Friday, November 9, 2007

Oprah Case Highlights Abuse in South Africa

Alleged sexual assault at Oprah Winfrey's new girls' school sparks fresh discussion about the widespread problem.

Johannesburg
Christian Science Monitor) Nov. 8th. The allegations were far from unusual: Physical and sexual abuse of young teenage girls. In Sth Africa, where sexual assault rates are among the world's highest, the news would normally surprise few. But over the past month, ever since Oprah Winfrey says students at her new $40 million Leadership Academy for Girls reported that a dorm matron was sexually abusing a classmate, the response has been anything but typical. Ms. Winfrey suspended the suspected staffer, put other school officials on leave and brought in counselors to talk to students. Within weeks, police identified seven alleged victims, arrested 27-year-old Tiny Makopo and charged her with 13 counts of abuse. "This has been one of the most devastating, if not the most devastating, experiences of my life," Winfrey said Monday in an emotional but forceful video address in which she detailed her response to the allegations.

It was a marked change from what children's advocates say they normally see after sexual abuse here: some combination of silence, inaction, and shame. And because of this, they hope that the alleged abuse at Winfrey's school – presented in US media this week as a "scandal" – will help bring attention to what observers call an epidemic of sexual abuse in this country. "It's phenomenal," says Rachel Jewkes, a specialist on sexual violence with South Africa's Medical Research Council, of Winfrey's talk. "I think the message that is sent by this, that [sexual abuse] is utterly unacceptable, is a really powerful one. We never get a message that's so unequivocal about how these acts should be judged. Wouldn't it be wonderful if these acts would always be taken so seriously?"

Even with rape and sexual assault considered underreported crimes in South Africa, the numbers here are staggering: 54,926 reported rapes in 2006 for a country of 47 million, according to the South African Police Force. In the US, whose population is more than six times as large, there were less than double the number of reported rapes that same year – 92,455. For girls, abuse often happens at school, studies show. The 2005 National Youth Victimization Survey, conducted by a team of academics, found that 23 percent of teens between the ages of 12 and 17 had been threatened or harassed at school, and 24 percent had been sexually assaulted at school. In a 1998 health survey, which Dr. Jewkes helped conduct, more than half the women who said they were raped before they turned 15 identified the perpetrator as a teacher. "It's not just these big, high-profile incidents; child sexual abuse is a significant problem, and it has been around for a long time," says Andy Dawes, research director of the Human Sciences Research Council in Cape Town. "[The Winfrey school case] can help put attention to services that children get.... The problem with some of these [media] events, is that there is only a short-time flurry of activity. It's about sustaining the response to this kind of events."

Fairouz Nagia-Luddy, the project coordinator for the domestic violence project of the Western Cape-based Gender Advocacy Programme, says that many girls never report sexual abuse because of cultural pressures. "The problem is the silence around it," she says. Until Oprah, she says, few famous figures have addressed sexual abuse publicly. "It's important to create awareness at all levels," she says. "Role models coming up and speaking about it is one way of doing it. "Students abused by teachers are often loath to report the crimes for fear of retaliation, advocates say. In addition to the problem of girls being afraid to report abuse, a 2001 Human Rights Watch report documented widespread incompetence when it came to following up on girls' complaints. The report found "a great deal of confusion over responsibility for resolving problems and repeatedly encountered breaks in the chain of communication between school officials, police, and prosecutors, with all actors shifting responsibility and sexually abused girls getting lost in the shuffle."

In a new study that Jewkes is working on, she says a close review of thousands of police rape files also shows consistent investigative lapses – investigators losing track of a victim because they never asked for her phone number or address, for instance. "The patterns of failures of policing are incredible and they are repetitive," she says. "A lot of cases fall down because very basic things aren't done." These won't be issues in the Leadership Academy case, Winfrey says. "It is one of my goals in life to put child abusers, whether they be in my home, whether they be in my workplace, or, in this case, in the Academy, to put them where they belong," she said. "And that is behind bars." Earlier this week Makopo appeared in the Sebokeng Magistrate's court south of Johannesburg and heard the charges against her – indecent assault, common assault, soliciting a minor to perform indecent acts, and verbal abuse. She told the court she intended to plead not guilty.
By Stephanie Hanes Scott Baldauf contributed to this report.
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Thursday, November 8, 2007

Bhutto Gives Musharraf Ultimatum

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) Nov. 7th. Former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto threatened on Wednesday to lead a mass protest march to the capital unless President Gen. Pervez Musharraf quits as army chief, holds elections and restores the constitution. Ms. Bhutto, leader of the largest opposition party and the politician most capable of mobilizing street power, gave Gen. Musharraf until Friday to comply.

Government officials have said national elections due in January will be held on time and a member of Gen. Musharraf's inner circle said emergency rule was likely to be lifted within 2 or 3 weeks. But Gen. Musharraf, who took power in a 1999 coup and imposed emergency rule last Saturday citing a hostile judiciary and rising militancy, has not yet personally confirmed either. "We can't work for dictatorship. We can work for democracy," Ms. Bhutto told a news conference in Islamabad after meeting members of her Pakistan People's Party and smaller opposition parties. "General Musharraf can open the door for negotiations only if he revives the constitution, retires as chief of army staff and sticks to the schedule of holding elections." She said her supporters would begin to march on Nov. 13 from the eastern city of Lahore, capital of Punjab province and the nation's political nerve-centre, to Islamabad to stage a sit-in. "The ball is now in government's court," said Ms. Bhutto. Her party is also due to hold a public protest rally in the garrison town of Rawalpindi, next to Islamabad, on Nov. 9 — which police said would be blocked.

