WCC Press Update: Kosovo Message
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Date: Sun, 21 Mar 1999 16:25:26 +0200 (EET)
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Subject: WCC Press Update: Kosovo Message
From: MINELRES moderator <[email protected]>
Original sender: Felix Corley <[email protected]>
WCC Press Update: Kosovo Message
World Council of Churches
Press Update
17 March 1999
MESSAGE TO THE CONFERENCE ON PEACE AND TOLERANCE IN KOSOVO
cf. WCC Press Release of 14 October 1998
The General Secretary of the World Council of Churches (WCC), Rev. Dr
Konrad Raiser, has welcomed recent attempts to seek a just and
peaceful settlement to the conflict in Kosovo. In a message addressed
to the first summit of Kosovo religious leaders currently meeting in
Vienna, Austria, Raiser stated that "the WCC supports the statements
and actions of the churches and religious communities that seek to
promote a lasting peace".
The religious leaders of the Serbian Orthodox, Roman Catholic and
Islamic communities in Kosovo are attending the "Conference on Peace
and Tolerance in Kosovo", which was organized by the US-based
interfaith Appeal of Conscience Foundation. WCC representative at the
meeting is Fr Leonid Kishkovsky from the Orthodox Church in America,
who is also a member of the WCC Executive Committee.
Message of WCC General Secretary, Rev. Dr Konrad Raiser, to the
Conference on Peace and Tolerance in Kosovo, Vienna, 16-18 March 1999:
"To the distinguished participants in the First Summit of Kosovo
Religious Leaders,
The World Council of Churches (WCC) has closely monitored the civil
conflict in Kosovo over recent months, and welcomes all attempts to
seek a just and peaceful settlement to the crisis in the region. The
WCC supports the statements and actions of the churches and religious
communities that seek to promote a lasting peace, including the
present summit of Kosovo religious leaders of the Serbian Orthodox,
Catholic and Islamic communities.
As churches and religious leaders in the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia and elsewhere have said from the beginning of this
conflict, violence cannot bring peace. The use of force and
intimidation cannot secure a lasting and just solution to this complex
and painful conflict. The only viable future for the region lies in a
negotiated settlement based on the establishment of full democracy and
respect for the human rights of all communities, majority and
minority, and the due recognition of the need for tolerance and
peaceful co-existence. The WCC affirms the principle that the
representatives of all national communities in Kosovo should be
involved in any political settlement, if this is to be just and
durable.
The Council condemns in the strongest terms the use of violence in any
form by the conflicting parties. The efforts by the international and
regional organizations and mechanisms to actively promote a settlement
to the conflict, in particular the Rambouillet peace process, and all
supportive measures short of military force to achieve this end, are
commendable and need to be encouraged. The WCC welcomes the active
involvement of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
(OSCE), which is in accordance with the resolutions of the UN Security
Council. The WCC emphasizes the necessity for the international
institutions to ensure that any future political settlement enhances
stability in the region and builds confidence among all its peoples.
The Council remains greatly concerned about the humanitarian disaster
created by the armed conflict which has resulted in the displacement
of tens of thousand of civilians. The WCC therefore urges all parties,
and especially the authorities in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia,
to honour their commitments to maintain and uphold the right to access
by international humanitarian organizations to the affected region,
and to facilitate the safe return of all those displaced by the
fighting. The WCC, through its emergency office ACT-Action by Churches
Together, will continue to provide assistance to the victims of the
humanitarian crisis, regardless of their origin.
The WCC expresses its profound solidarity with all the peoples of
Kosovo, and joins the common prayer of the faithful of all religious
communities that justice and peace may be restored in this land."
Contact: Karin Achtelstetter, Media Relations Officer
**********
The World Council of Churches is a fellowship of churches, now 338, in
more than 100 countries in all continents from virtually all Christian
traditions. The Roman Catholic Church is not a member church but
works cooperatively with the WCC. The highest governing body is the
Assembly, which meets approximately every seven years. The WCC was
formally inaugurated in 1948 in Amsterdam, Netherlands. Its staff is
headed by general secretary Konrad Raiser from the Evangelical Church
in Germany.
World Council of Churches
Media Relations Office
Tel: (41.22) 791.61.52/51
Fax: (41.22) 798.13.46
E-Mail: [email protected]
http://www.wcc-coe.org
P.O. Box 2100
CH-1211 Geneva 2
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