to which the West should be devoting its technological,
diplomatic and economic resources".
The Declaration
will be presented at Downing Street at 1.00 pm on Tuesday 6th
August. This is also the anniversary of the first use of nuclear
weapons at Hiroshima in 1945. The organisers believe there
is a strong link between the two. Forty-three years on the
British Government still holds and threatens to use its nuclear
weapons.
Dr Tina Beattie,
a member of the delegation presenting the Declaration said, " When
our elected leaders are considering fighting a war in our name,
funded by our taxes, there is no morally neutral position.
Christians have a responsibility to affirm certain fundamental
principles of justice, and for those who consider that a military
attack on Iraq would violate those principles, then there is
a duty to speak out publicly. The response to this declaration
suggests that many welcome an opportunity to do so, adding
our voices to the growing number expressing disquiet in military
and political circles as George W Bush and Tony Blair prepare
for a war that could further destabilize one of the world's
most volatile and violent regions, with devastating consequences
for all the people of the Middle East."
For more information
contact:
Pat Gaffney ++44-20
8203 4884
Dr Tina Beattie
++44-1179 426212
* Includes Rt
Rev Michael Hare Duke, Bishop of Beverley, Bishop of Chichester
(Anglican) Bishop of Galloway, Bishop of Northampton (Roman
Catholic), Gerard Hughes SJ, Wilfred McGreal O.Carm, Prior
of Aylesford Priory Kent/ Provincial leaders of the following
religious orders: Daughters of Wisdom, Passionists, Xavarian
Missionary Society, Srs of St Joseph of Peace, Religious of
the Assumption/ Churches Together in Loughborough, Kings Lynn,
Stockport, Highgate, Wales, Manchester/ General Assembly of
the Presbyterian Church of Wales/ academics from Universities
in Oxford, Birmingham, Lancaster, Cambridge, Edinburgh, Religious
communities in Kenya, Zambia, South Africa, Italy and concerned
individuals from Australia, USA, Canada, Japan, India, Switzerland
and Italy.
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