From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
NICARAGUA: Churches respond to expelled immigrants from USA
From
a.whitefield@quest.org.uk
Date
25 Jun 1997 13:10:12
Title; Churches respond to expelled immigrants from USA
May 30, 1997
ANGLICAN COMMUNION NEWS SERVICE
Canon Jim Rosenthal, Director of Communications
Anglican Communion Office
London, England
[97.5.4.8]
NICARAGUA: Churches respond to expelled immigrants from USA
(ALC) A leader from the Latin American Council of Churches (CLAI) has
proposed creating a bridge of solidarity between North American Churches
and Central American immigrants who could be expelled from the United
States under the new immigration law.
Rolando Soto, responsible for CLAI's Education for Peace project,
specified that the initiative could be accompanied by legal advice,
pastoral support, socio-economic and labour orientation and paperwork to
support productive and housing projects. These projects will benefit
some 2 million people from Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua
and Costa Rica, who will have to return to their countries where the
mentioned law comes into effect next September.
The Revd Martin Barahona, of the Anglican Church of El Salvador,
proposed making an urgent call to national and regional councils and the
World Council of Churches as well as Human Rights Organisations and the
United Nations, to detain the massive deportation of Central Americans
on the part of the US government.
Norman Bent, CLAI Secretary for the Aboriginal, Black and Against All
Discrimination Pastoral, said that action should be taken immediately.
According to Mr Bent the law began to be applied in March and led to a
situation of injustice involving a Nicaraguan woman who was expelled,
without a right to defence, despite being married, having children born
in the United States and having lived there for 10 years.
Representatives from Lutheran, Baptist, Moravian, Anglican and Central
American Pentecostal Churches, who attended the meeting convened by
CLAI, approved the proposals, which will be shaped in a Managua
Declaration, which will define a joint strategy.
Marilyn Mendez, CLAI Secretary for Central America, indicated that the
meeting was convoked in the face of the dramatic situation facing
hundreds of Central Americans and it is time that Churches joint efforts
to lobby the US Congress to modify the immigrants law.
Letters were sent to President Bill Clinton of the USA, Christian
organisations and European Churches in order to raise awareness among
the American people about the harshness of the immigrant law.
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