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Date: Monday 10 March 2008
United Reformed Church
seeks new vigour in
ending Iraq occupation
The United Reformed Church has called for
renewed urgency and vigour to be brought to ending the occupation of
Iraq by British and American forces, as the fifth anniversary of the
start of the Iraq War approaches. The Church says the consequences of
the military action have been devastating for the people of Iraq, and
for families with members serving in the coalition forces.
The Church has consistently voiced its
opposition to Britain and America entering Iraq (on 19 March 2003),
without the proper backing of the United Nations. It now describes that
decision as “ill-conceived”.
Simon Loveitt, Convenor of the Church and
Society committee said “We opposed it then. We oppose it now. It was a
foolhardy and immoral incursion which did not have our backing. Nor did
it have the backing of millions of people of this country, who still
carry a sense of outrage about it”.
A statement approved by the Church’s Mission
Council, meeting on 9 March, drew attention to the fact that more than a
million Iraqis have been killed, more than four million have been
uprooted from their homes and more than three thousand British and
American troops have been killed. Concern was expressed that some
returning British servicewomen and men have been vilified, simply for
doing their duty.
The statement calls for an understanding that
“where conflict and tension abound, lasting peace and stability are more
likely to emanate from a dismantling of structures that perpetrate
injustice or division, than from violence or aggression”. It says the
ending of the occupation needs to be based on the development of
sustainable security for the people of the region
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