Ms. Bhutto, with Gen. Musharraf's blessing, returned to Pakistan from almost eight years of self-imposed exile on Oct. 18, amid speculation that she could end up sharing power with him after elections, forging a partnership favoured by the United States. Police have arrested hundreds of lawyers and opposition figures and supporters since Saturday, and courts remained virtually deserted across Pakistan on Wednesday in a boycott by lawyers angry at the crackdown. The main reason for imposing emergency rule and suspending the constitution appears to have been the removal of judges who appeared hostile to the government, analysts say. The Supreme Court had been hearing challenges to the legality of Gen. Musharraf's Oct. 6 re-election by parliament while still army chief, and fears the decision could have gone against the general were believed to have been the main motive for his move. The only public protests of any size so far have been led by lawyers, outraged by the dismissal of independent-minded judges such as ousted chief justice Iftikhar Chaudhry, who is being held incommunicado at his residence in Islamabad.

As arrests have mounted lawyers' protests have become smaller and more subdued. Fewer than a dozen men wearing black waistcoats over their shalwar kameez marched toward the High Court in Lahore on Wednesday chanting "Go Musharraf Go", before being pummelled and detained by plain clothes security officials. Announcing the emergency and suspension of the constitution, the general said he was being hampered by a hostile judiciary while fighting rising militancy and asked in vain for Western allies' understanding. The United States and Britain were joined by the 27-nation European Union in urging Gen. Musharraf to release all political detainees, including members of the judiciary, relax media curbs, and seek reconciliation with political opponents. The EU said Gen. Musharraf should stick to a pledge to step down as army chief this month and hold elections in January. The Commonwealth, a 53-nation group of mainly former British colonies, called a special ministerial meeting in London next week to discuss the state of emergency in Pakistan.

However the Karachi stock market, which fell 4.6 per cent on Monday, has since stabilized thanks to perceived low prices and a boost to oil stocks from international crude prices. The market is still up around 34 per cent since the start of the year, but has come off around 10 per cent amid deepening political uncertainty since scaling historic highs on Oct. 22. Washington has said it will review aid to Pakistan, which has reached nearly $10 billion since the Sept. 11 attacks. But it has yet to come up with a clear stance for dealing with a nuclear-armed country which is on the front line in the battle against al Qaeda and the Taliban. A White House spokeswoman said President George W. Bush had not telephoned Gen. Musharraf since he imposed emergency rule and described the general's act as "a mistake". Critics of Gen. Musharraf's decision to declare emergency rule say he may have made Pakistan more unstable.
ZEESHAN HAIDER
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Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Aung San Suu Kyi Set for Talks with UN Envoy

November 6th: (Guardian) The detained Burmese democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi is set to meet the UN envoy to the country today. The move is another attempt to resolve the country's political crisis amid reports that she is being treated for an unknown illness.

Ibrahim Gambari has returned to Burma earlier than scheduled to discuss the fallout from the brutal crackdown of anti-government protests in September. He has been holding talks with the senior figures in the ruling military junta in their remote new capital, Naypyitaw, and is hoping to again to persuade the generals to talk to opposition leaders. Mr Gambari is expected to travel to the former capital, Rangoon, to meet Ms Suu Kyi, who is under house arrest. Her party, the National League for Democracy, told the Irrawaddy - a website run by exiled Burmese journalist in Thailand - that doctors had been visiting her home. "We do not know yet whether she is suffering from a serious illness or not," the site's spokesman, Nyan Win, said.

Ms Suu Kyi, who is 62, appeared in public for the first time in several years in September when protesting monks gathered outside her home. Pictures of her holding previous talks with Mr Gambari also appeared. She is known to have suffered back pains and problems with her teeth in the past. Mark Farmaner, the acting director of the Burma Campaign UK, said: "She did not look at all well in the pictures with Gambari. She has always been thin, but she looked unusually thin and uncomfortable, and she is normally quite vibrant." He said reports of the democracy leader's failing health could provide added impetus to resolve the crisis, and urged Mr Gambari to take a tougher stance with the generals.

"The UN needs to stop tiptoeing around and start showing some muscle," he added. "The softly softly approach of the UN has got nowhere and has allowed the regime to keep delaying any reform or dialogue. If Mr Gambari can't get negotiations going this time, he will have failed, and the UN director general himself should take over negotiations because the regime shows no respect for UN envoys."

Burma's leading general, Than Shwe, again kept the UN envoy waiting during the current visit. He has refused to talk to him since he arrived on Saturday. On his last trip, Mr Gambari eventually met Gen Shwe after four days of negotiations. After the visit, the general said he would only meet Ms Suu Kyi if she dropped demands for human rights in Burma and calls for sanctions against the regime. The National League for Democracy rejected the demands. Last Friday, the junta announced it would expel the top UN official in the country, Charles Petrie.

It accused him of going beyond his duties by issuing a statement criticising the generals' failure to meet the economic and humanitarian needs of the people and saying this had been the cause of September's protests. The military brutally cracked down on September's protests, firing into crowds and arresting thousands of demonstrators. There have been only two open demonstrations since.
Matthew Weaver and agencies
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Thursday, November 1, 2007

Chad Won't Impede Aid Groups Despite Arrests

N'DJAMENA, Chad (AP) Nov. 1st. -- Chad assured humanitarian groups Wednesday that it would not hinder their efforts along the border with Darfur because of charges that a French group kidnapped children whom it falsely labeled orphans from the conflict. Seventeen Europeans have been detained since Thursday after authorities thwarted an attempt by a group calling itself Zoe's Ark to fly the African children to Europe, where the group said it intended to place them with host families.

