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Final Declaration
of the International Ecumenical Conference on Terrorism in a Globalized
World
INTRODUCTION
1.
Motivated by the urgency and passion we share in response to the
massive threat to life posed by the global situation, 130 people
from 22 countries gathered here in Manila, Philippines. We have
come at short notice, little more than a year after September 11,
on the invitation of the National Council of Churches in the Philippines,
the World Council of Churches and the Christian Conference of Asia.
We are women, youth, and men. We come from many countries, some
which experienced the direct impact of state terrorism. We are all
affected. We include Christian and Muslim. We meet in the context
of the Philippines and the ongoing struggle of the Philippine people.
As an 'International Ecumenical Conference on Terrorism in a Globalized
World', we have joined in solidarity to share experiences, reflect,
analyze, and act together in the face of mounting global hegemony.
2. The massive
affliction of terrorism did not begin on September 11. We grieve
as we remember the pain resulting from criminal acts of terrorism
such as September 11th. We also grieve the pain of the people of
Afghanistan as a result of the United States led so called 'War
on Terror' that began on October 7th. The entire human community
suffers the devastation of this 'War on Terror'. We ask why? As
we grieve we remember the victims of US wars of direct and indirect
intervention and aggression such as on the people of Hiroshima,
Nagasaki, Vietnam, Korea, Philippines, China, Chile, Nicaragua,
El Salvador, Columbia, Indonesia, Iraq, and Palestine. Even here
the list does not end.
Old
and New Terror
3.
The stories of women and men from all over Asia, particularly from
the Philippines leave us outraged. Other stories from the Middle
East, Latin America, the Pacific and Africa resulted in us feeling
anger and compassion at the continuing and ongoing impact of war.
4. Christians
and Muslims have shared the impact of war on them and their communities.
The participants in the Women's International Peace Mission and
the Women's International Solidarity Forum made visible the impact
on women's lives of militarized globalization. As a conference we
committed ourselves to the key role of women in building a world
of peace.
5. Globalization
has resulted in the further exclusion and marginalization of vast
numbers of people, particularly women and youth. It has spawned
the worst forms of social fragmentation. Economic globalization
has brought about even greater monopolization, mergers, and concentration
of wealth. It has further widened the gap between the rich and the
poor.
6. The US state
terrorism under the banner of the 'War on Terror' has legitimated
the US to target any state, nation, group, or individual deemed
threatening to US national interests as defined solely by the US
itself. This is a dramatic threat to global security. This amounts
to a re-ordering of global politics and a repudiation of international
law. This has unleashed state terrorism of historic dimensions.
On September
11 the US experienced what other countries have already known. Now,
after Afghanistan and the obscene loss of human life, the US is
directing its guns and bombs against other so-named 'rogue states',
and singled out several countries with Islamic nationalists as harboring
terrorists groups.
7. The 'War
on Terror' is not an authentic or just response to the events of
September 11th. It is an opportunistic use of violence to consolidate
and expand US economic, political, cultural, and military hegemony,
which amounts to state terrorism. The US global hegemony must be
named as Empire.
8. The poor
who are impacted by the indirect violence from state and corporate-led
globalization also experience this intensified violence. Undeveloped
markets for goods and technology, availability of resources, particularly
oil and servile government and people makes consolidating hegemony
in Asia an imperative of the US empire.
9. We say:
- The 'War
on Terror' is undermining many years of human struggle for self-determination,
human rights, civil liberties, and democracy will be lost in US
quest for peace and security.
- The suffering
of many due to institutionalized socio-economic violence at the
hands of the forces of globalization is wrong.
- No to terror
in all its forms–institutional, militaristic, economic,
state, and criminal.
- The indiscriminate
branding of people, groups, nations, and organizations as 'terrorist'
is unjust and must be stopped.
- No to the
way that the US agenda undermines peace efforts such as the Sunshine
Policy in Korea.
- It is wrong
that women, children, and youth bare the brunt of the impact of
globalization and terrorism.
- The vulnerability
of minority Christian and Muslim communities in many countries
and inter-religious relationships has been made worse by US actions.
- The polarization
of Muslim and Christian communities spawn by the 'War on Terror'
must be resisted and overcome.
- International
law, the role of the UN, and human rights and humanitarian law,
conventions and standards must be respected.
- That the
control of oil and natural resources is the driving force behind
the US threats against Iraq and other countries. The economic
and geopolitical agenda of US foreign policy must be exposed and
opposed.
