World Alliance of Reformed Churches
War on Iraq is simply wrong
(21/02/03)
Amman, Jordan, February 21 2003
Following a team visit to Baghdad, the Revd Dr Setri Nyomi, general secretary of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches today issued the following statement opposing the war on Iraq that is being planned by the US administration and its close allies in the UK and elsewhere.
Statement of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches on the proposed war on Iraq
The World Alliance of Reformed Churches delegation has just returned from a pastoral visit to Iraq. We felt the pain of the people of Iraq, and saw the devastation caused by the wars they have been through and the sanctions still in place. Everything points to the senselessness and callousness of war at this time. The victims will be poor innocent civilians of Iraq and the region.
Daily and from every
corner of the earth, the Alliance receives statements from its member churches
expressing opposition to war on Iraq. Reformed churches including those in the
United States of America and the United Kingdom are against it. Nor are we
alone. Churches and Christians of every tradition stand together in their
opposition to this war.
The World Alliance of
Reformed Churches endorses and identifies with the united voice of international
Christian opinion.
A war on Iraq would
violate the UN Charter and international law. No nation has the right to attack
another. A reference to pre-emptive self-defence by the US and the UK
governments is without justification in international law, especially when there
is little evidence of an intended strike from the target. With a United Nation’s
Charter which is unambiguously committed to peaceful solutions, it is difficult
to imagine the legality of a UN resolution which would allow any nation and its
allies to attack Iraq.
War on Iraq is simply
wrong. Christian faith and tradition lead the World Alliance of Reformed
Churches to this conclusion.
The UN Security Council
has resolved that Iraq shall rid itself of any weapons of mass destruction it
may possess. The inspectors it has sent to Iraq for that purpose should be
allowed to finish their work. Once mechanisms are in place for verifying the
existence of weapons of mass destruction in a nation and destroying them, it is
morally unjustifiable for other weapons of mass destruction from any other
source to be unleashed upon such a nation.
The World Alliance of
Reformed Churches is in no way defending Saddam Hussein. The Alliance has a long
tradition of standing for human rights, dating back to the genocide of Native
Americans in the 19th century. While the purpose of our visit to Baghdad was not
to evaluate the leadership of Saddam Hussein or his regime, we know from
experience that he is a tyrant. His treatment of his own people is a gross
violation of human rights, as was his war of aggression against Kuwait.
But the war urged by Mr
Bush and Mr Blair will undoubtedly increase the suffering of the people of Iraq
and violence in the world rather than achieve a desirable democratic outcome for
the people of Iraq or increase world peace and security. Any war on Iraq will
affect the lives of common people gravely. It will also increase violence and
insecurity in the world.
The children, young
people, women and men of Iraq have suffered enough, without being subjected to
yet another devastation.
It is the responsibility
of all people of faith to call the sacredness of life to the attention of
political leaders who seem to be forgetting that life belongs to God and is
sacred. In the Bible the vision to which people of faith are called to counter
evil with good includes seeking peace and pursuing it (1 Peter 3.11). This is
not a passive stance – it means actively doing everything possible to avoid war
and to seek peace.
It is this calling for
peace that leads the World Alliance of Reformed Churches to call on world
leaders to refrain from the path of war, seek peace and pursue it. This same
calling led the World Alliance to send a delegation to visit Iraq to express
solidarity with our sisters and brothers in Iraq. We care for the children,
young people, women and men of Iraq – Muslims, Christians and people of other
faiths living in Iraq. Our faith calls us to love our neighbours as ourselves.
The war that Mr Bush and Mr Blair are calling for is certainly not one of one
religion against another. In solidarity with the people of Iraq, we pray that
the war and its resultant sufferings will be averted.
Our appeal
We appeal to our member
churches, and to Christians everywhere, for continued prayer and protest. Pray
for all people of Iraq, and for all leaders making decisions today to listen
carefully to God’s calling and the cries of the ordinary people of Iraq, and
choose life rather than death.
We appeal to the United
Nations – especially the fifteen nations represented in the UN Security Council
– to place the requirements of international law, the long-standing commitment
of the United Nations to choose peaceful solutions, and the value for life above
national self-interests.
We appeal to the US and UK
governments to turn away from the path of destruction and death.
"Blessed are the
peacemakers, for they will be called children of God."
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