Six French citizens were charged with kidnapping, raising concerns that the government could restrict the work of humanitarian organizations. Chad said humanitarian efforts would continue unimpeded. "Anyone not implicated in this affair ... and who work in other humanitarian assistance organizations, need not concern themselves with, nor be concerned by, those who would substitute themselves for justice to fill their empty accounts," said a statement attributed to Communications Minister Hourmadji Moussa Doumgor and read on national radio Wednesday. He reiterated that the case would have no bearing on a European Union plan to deploy 3,000 peacekeepers to protect refugees in strife-torn regions of Chad and neighboring Central African Republic.The French Foreign Ministry and others have cast doubt on the claims by the little-known group that the children are Darfur orphans, suggesting many are from Chad and their parents are still alive. If convicted, the six French nationals face up to 20 years in Chadian prison with hard labor. Three French journalists traveling with the Zoe's Ark members and a seven-member flight crew were charged with complicity in the alleged crime. A Belgian pilot is also under detention, but hasn't been charged. French Justice Minister Rachida Dati said France and Chad had an agreement that would enable the French nationals to face trial at home, but added that Chad had not yet chosen to act on it.

More than 300,000 Darfur refugees are living in camps along the Sudanese border, having fled four years of conflict that has left more than 200,000 people dead and 2.5 million displaced from their homes. French Prime Minister Francois Fillon on Tuesday criticized the French group and expressed hope that the case didn't discredit other nongovernmental organizations doing "remarkable work" in Chad and Darfur -- "and which now are suffering suspicion and violence."

Zoe's Ark was founded in 2005 by volunteer firefighter Eric Breteau. According to its Web site, the group announced in April an operation for "evacuating orphans from Darfur." The group launched an appeal for host families and funding. Established French aid and adoption agencies raised questions about how the group could legally organize adoption of children from Darfur, and alerted French judicial authorities, according to French newspaper reports. The French Foreign Ministry in August warned families to be careful about involvement in the group's operation. Still, some 300 families reportedly signed up to adopt or foster children, and many were waiting at a French airport last week for the children when they heard members of the group had been arrested. The charity said its intentions were purely humanitarian.
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Editorial - Playing Sudan's Game

NY Times November 1: After four years of genocidal massacres that have killed more than 200,000 people, the Darfur region of Sudan desperately needs a peace agreement and a robust multinational force to carry it out. Regrettably, this week’s internationally sponsored peace conference in Libya is doing little to meet those urgent needs. The problem is not just Sudan’s continuing duplicity — it announced a cease-fire and then promptly violated it. Sudan does not really want a peace agreement. It merely wants more time to let the janjaweed militias it backs in Darfur finish killing or drive off what remains of the region’s non-Arab population.

Many of the rebel groups that claim to be Darfur’s defenders also bear serious responsibility. Some of the best-known rebel leaders failed to show up. And so, the killing is likely to proceed, with Sudan taking maximum advantage of the rebel’s fecklessness, the diplomatic timidity of those closest to it and the failure of an Iraq-distracted Bush administration to pay consistent, high-level attention to the Darfur issue. The Arab League, to which Sudan belongs, and China, a major customer for Sudan’s oil, have at least started talking about Darfur. But they have yet to apply real pressure on Khartoum. The Arab League is reportedly readying proposals for Darfur’s future economic development that all but overlook the far more pressing problem of creating the peace that is essential for development. China’s tepid complaints seem aimed more at fending off Darfur-related protests at next year’s Beijing Olympics than stopping the slaughter. President Bush’s words on Darfur have been admirably strong, but he has not followed up with the high-level diplomacy and focus needed to rally effective international pressure on Sudan.

These failures, large and small, go a long way toward explaining why the killing continues monthly despite worldwide protests, White House speeches, American sanctions, African peacekeepers and Security Council resolutions. They make it easier for Sudan to take credit for announcing cease-fires that it has no intention of honoring, agreeing to peacekeepers that it has no intention of cooperating with and attending peace conferences that have no realistic possibility of bringing peace.

Meanwhile, the genocide goes on.
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Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Islamic Scholars Send Open Letter to Pope Benedict XVI

October 11th: More than 130 Muslim scholars have written to Pope Benedict XVI and other Christian leaders urging greater understanding between the two faiths. Entitled - A Common Word Between Us and You, the historic letter compares passages in the Koran and the Bible, concluding that both emphasise "the primacy of total love and devotion to God", and the love of the neighbour. The message identifies the principles of accepting only one god and living in peace with one's neighbours as common ground between the two religions.

With Muslims and Christians making up more than half the world's population, the letter goes on to say that the relationship between the two religious communities is "the most important factor in contributing to meaningful peace around the world". "As Muslims, we say to Christians that we are not against them and that Islam is not against them - so long as they do not wage war against Muslims on account of their religion, or oppress them and drive them out of their homes".
The letter was signed by prominent Muslim leaders, politicians and academics, including the Grand Muftis of Bosnia and Hercegovina, Russia, Croatia, Kosovo and Syria, the Secretary-General of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference, the former Grand Mufti of Egypt and the founder of the Ulema Organisation in Iraq.
Click here to read complete document

Vatican: Catholic scholars respond to Muslim Letter to Pope
ICN News: Members of the Pontifical Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies (PISAI) of Rome, issued the following statement in response to the letter sent by 138 Muslim scholars to Pope Benedict XVI and other Christian leaders on October 11.


