People of Faith
Unity Statement and Call to
Action for the Massive Crisis in
The emergency in
Villages have been razed, women and girls are systematically raped
and branded, men and boys murdered, and food and water supplies targeted and
destroyed. Government aerial bombardments support the Janjaweed by
hurling explosives as well as barrels of nails, car chassis and old appliances
from planes to crush people and property. Tens of thousands have died. Well
over a million people have been driven from their homes, and only in the past
few weeks have humanitarian agencies gained limited access to some of the
affected region.
Mukesh Kapila, the former United Nations humanitarian coordinator
for
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
estimates that 350,000 people or more could die in the coming months. Ongoing
assessments by independent organizations such as Medecins sans Frontieres
(Doctors without Borders) suggest that USAID’s estimate may be conservative. If
aid is denied or unavailable, as many as a million people could perish.
Lives are hanging in the balance on a
massive scale.
Call To
Action
We commend the efforts of the U.S. government in brokering
a peace deal to end the gruesome 21-year Civil War in the South and its
generous pledge of $300 million in U.S. humanitarian aid. We also applaud the
recent visits of Secretary of State Colin Powell and United Nations Secretary
General Kofi Annan to the region of Darfur to assess the atrocities human
rights organizations are calling the worst humanitarian crisis in the world
today. And we congratulate Congress for taking decisive legislative action. But
we must not wait for a legal determination of "genocide" to ensure a
massive worldwide humanitarian response and call to end the violence and
investigate crimes against humanity.
As Elie Wiesel passionately declared at the Darfur Emergency Summit on July 14, "the perils of
indifference enable killers to kill and tormentors to torment--we cannot stand
idly by [the crimes against humanity being committed in Sudan] or all our
endeavors will be unworthy--We must act."
We therefore call on people of conscience everywhere to take any and all
actions permitted by each individual’s or
organization’s abilities and constraints to:
·
offer
prayers during weekend services throughout the next several weeks for the
suffering people of the
·
fast as
a sign of solidarity with the people of
·
encourage
worldwide efforts to stop the displacement and end the crimes against humanity
·
support
legislation, such as the Comprehensive Sudan Peace Act (S.2705), that will
increase humanitarian aid to the
·
demand
massive worldwide governmental humanitarian support and access to match the
need
·
promote
efforts to rebuild villages and return the displaced
·
call for a UN Commission of Inquiry
to investigate war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide
This statement is hereby signed and endorsed by:
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Please return
petitions to: Catholic
Commission,
Address: 795