From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


United Methodist bishop joins appeal to Clinton on Sudan


From NewsDesk <NewsDesk@UMCOM.UMC.ORG>
Date 10 Dec 1999 09:34:44

Dec. 10, 1999 News media contact: Linda Bloom·(212) 870-3803·New York
10-71B{666}

By United Methodist News Service

Two hundred religious and human rights leaders have appealed to President
Clinton to help stop the "genocide now taking place in Sudan."

Those signing the Dec. 9 letter to the president included Bishop Robert C.
Morgan, Louisville, Ky., president of the United Methodist Council of
Bishops.

The appeal warned that if America does not lead the way towards peace in
Sudan, "an unspeakable catastrophe evident to all will take its final,
dreadful toll in a century already defined too fully by indifference and
genocide."

Sudan, the largest country in Africa, has been engaged in civil war for 33
of its nearly 44 years.  An estimated 2 million have died and another 4
million are internally displaced. The current government, based in Khartoum,
took power in 1989, preventing a peace settlement that would have resulted
in a separation of church and state.

Another signer of the appeal, Roger  Winter, executive director of the
U.S.Committee for Refugees, has called those living in South Sudan "the
poorest, most destitute population anywhere in the world."

Speaking in October to the governing members of the United Methodist Board
of Global Ministries, Winters said that the  "highly-complicated conflict"
in Sudan has affected all people there - whether Arab or African, Muslim or
Christian, Northerner or Southerner. The current government, controlled by
the National Islamic Front, is the primary abuser, he added, and the people
of South Sudan are the primary victims.

The letter asks Clinton to:
·	meet publicly with Elie Wiesel and experts on the policies and
practices of the Khartoum regime in Sudan;
·	tighten U.S. sanctions against that regime;
·	support the Sudan Peace Act, unanimously passed by the U.S. Senate
on Nov. 19;
·	strip the Khartoum regime of the authority to use American and
international food aid as an instrument of war.
#  #  #

*************************************
United Methodist News Service
Photos and stories also available at:
http://www.umc.org/umns


Browse month . . . Browse month (sort by Source) . . . Advanced Search & Browse . . . WFN Home