A Common Word Between Us and You
"An Open Letter and Call From Muslim Religious Leaders" to leaders of different Christian Churches as a festive message on the occasion of the ending of the fast of Ramadan 1428/2007, and on the first anniversary of the 2006 "Open Letter of 138 Muslim Scholars to Pope Benedict XVI", is a highly significant event that we cannot fail to notice and must accentuate its importance. Accordingly, as members of staff of the Rome Pontifical Institute for Arabic and Islamic Studies (PISAI), concerned particularly with relations between Christians and Muslims, we believe it is our duty to express our viewpoint on this document.

In an attempt to enter with an open mind into the dynamic of this event just as it appears, we would like to register all that we appreciate in the presentation and content of these pages. We are convinced of the good faith of those who produced it, purified by their lengthy fast during Ramadan. Our long and diligent association with the cultural and religious patrimony of Islam, as well as our regular contacts with members of the Muslim community enables us to take note of the originality of this gesture and entitles us to draw the attention of non-Muslims to it qualities.

Firstly, we were impressed by the broad scope of this text. Its breadth at the level of the signatories, one hundred and thirty-eight Muslim personalities from numerous countries of every continent, whose religious affiliations demonstrate a great variety. There was breadth also at the level of the addressees, all leaders of different Christian Churches, including twenty-eight named explicitly.

Partners with humanity
In the same line of observation, we highlight the extent of the area under consideration: Muslims, Christians, Jews and people worldwide. The authors of the letter do not seek refuge in a convenient one-sided protest on behalf of the "umma," but on the contrary, place themselves as partners within humanity. For it, they offer their way of perceiving its foundations and principles, accepted also by other communities, in view of its survival in an effectual and general peace.

The broad sweep of its perspectives is also a noteworthy feature of this text. Admittedly, its authors are interested in the fate of the present world, at stake here and now, but also in that of the 'eternal souls', a destiny determined elsewhere and in the future. This dual aim, at once immanent and transcendent, runs a strong and liberating current throughout this discourse. Naturally, we are equally struck by the fundamental character of the issue in question: God and humankind. It is much easier to confine oneself to ideas that are all the more generous for being vague and general, than to call attention in this way to the urgency of God's rights and those of humanity that demand continual awareness and an active and concrete love from each individual.

We are also keenly aware of the special treatment that the signatories of this letter give to the supreme point of reference that under girds "the other" as Jew or Christian, namely, the dual commandment of love of God and neighbour in Deuteronomy and in Matthew's Gospel. This willingness to acknowledge another person in the deepest desire of what he or she wants to be seems to us one of the key points of this document. Only this can guarantee success in a genuine relationship between culturally and religiously diverse communities. At the same time, we appreciate the way the authors of this text, as Muslims, see the proper definition of their own identity in these two commandments. They do so not by compliance or by

Politicking, but truly, solely on the basis of their proclamation of divine uniqueness, (al-tawhîd), the pivot of Muslim belief. Indeed, we acknowledge that the radical acceptance of divine uniqueness is one of the most authentic expressions of love owed to God alone. In addition, as faith always goes together with good works, as the Koran never fails to repeat, (al-ladîna âmanû wa 'amilû al-sâlihât : al-Baqara 2, 25), love of God is inseparable from love of neighbour.

Diverse communities
We are grateful to those who challenge us, thus underlining the agreement over the essential that underpins our diverse communities of believers, nonetheless keeping a realisticand bold vision in place. In effect, on the one hand, they do not erase the differentiation of our Christological options and on the other, they do not disregard the problem of religious freedom (lâ ikrâha fî l-dîn : al-Baqara 2, 256), which they consider a crucial issue.

This realism does not prevent them from having a positive view concerning obstacles and differences that remain between us. This means that faithful to the Koranic tradition that inspires them, they only see in it an opportunity for competition in the pursuit of the common good, (fa-stabiqû l-hayrât : al-Mâ'ida 5, 48). Undoubtedly, this positive view of problems enabled them to avoid controversy, to surpass themselves, to shoulder and ignore their disappointment to a response that did not rise to their expectations in the outcome of their letter of 2006 addressed to Pope Benedict XVI.

Reading this document, we notice on their part the presence of a new and creative attitude relative to the Koranic text and that of the Prophetic tradition. This is in reference to certain historical interpretations, marked by particular situations that made access relatively restricted as far as the consideration of non-Muslims was concerned. In particular, we have in mind the general application they give to the Âl 'Imrân 3, 113-115 verses, relative to 'a staunch community who recite the revelations of God in the night season, falling prostrate,' that many commentators had up to then considered only in relation to Christians on the point of converting. We are pleased to see that the biblical and Gospel quotations used in this document come from the sources and that explanations given are on occasion based on the original languages: Hebrew, Aramaic and Greek. This is evidence of deep respect and genuine attentiveness to others, while at the same time of a true scientific spirit. In this respect also, we note the emergence of a new attitude.

In conclusion, we wish to insist on the a priori positive attitude of the writers of this text in their interpretation of the three parallel passages in the Synoptic Gospels. They could have chosen a much more restrictive and minimalist exegesis with which the Christian tradition would have provided them without difficulty and of which they were surely aware. Inspired by their attitude, we also would only hold to the maximum interpretation according to which the texts of the Koran and the Prophetic tradition do not only restrict to members of the umma the benefits that any good Muslim may lavish on his neighbour, for the sake of his faith in God and in his exclusive love for him.

