From the Worldwide Faith News archives www.wfn.org
[PCUSANEWS] Baghdad peacemakers go back to work,
From
PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ECUNET.ORG>
Date
Fri, 27 Jan 2006 16:12:24 -0600
Note #9077 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:
06035
Jan. 27, 2006
Baghdad peacemakers go back
to work, await news of abductees
Two months after kidnapping, 4 team members still missing, not forgotten
by Alexa Smith
LOUISVILLE - Although there is still no word from the captors of four
Christian peace activists in Baghdad, the international Christian Peacemaker
Team (CPT) there is resuming its work of helping the families of Iraqi
detainees find imprisoned family members.
On Dec. 26, unidentified militants abducted four male team members,
who hail from Canada, Britain and the United States.
The kidnappers threatened to kill them unless Iraqi prisoners were
released from jails, but postponed the executions. There has been no word
since then.
In a statement issued on Jan. 26, the CPT said: "Today, 26 January
2006, marks two months since our brothers - Jim Loney, Norman Kember, Tom Fox
and Harmeet Sooden - were pulled away from their work in Iraq.
"Although we cannot have them with us right now, we choose to
continue the work they are doing: exposing the abuses of Iraqi detainees and
calling for an end to the military occupation of Iraq."
Since the kidnapping, the Baghdad team has limited its travel in the
city and focused solely on the hostages.
CPT has held daily vigils since Jan. 15 in the United States, Canada
and the United Kingdom as part of a "Shining the Light" campaign intended to
expose the suffering of ordinary Iraqis and the abuse of detainees and to
call for an end to the U.S. occupation.
Over the next few days, CPT will hold processions at the White House,
the Central Intelligence Agency, the U.S. Congress and the Veterans'
Administration in Washington, DC.
The team was involved in the 2004 disclosure of abuses in Abu Ghraib
prison.
Anita David, of Lakeview Presbyterian Church in Chicago, and Beth
Pyles, of First Presbyterian Church in Fairmont, WV, both work for CPT from
an apartment in Baghdad. David was scheduled to return to the United States
this month, but has chosen to remain. She has been in Iraq since Oct. 13.
Pyles arrived three weeks ago after working briefly with Iraqi
refugees in Jordan.
"There's work to do," David told the Presbyterian News Service by
telephone, explaining her decision to stay. "We've decided to get back to
work again. We're stepping out again."
David said she accompanied an Iraqi human-rights worker to a military
compound last week to seek the release of two female detainees, both of whom
were later freed. She is also helping a family with a child who needs medical
treatment not available in Iraq.
"People are contacting us, and we're accompanying them," she said,
adding that team members haven't forgotten their abducted colleagues: "We're
still on high alert. We want our friends back."
David said the team lights candles during worship each morning for
the missing men.
In yesterday's release, the team said: "Those of us in CPT and the
families of Jim, Norman, Tom and Harmeet continue to feel their absence
acutely. We worry about their physical and emotional wellbeing and long to
see them, speak to them and be with them again. We know that thousands of
Iraqi families share our grief and yearning as they wait for loved ones
caught in a prison system over which they have no control.
"We also know that the world cares less about their fate than it does
about westerners currently in captivity, and for this we are truly sorry."
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