CTindex - Christian Today UK Interactive Catalogue
World

WCC Calls on Ethiopia to Halt Military Action

The World Council of Churches has called on the Ethiopian government to end the military campaign against the people in a letter to the country's prime minister Meles Zenawi.

by Maria Mackay
Posted: Tuesday, November 8, 2005, 18:54 (GMT)
Font Scale:A A A

The general secretary of the World Council of Churches, Rev. Dr. Samuel Kobia, has called on the Ethiopian government to bring to an immediate end its military action against the people and to release political prisoners as soon as possible.

The World Council of Churches urgently and respectfully calls on Your Excellency to exercise utmost restraint and bring to an immediate halt the military action against the people and release the political prisoners as soon as possible.

Rev. Dr Samuel Kobia, general secretary of the WCC

Rev. Kobia expressed “great sadness” for the death of many Ethiopians following demonstrations and riots in Addis Adaba in a letter sent last Friday to the Ethiopian prime minister Meles Zenawi.

In the letter, Kobia warned that “further military action against the people is an escalation of violence and will further damage the political climate and make dialogue even less possible”.

The letter read: “The World Council of Churches urgently and respectfully calls on Your Excellency to exercise utmost restraint and bring to an immediate halt the military action against the people and release the political prisoners as soon as possible.

“Such action will help in easing the fast rising political tension,” said Kobia.

Kobia met with Zenawi last September during a visit to WCC members in the country, where he expressed his conviction that “honest dialogue with the opposition” was needed.

Following the visit, Kobia wrote to the leadership of the Coalition for Unity and Democracy and the United Ethiopian Democratic Forces making the same appeal “to resolve the political impasse through dialogue".

In last Friday’s letter to the Ethiopian prime minister, Kobia criticised the government for its arrest and detention of key figures in the opposition, saying, “These developments are not likely to lead to a peaceful resolution, but instead would aggravate the situation”.

He warned: “Consequent to the actions taken by the government, the wedge between the government and the opposition will widen, thereby unnecessarily dividing the population and leading to economic and political hardship."

“It could even destabilise the entire nation with all the adverse effects on the laudable initiatives you have taken on development and democratisation process.”

Bloody clashes between demonstrators and police over the disputed May 15 elections last week left 46 people dead and thousands in custody, reports IOL.

Prime minister Zenawi promised an independent commission would investigate whether police had used excessive force to quell last week’s violence and similar in June, in which at least 42 people were also killed.

The country has come under intense pressure from the U.S. and the European Union, the country’s main donors, to investigate the clashes which started on Tuesday following peaceful protests on Monday.



Copyright © 2005 Christian Today. All rights reserved.
This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Have your say on this article
Christian Aid
Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here
Bible Society
World Headline
Chinese Christians persecuted but still patriotic, says Open Doors head

Chinese Christians persecuted but still patriotic, says Open Doors head

Chinese house church Christians have a paradoxical view of their country, says the head of Open Doors USA who recently...
Sponsored Features
For holidays and retreats in the Scottish Borders. 01450 377477 INSPIRING BOOKS BY PRESTON TAYLOR, former Argentina missionary. A thrilling "Safari" into God's Word. Click this web site: Order through any Bookstore. Ideal gifts for anyone, any occasion. Tell a friend, please. The original Anglican resources shop your only independent one-stop-shop.
Google Advertisement
Externally generated - Report offensive links here