Differences in our languages and in our hues, (ihtilâf alsinati-kum wa alwâni-kum: al-Rûm 30, 22), that is, our deep cultural differences, will be far from engendering suspicion, distrust, contempt and dissension in us, as it often turned out in the history of our relations and still is the case in the world today. Such a document encourages us to pursue our commitment with determination, so that these variations will be seen as signs for those who know, (inna fî dâlika la-âyâtin li-l-'âlimîna), that is, as the mercy of Our Lord.

Rome, 25th October 2007
Rev Fr Miguel Ángel Ayuso Guixot, Comboni,Rector
Rev Fr Etienne Renaud, Miss. Of Africa, Dean of Studies
Rev Fr Michel Lagarde, Miss. Of Africa, Professor
Rev Fr Valentino Cottini, Professor
Rev Fr Felix Phiri, Miss.of Africa, Professor
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Myanmar Junta May Have Killed 110 Protesters, UN Says

Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Myanmar soldiers may have killed as many as 110 people during a crackdown on anti-government protests last month, said a United Nations official tasked with probing alleged human rights abuses by the military regime.

Paulo Sergio Pinheiro, who will travel to the Southeast Asian nation next month, said he had verified ``allegations of the use of excessive force by the security forces, including live ammunitions, rubber bullets, tear gas, bamboo and wood sticks, rubber batons and catapults.'' Thirty to 40 monks and 50 to 70 civilians may have been killed in the crackdown, Pinheiro, who is UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon's special rapporteur on human rights in the country formerly known as Burma, said in New York yesterday.

General Than Shwe's regime has faced global condemnation since it deployed soldiers Sept. 26 to crush the biggest anti- junta protests in almost 20 years. UN envoy Ibrahim Gambari is trying to rally neighboring countries to pressure the regime to take steps toward democracy. He is holding a second day of talks today with officials in China, Myanmar's closest ally. Reports continue of deaths in custody, torture, disappearances, ill-treatment and lack of access to food, water and medical treatment for those in detention, Pinheiro told a General Assembly committee, according to a statement on the UN's Web site.

The army and militia are reportedly ``going home by home searching for people and detaining participants in the demonstrations,'' Pinheiro said. ``Relatives of people in hiding have reportedly been taken hostage as a way of pressure.'' A ``situation of fear prevails,'' he added. The junta must unconditionally release all detainees, grant amnesty to those who have been sentenced, reveal the whereabouts of missing people and conduct an independent investigation into the killings, Pinheiro said in a statement to the committee. He also demanded the release of opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who has spent 12 years in custody since the junta rejected the results of parliamentary elections won by her National League for Democracy in 1990. Protesters staged rallies yesterday in cities around the world, including London, Paris, Bangkok and Washington, demanding Suu Kyi's release.

China is one of Myanmar's biggest trading partners. As a permanent, veto-wielding member of the UN Security Council, its support is essential for any international effort to end the political crisis in Myanmar. Gambari will meet Tang Jiaxuan, China's highest-ranking foreign policy official, and Vice Foreign Minister Wang Yi today. ``This is a very important stop on this mission,'' Gambari told reporters yesterday in Beijing.

He will travel next to Japan before returning to New York on Oct. 27 to brief Ban on his trip, which included visits to Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and India. Gambari, who held talks with junta leaders earlier this month, is scheduled to return to Myanmar in the first week of November, the UN says.
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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Darfur Rebel Leaders Want Talks Halted

SIRTE, Libya (AP) — Key rebel leaders in Sudan's Darfur region called Monday for a peace conference to be canceled, but U.N. and African mediators bid for more time in hopes of drawing the insurgents into the stalled talks. The two main rebel chiefs have boycotted the U.N. and African Union-brokered conference since it began in this Libyan city Saturday, saying they won't sit alongside minor rebel factions that they describe as stooges of the Sudanese government. Their rejection of the meeting has blocked long-sought direct negotiations between rebels and Sudan's government on bringing peace to Darfur, a region where more than 200,000 people have died in nearly five years of conflict.

Jan Eliasson, the chief U.N. envoy at the meeting, said U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon decided not to postpone the conference despite the absence of the rebel chiefs because he felt it was urgent to push for an end to the suffering of Darfur civilians. African Union spokesman Noureddine Mezni took a similar position. "We're trying to find a formula to conciliate the sense of urgency with the rebels' need for more time," Mezni said. But leaders of the two main rebel forces — the Justice and Equality Movement and a major faction of the Sudan Liberation Movement headed by Abdulwahid Elnur — called for an outright cancellation for now. Elnur, founder of the Sudan Liberation Movement, insisted he would not participate in talks until a 26,000-strong force of U.N. and African Union peacekeepers deploys to Darfur in January and shows it has the muscle to end violence. "I appeal very, very strongly on Eliasson not to pursue this failed negotiations process," Elnur said by telephone from his base in Paris. "They need to first stop the killing of my people."

Khalil Ibrahim, founder of the Justice and Equality Movement who initially supported holding the conference, also said the talks should be canceled. "We have to arrange for another time, this is not working," said Ibrahim, who leads the most potent rebel force. He said he would not attend because mediators let in splinter groups beholden to the Sudanese government in Khartoum. "These aren't rebels, they took money from Khartoum and were created to dilute the cause of Darfur," Ibrahim told The Associated Press by satellite phone. The mediators, who have traveled for months through Darfur, insist they invited everybody to Sirte so that talks would be as inclusive as possible. Ahmed Farzi, spokesman for the mediators, Eliasson and Salim Ahmed Salim of the African Union, said envoys would be sent to Darfur in the coming days to meet with the boycotting rebel leaders. He said those leaders "have a sincere interest in peace and a desire to participate."