- That US
declaration of SE Asia and the Philippines as the Second Front
of the 'War on Terror' threatens the Human Security and People's
Sovereignty.
- The Israeli
state terrorism against Palestine forms part of the US agenda
in the Middle East. It must end now.
- US state
terrorism encourages similar recourse to national state terrorism
in the Asian region.
- There must
be a peace process in Kashmir in which the aspirations of the
people of Kashmir are given a priority.
- The full
participation and guiding perspective of women and youth must
shape the agenda of ecumenical solidarity.
- That we
commit ourselves to work in the spirit and discipline of interfaith
cooperation.
- Peace will
come when the situation of women, children and youth is respected
and war is no longer waged.
10. We decided
that:
· The
US action designating the Communist Party of the Philippines and
the New People's Army as foreign terrorist organizations and subsequent
actions by the Philippine and Dutch governments has jeopardized
the peace process. It is vital that the Government of the Republic
of the Philippines and the National Democratic Front of the Philippines
immediately resume the formal peace negotiations on the basis of
previous agreements and the Moro Islamic Liberation Front.
The US armed
forces must leave the Philippines immediately. This presence and
activity in the Philippines violates national sovereignty and territorial
integrity, aggravated armed conflicts and gives rise to social and
cultural degradation.
All governments,
including the US and Philippines, have a responsibility and duty
to ratify the Rome statute and support the International Criminal
Court (ICC). We condemn the efforts of the US to undermine the ICC.
We reject religious
extremism and religious intolerance of all forms and we condemn
any actions that degrade the lives of people regardless of one's
faith, race or ethnicity. We affirm our common humanity and our
common commitments to justice and peace in all religious traditions.
To urge the
WCC, CCA and NCCP to explore the possibility with the Asian women's
regional network the convening of an Asian Court of Women. This
would focus on the brutal violence that is being experienced by
women migrant workers, and particularly the undocumented women workers
and their children who are being deported by the governments in
the region and in the US
We call on the
church representatives to the United Nations to press for the implementation
and the upholding of international human rights and international
law.
We strongly
condemn the impending U.S driven war on Iraq, and Israel's US backed
aggression against the Palestinian people. We demand peace with
justice.
Not
in God's Name
11. We join with families of victims in the US who say 'not in our
name', to those who would kill and repress as a response to September
11th.
12. We believe
that the living God is saying 'not in my name' to those who would
invoke God's name or divine will to justify or legitimate domination,
repression and state violence.
13. We stand
with those who suffered from terrorist attacks and those who suffer
from and resist the violence and domination of the US global empire
and the oppression of national states and transnational institutions.
14. We confess
that the Church has often been complicit with the power of Empires.
As people of faith we must choose to resist the death dealing domination
of Empire and engage in the struggle for life in all its fullness
for all God's creation.
15. The Christian
church is to give witness to Christ's lordship and so resist oppression
and idolatry of any state or group that claims divine justification
for power over others. We oppose the use of theological and religious
language to justify war and the agenda of Empire.
16. We believe
in the power of the resurrection in history. In the face of repression
and violence, death does not have the last word.
17. We commit
ourselves to making another world possible, a world of peace with
justice and respect with all creation.
18. We stand
in solidarity with all those who suffer and struggle against domination
as we humbly seek to be with Jesus in his mission as declared in
Luke 4:16f:
The Spirit of
the Lord is upon me because he has anointed me to preach good news
to the poor, he has sent me to proclaim release to the captives,
recovery of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are
oppressed and proclaim the acceptable year of the Lord.
Choice
for Life
19. We call upon the Conference organizers to facilitate a global
coalition of ecumenical and inter-religious and multi-faith movements
in solidarity, resistance and opposition to expanding state terrorism
and US global hegemony including the creation of an African, Asian,
Latin American and Pacific solidarity network. This could take the
form of a People's Forum of Peace for Life as a contribution to
the ecumenical 'Decade to Overcome Violence'.
20. We will
not be silent. We covenant with each other to take up the issues
in our own countries and settings. We call upon Christians in general
to take a position against militarized globalization and raise their
voices unambiguously to stop the US government from continuing its
war against people and peace. We invite the US churches and the
wider ecumenical movement to join with us as we seek to establish
forums to critique and confront the US global agenda.
21. In the face
of the massive threat to life posed by this global situation, together
in unity and solidarity, we say again: 'Another World is Possible!'
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