From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org


AACC PRESIDENT EMPHASIZES CHURCH-STATE COMPLEMENTARITY


From Worldwide Faith News <wfn@igc.org>
Date Tue, 25 Nov 2003 12:00:48 -0800

or Immediate Release
AACC Media Team: (011) 237 966 3059 or 3063

AACC PRESIDENT EMPHASIZES CHURCH-STATE COMPLEMENTARITY

AACC Cameroon November 24:  Churches need to understand and take advantage
of the need for complementarity between church and the State in Africa
and, if the people of Africa are to progress, be prepared to denounce
irregularities, said the President of the All Africa Conference of
Churches, Professor Kwesi Dickson.

Addressing the over five hundred delegates from all states in Africa at
the AACC General Assembly in Yaounde, Dickson said that the political
power will continue to be abused until and unless the church does more
than denounce the abuses.

&#8220;While the church should not abandon or compromise its prophetic
responsibility, the Church in Africa also needs to be assisted to
understand the principle of complementarity in areas such as economic
renewal,&#8221; he said, adding that the witness of the church in any
country,
represents a collective witness and any assault on a Church leader in any
country, is an assault on the church in Africa.

In terms of democracy, Kwesi posed the question whether democracy should
be extended from the political to social, economic and even familial
realms or remain a question of political decision making, election and
governmental institutions as the case currently appears to be?	He also
asked whether democracy can be turned in a society that is pluralistic as
African nations are.

&#8220;I believe democracy should, essentially, be home grown.	It should
provide a means of transforming, not just political power, but also
social, economic and even psychological aspects of power to create a truly
equitable order.  The African experience has been that when communities
are excluded from power or when changes in ethnic power base occur, then
conflicts break out,&#8221; he said.

  Dickson affirmed the Kenyan experience which is based on the formation of
a coalition as a way of conducting politics and which recognises the
multicultural nature of African societies, ensuring representation of
various ethnic segments.

&#8220;We hope in time we will see most if not all nations of Africa having
in
place constitutions, which recognise the people as the repository of
sovereign power.  Churches should not tolerate bad governance; they should
oppose it in no uncertain terms.&#8221;

Dickson said that now that peace has been restored in many countries which
were locked in civil wars in 1997, the challenge is to help former child
soldiers restore their lost childhood.	As an example, he cited the need
for traditional cleansing ceremonies to be performed in northern Uganda,
where the Lord&#8217;s Resistance Army is said to have abducted 10,000 
children.

&#8220;The rehabilitation and counselling of former child soldiers who were
turned into killing machines, are crucial, they need to be given hope and
a sense of purpose for the future&#8221;, he said adding that according to
Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, about one third of the
world&#8217;s child soldiers amounting to 120,000 children are in Africa.

Referring to the proliferation of arms in Africa, Dickson said that some
10 million small arms and light weapons were said to be in the hands of
insurgents, local militias and a network of criminals in Africa and that
the most popular brand of small arms is the AK 47 rifle.

&#8220;If small arms were edible, no one would go hungry in Africa. As the
supply increases, so does the price drop so that one rifle can be traded
for a chicken in some parts of Africa. According to some studies, small
arms alone have taken the lives of 8 million people between the last
Assembly (five years ago) and now.

In terms of the cultural significance that the AK 47 has gained in Africa,
Dickson said that while it represents power and even if not used, the gun
threat is intimidating.

&#8220;Once small arms are in the wrong hands, they tend to outlive any peace
agreements,&#8221; he said.

The term &#8220;globalisation&#8221; and &#8220;global village&#8221; 
Dickson said, have
in
reality limited significance in that they apply to one fifth of the world,
excluding five billion of the six billion human population on earth.  At
the economic level, Africa remained a mere subservient appendage to the
global village, supplying a pool of cheap labour and cheap raw material
and in return, it provided markets for imports of unsophisticated products.

&#8220;In the filed of communication, the era of globalisation found the
index
of adult literacy in sub-Saharan Africa amounting to an average of 50
percent.  University enrolment of high school leavers averages 2.5%
compared to 77.3 percent in North America.

The HIV/AIDS epidemic which continues to decimate thousands of lives in
Africa, was a topic that was high on the agenda of the AACC Assembly.
Stating that the disease has become the most lethal scourge to the
development of Africa, Dickson who said that it does not occur by chance
but when circumstances offer a favourable breeding ground.
He questioned whether Africa lacked the moral authority to deal with the
epidemic.

The deployment of military personnel in conflict zones he said, added
another dimension as troops increasingly become significant carriers of
the virus to areas previously unaffected by the syndrome.  Dickson called
for an integrated and regional approach to tackle it as he believes that
the crisis is an ecumenical challenge.

Referring to the plight of African children, already trapper by poverty,
disease, war and insufficient aid Dickson said that they are more likely
to die before the age of 5 years than children in other regions of the
world.	He cited statistics which bear grim witness in that Africa today
has 12 million orphaned children left behind by 17 million, mostly their
parents who have died of HIV/AIDS. The shocking revelation of the facts
surrounding the plight of the people in Africa whose lives were being
decimated by HIV/AIDS and whose quality of life was a travesty, Dickson
urged the Church to be in the forefront of finding a way to turn
rhetorical conviction into action.

By Val Pauquet	AACC


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