Meanwhile, talks among various civilian delegates and a handful of low-level rebels continued in Sirte's half-empty conference center. Organizers said they were discussing a "general framework" for future peace.

Darfur's ethnic African rebels took up arms against the Arab-dominated central government in early 2003, accusing it of discrimination. The regime has been accused of waging a campaign of atrocities on civilians, causing 2.5 million to flee their homes. The government denies doing that.
Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Sunday, October 28, 2007

Father Damien Closer to Sainthood

Clerical Whispers Oct. 27th: Father Damien DeVeuster, the Belgian priest who ministered Hansen’s disease (leprosy) patients at Kalaupapa, Molokai, and later died of the disease, has moved closer to sainthood. A commission of five doctors scrutinizing an alleged medical cure attributed to Damien has reported that the woman’s healing was dramatic and defied medical explanation, said Patrick Downes, Catholic Diocese of Honolulu spokesman. The woman was reported cured of lung cancer about 10 years ago after making a pilgrimage to Kalaupapa and praying to Damien.

The Congregation of the Sacred Hearts Order (SS.CC) that Damien belonged to was informed of the medical commission’s decision, Downes said, describing it as “a significant step forward.” Two miracles are needed to be considered for sainthood. The first one attributed to Damien occurred in 1895 when a French nun dying of a gastrointestinal illness miraculously recovered after beginning a novena or Catholic ritual to Damien. He was beatified in 1995, 100 years after the first miracle.

A commission of theologians now must determine whether the alleged second miracle was done through the intercession of Damien, Downes said. If the commission determines that Damien was involved, a commission of bishops and cardinals will review the case and make a recommendation to the pope, he said. The process may take about a year, Downes added.

Damien came to Hawaii from Belgium in 1864, joining other missionaries of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. He died at age 49 in 1889 of leprosy after ministering to people of Kalaupapa for 16 years.
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Saturday, October 27, 2007

Pity the People of Darfur, Pity the Peacemakers Too

As peace talks begin in Libya, expect arm-twisting, boycotts and confusion but little progress towards peace

Oct. 25th. (The Economist) AS THE people of Darfur, the ravaged western region of Sudan, continue to die in droves, their representatives—or at least those who claim to represent them—are set to gather in the town of Sirte in northern Libya to make yet another attempt to persuade the Sudanese government to agree to a ceasefire and to start discussing how to fix a durable settlement. Even though the meeting, brokered jointly by the African Union (AU) and the UN, is supposed to be at best a preliminary session to set a framework for more detailed talks, the omens are bleak. The Sudanese government has given no sign that it is ready to stop its forces or its proxies from bludgeoning the Darfuris. And the Darfuris are so divided that it is hard to imagine them creating a coherent front that would command the support of the bulk of their people if they did forge an accord with the government in Khartoum.

The mélange of parties, splinters and acronyms standing for just some of the dozen-odd rebel groups who are sending people to Libya, and who claim to speak for the 6m or so Darfuris in the maelstrom of what the UN calls the “world's worst humanitarian disaster”, is a negotiator's nightmare. The biggest Darfuri faction is called the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army but it has broken into at least five factions; the SLM/A is led by Abdul Wahid al-Nur, perhaps the key rebel leader, who says he will not attend the meeting in Libya. Then there is the SLM/A-G19, which probably will come, but may or may not be talking to another SLM/A faction loyal to Ahmed Abdel Shafi, a rival of both the SLM/A-North Command and the SLM/A-Union Front, to say nothing of the Great Sudan Liberation Movement. The fractious SLM/A may in turn co-operate with a faction of the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), the other big umbrella group, led by Khalil Ibrahim. But that depends on the attitude of another JEM faction led by Idriss Bahar abu Garda—not to mention the Revolutionary Democratic Front Forces, the United Revolutionary Force Front or, for that matter, a faction of the National Movement for Reform and Development. Some of the expected delegates may have invented these names just to attend the talks—and may, in the words of one observer, represent “just 30 men and a jeep”. This hotch-potch of rebels has so far failed to agree to any kind of negotiating position from which to parley with the Sudanese government of President Omar al-Bashir, which has continued to launch lethal attacks against the Darfuris. Sudanese government officials will be in Libya to talk about a ceasefire. But only if the rebels sort out their own differences can they hope, at a later date, to talk to Mr Bashir.

Even that might be hard, because several of the groups so far refusing to come, in particular Mr Wahid's, are those with the most clout among the Darfuris, particularly the 2.1m-2.5m who, says the Save Darfur Coalition, a leading lobby group based in America, now fester in camps. That figure does not include the 300,000 or so who have fled across the border to Chad and the Central African Republic, and another 1m-plus who have not been counted because they migrate according to the seasons and no one is sure where they are. Yet another serious SLM/A faction, headed by Minni Minawi, who signed a peace deal with the government at the last round of talks, last year in Nigeria's capital, Abuja, may not come either. The main JEM faction says it may stay away too. The splintering of the opposition is partly due to the failure to implement the deal signed in Abuja in May last year. Then, as only one rebel group signed up, the other two main ones were left out in the cold and have since splintered into ever-smaller factions determined to improve their positions at any future talks through military gains in battle.

