|
Israel bears the burden of
responsibility for the present crisis in the Middle East, the
World Council of Churches has announced, following a meeting of
its Executive Committee in Geneva from May 16-19.
The Christian Left's leading
ecumenical organization stated Israel's actions towards the
Palestinians "cannot be justified morally, legally or even
politically."
The failure "to comply with
international law" had "pushed the situation on the ground to a
point of no return," they concluded.
The WCC condemned the killing of
innocent civilians by "both sides" in the
conflict and called for the Palestinians to "maintain the
existing one-party
cease-fire toward Israel" and asked Israel to base its security
on "the
equitable negotiation of final borders" with its neighbors.
However, the present disparities
between Israel and Palestine were "appalling," the WCC said.
"One side is positioning itself to
unilaterally establish final borders on
territory that belongs to the other side; the other side is
increasingly
confined to the scattered enclaves that remain. On one side there
is control of more and more land and water; on the other there
are more and more families deprived of land and livelihoods.
On one side as many people as
possible are being housed on occupied land; on the other side the
toll mounts of refugees without homes or land. One side controls
Jerusalem, a city shared by two peoples and three world
religions; the other-Muslim and Christian-watches its
demographic, commercial and religious presence wither in
Jerusalem," the WCC said.
The WCC claimed a double standard
was at work in the international community that favored Israel,
saying, "The side set to keep its unlawful gains is garnering
support from part of the international community. The side that,
despairing at those unlawful gains, used legitimate elections to
choose new leaders is being isolated and punished."
"Democracy must be protected where
it is taking root," the WCC said, calling for a relaxation of
American, British and EU sanctions against Hamas. "Peace must
come soon or it may not come to either people for a long time,"
they concluded.
The WCC's Executive Committee
called upon its 340 member churches in over 100 countries
representing approximately 550 million Orthodox, Anglican and
Protestant Christians to "share solidarity with people on both
sides of the conflict," and to "use legitimate forms of pressure
to promote a just peace and to end unlawful activities by
Israelis or Palestinians."
It also asked its members to "find
constructive ways to address threats
experienced among the Jewish people, including the nature,
prevalence and impact of racism in local, national and
international contexts."
In March 2005, the WCC urged its member churches give "serious
consideration" to pulling investments out of Israel and endorsed
the 2004 decision by the Presbyterian Church of the United States
to seek "phased selective divestment" from Israel. "This
[Presbyterian] action is commendable in both method and manner,
uses criteria rooted in faith and calls members to do the things
that make for peace," the WCC said.
The Presbyterian Church will
revisit its 2004 divestment decision next month at its 217th
General Assembly in Birmingham, Alabama, in response to criticism
that the divestment call was one-sided and ill-informed.
More Press Releases |