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The
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MECC Statement on Recent Situation Concerning Iraq
August 5, 2002
The Middle East Council of Churches views with disappointment
and increasing alarm intensified efforts in the United States to gather support
for major military action against Iraq. Apart from its humanitarian concerns for
the Iraqi people who, for over a decade, have been ground down by sanctions and
daily air raids, the MECC is committed to Iraq not least of all because of the
cries of its member churches there for peace and sanity.
From our nearby vantage point, we see the conflict in Iraq as
one against the people of that country, the common people, not the politicians
or power brokers. The UN sanctions — themselves a type of violence — have not
really touched Iraq’s governing elite, but have caused the people untold
suffering. For over a decade the Middle East Council of Churches provided
ecumenical relief services in Iraq, becoming a channel for international relief
and reconstruction. Now as talk focuses upon escalating this low-intensity war
into a full-scale military offensive, the churches in the Middle East are truly
alarmed.
Not only has the sanctions regime failed; that failure is now
to be compounded by an initiative that lacks justification and has no
discernible or constructive goal. It has no support in the region. All that
military offensive will leave behind is ruin and a shattered country. Chaos will
ensue. In the meantime, nothing will be done to ameliorate the human suffering
that has already scarred and ruined a whole generation of Iraq’s youth, caused
the death of thousands of infants, destroyed one of the region’s most productive
and creative middle classes, and left a wasteland, a swirling pool of despair
and rage, a time-bomb to bedevil the future.
We Christians of the Middle East urge the churches of the
West to speak to their governments. The issue to be kept squarely in the
forefront is the humanitarian one. There is a whole population of ordinary and
decent people whose desire is survival with dignity. Violence will only cause
their circumstances to deteriorate further. What is needed is a sustained and
determined diplomatic and political effort that engages the Iraqi government
directly, and a sustained campaign to re-empower the Iraqi people and restore
their dignity. This is the wisdom of the region. From the churches’ point of
view, it is also consistent with the priorities of the gospel that seeks healing
for the nations and dignity for human beings.
The churches of the Middle East are committed to peace that
comes through the power of the Word to establish justice, and champions the
cause of the poor and downtrodden. We believe that through peaceful intervention
the moral force of truth can break the cycle of violence in Iraq, in Palestine,
and throughout the world.
Rev. Dr. Riad Jarjour General
Secretary, The Middle East Council of Churches (MECC)