The UN and AU envoys, respectively Jan Eliasson, a Swede, and Salim Salim, a Tanzanian, who will chair the event under the eye of Libya's Muammar Qaddafi, are unlikely to repeat that mistake; better no deal than half a deal that most of the biggest rebel groups have not signed up to. Yet if the rebels could create a front, an agreement would be timely and vital. After years of wrangling with Sudan's government, the UN has finally persuaded it to accept 20,000 peacekeepers in Darfur. The first units are due to arrive before the end of the year (provided that the UN and the Sudanese government agree to the force's composition, which Mr Bashir insists must be all-African). Their task would plainly be much easier if there were an agreed peace to keep. A much smaller AU force, less than 7,000-strong, due to be merged with the UN force, has been struggling to make an endlessly flouted ceasefire stick since 2004. But the AU's force has been battered by attacks from the various rebel and bandit groups that have proliferated, some with the wink of the government. Last month ten Nigerian soldiers serving in the AU force were killed in a rebel attack on their base at Haskanita, bringing AU deaths up to 28 so far.

In the first six months of this year, 160,000 more Darfuris were displaced by the fighting. In the same period, one in every six convoys carrying humanitarian aid to the refugee camps was attacked; assaults on aid workers more than doubled compared with a year ago. The killing and burning of villages by the government-directed Arab janjaweed militias continue. More than 500,000 refugees are now cut off from supplies. And there are ominous reports that the Sudanese government, in what would be ethnic cleansing, is inviting Arab tribesmen from Niger and Chad to occupy the lands vacated by the refugees. If they have any sense, that should make the rebels put their differences aside. They are not secessionists, like the south Sudanese who want full independence. They want greater autonomy and a bigger share of national wealth (especially from oil). Their demands are eminently negotiable. But if they cannot form a coherent front, Sudan's ruthless government will be happy to leave them in limbo, at the mercy of the murderous janjaweed.
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Mugabe Launches Robert Mugabe Intelligence Academy

HARARE Oct. 26th (Reuters) - Zimbabwe's President Robert Mugabe has launched an intelligence academy named after him, saying it would produce officers able to counter growing threats from Western powers, state media reported on Friday. Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence from Britain in 1980, is fighting isolation from the West, which accuses him of human rights abuses and rigging elections and economic mismanagement.

The combative 83-year-old veteran leader says he is being punished for seizing white-owned farms for landless blacks to redress colonial imbalances, a program critics say has plunged the economy into crisis. "With the current unjustified demonization of Zimbabwe by Western powers, the role of intelligence in shaping foreign, security and economic policies become even more critical," the Herald newspaper quoted the president as saying at the launch of the Robert Mugabe National School of Intelligence near Harare. Critics say Mugabe has increasingly relied on security forces to keep opponents in check in the face of growing anger over the unraveling economy, but he denies the charge.

The intelligence academy is also expected to train members of the army, police and operatives from other southern African countries. Mugabe said Britain and the United States continued to try to destabilize Zimbabwe by working with "non-state actors" aimed at unseating his government. "The important role of defending our country cannot be left to mediocre officers incapable of comprehending and analytically evaluating the operational environment to ensure that the sovereignty of our state is not only preserved, but enhanced," Mugabe said.
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No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Mozlink’ for any or all of the articles/images placed here. The placing of an article does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
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Friday, October 26, 2007

Dear Mozlink Readers

My apologies for being out of touch these last days. I have been extremely busy around the visit of a Bishop from the Diocese of El Obeid in the Sudan. His name is Bishop Macram Max Gassis, whose Diocese stradles the center of Sudan. Part of his Diocese is controlled by the Government in Khartoum and part is in the control of the Sudanese Liberation Movement. The Diocese actually also includes the area of Darfur. He has been an outspoken advocate of the human rights of the Nuba people in his Diocese, who suffered unspeakable atrocities during the first war in Sudan some years back. This war ended in 2005 with the signing of a Peace Agreement. The Bishop was visiting Ireland all of last week and his itinerary included talks in Cork and in Dublin as well as interviews for various media outlets. He left Ireland this morning (Fri Oct 26th) So now that I am relieved of this responsibility, I will continue to regularly POST stories of interest from around the world. The photos show the Bishop preaching in one of his bush Churches and Before & After around the precious life giving licquid, water. Below is news from Sudan that I came accross today. The slide show left, at the top of page is a mixture of photos taken during the Bishops visit to Ireland (Oct. 19th - 26th) and photos from his life in Sudan. Mozlink





Church leaders fear another war in south of Sudan Nairobi (ENI).
Sudanese church leaders seeking a peaceful settlement of tensions between the Sudan People's Liberation Movement/Army and the country's governing National Congress Party, fear another war could erupt in the south of Africa's biggest country. "We hope they will find a peaceful solution to the problem. Another war is hard to imagine. The region is tired of war. The people don't want war," the Rev. Anthony Bagoye, the general secretary of the Sudan Catholic Bishops' Regional Conference told Ecumenical News International in Nairobi on 24 October.

Friday, October 19, 2007

Speed up the Reform of U.N., says Archbishop

.- The Archbishop of Dublin, Diarmuid Martin, was in New York yesterday addressing the U.N., where he delivered a speech calling for reform of the “world authority”. “Were Pope Paul here with us today he would certainly… be making remarks on the slow progress of U.N. reform,” the primate of Ireland said.

On the 40th anniversary of Pope Paul VI's encyclical Populorum Progressio, his only social encyclical, Archbishop Martin spoke of how the world needs the U.N. to be a body which promotes peace around the world through development. He used the dominant theme of Pope Paul’s encyclical that “development is the new name for peace” to make his point. The archbishop also explained that “the biblical notion that peace is more than the absence of war,” is key to understanding development. This development cannot be based solely on building infrastructure. “For Populorum Progressio, the measuring stick [of true development] is the human person,” he said.

Having called for true development, Archbishop Martin explained its importance for the U.N. and politics in general. "Were Pope Paul here with us today he would certainly be saying thanks to all those who have given themselves in the service of humanity within the U.N. system. He would surely also certainly be making remarks on the slow progress of U.N. reform. We need a well-functioning U.N. Today's possibilities for inter-connectivity among peoples offer new and innovative ways of cooperation, also within the U.N. system. In talking about responsibility for development and of international cooperation," said Archbishop Martin, the encyclical "consistently stresses the role of public authorities. This recalls today's debate about both good governance and the important role of politics." "Politics," he concluded, "is an essential dimension of the construction of society. We need around the world a new revival of politics. Around the world we need a new generation of politicians inspired by ideals, but also capable of taking the risks involved in transmitting those ideals into the 'possible,' through the optimum use of resources and talents to foster the good of all."
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Millions Join U.N. Events to Mark Poverty Fight

UNITED NATIONS Oct. 17th (Reuters) - Millions of people marked an annual International Day for the Eradication of Poverty on Wednesday by joining a mass "stand up" around the world aimed at promoting U.N. targets on reducing poverty.

In New York participants led by U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon crouched down on their knees and, on a count of three, stood up to demonstrate support for the fight against poverty. World leaders committed themselves in 2000 to a set of Millennium Development Goals including reducing hunger, halving extreme poverty, combating HIV and boosting primary education. Still, 980 million people are living on less than $1 a day. Organizers said around 7,000 "Stand Up" events had been registered around the world, from New York to Nairobi, and they were hoping to break last year's figure of 23 million people participating -- in itself a world record. "I don't want to jinx it but I think we can say that we will at least break the record," Mandy Kibel, deputy director of communications for the U.N. Millennium Campaign, said at U.N. headquarters where several hundred people took part. "Our global scorecard is mixed," Ban said, noting that the world had just passed the half-way point towards the target date of 2015 outlined in the Millennium Development Goals.

While parts of Asia have made good progress on eradicating poverty, he said Sub-Saharan Africa was not on track. "We are standing because every day 50,000 people die needlessly as a result of extreme poverty, and the gap between rich and poor is getting wider," Ban said, leading participants in reading a pledge to work to end poverty. Kibel said similar events were held in schools in Africa and Asia, in a prison in Kenya, at a soccer stadium in Japan and at churches in the United States. The aim, she said, was to show governments that people want them to take action. "From a political point of view obviously at the end of the day what we're looking for is change of policy," she said.

France's U.N. Ambassador Jean-Maurice Ripert said the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, marking its 20th anniversary this year, had helped put the issue on the international agenda but there was much still to be done. "The situation is not getting better and we need to mobilize much more energy and much more money to fight effectively against poverty," Ripert told a news conference. "Reducing poverty by half by 2015 -- probably we won't make it, let's be clear," he said. "Therefore more than ever we need to increase our efforts." A report in July marking the mid-point of the campaign said the world would struggle to meet the targets by 2015 but it could be done if rich countries boost international aid budgets.
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Thursday, October 18, 2007

New Cardinal for Ireland

Pope Benedict announced today (Oct. 17th.) that Archbishop Sean Brady would be made a Cardinal at the next consistory. For the first time in Irish history, Ireland will have three living Cardinals, although Archbishop Brady will be the only one young enough to vote for the next Pope

Press Conference ADDRESS BY ARCHBISHOP SEÁN BRADY Archbishop of Armagh & Primate of All Ireland

Armagh Ireland: Ladies & Gentlemen, First of all, thank you for coming here. This is a day of great joy for the Archdiocese of Armagh, for the Church in Ireland and for me personally, and I am very grateful to you for carrying the news of this announcement by Pope Benedict XVI. Last Sunday, when I was leaving to celebrate the 11 o’clock Mass in the Cathedral, I received a telephone call from the Papal Nuncio, Archbishop Lazarrotto. He said that he wanted to tell me some good news. When we met later that evening he informed me that the Holy Father Pope Benedict would soon announce a Consistory and that the news would bring great joy to Ireland. When he confirmed that my name was to be among those announced, I was taken aback. I had heard the usual speculation about a Consistory, but I did not expect it to take place so soon. I certainly did not expect Ireland to be included on this occasion. After all, this will be the first time in history that Ireland will have three Cardinals.

As I began to take in what the Nuncio had said, my thoughts turned to those many, many people I know throughout the Church in Ireland – priests and lay faithful, young and old, religious and bishops, married people and missionaries – those who give their lives on a daily basis to make God’s love more visible in the world. My sincere hope is that they will see this announcement as a recognition by the Holy Father of their faith, life and work.

Anyone who knows Pope Benedict will be aware that he is a man of transparent humility and gentleness. On the day he was elected Pope he described himself as “a simple and humble worker in the Lord's vineyard.” In my own visits to Rome I have come to know him as someone who lives this out in every aspect of his daily life and work. He has a profound sense of the importance of the particular vocation of each and every person in the Church. This is why I have no hesitation in saying that in honouring me in this way the Holy Father wishes to honour the whole Church in Ireland, especially those whose service of the Lord is lived out in the ordinary and often hidden circumstances of everyday life. This announcement is about them – about the families and individuals who in spite of the great challenges faced by the Church in Ireland in recent years, of the many reasons to feel hurt or unheard or uncertain, have remained faithful to the message of Jesus in their everyday lives. I hope that all who are persevering in living the faith will find new heart in this expression of confidence by the Holy Father, not so much in me as in the whole Church in Ireland at this time.

I would like to acknowledge the many expressions of support and good wishes received from across Ireland today. I am very grateful to the President of Ireland, Mrs Mary McAleese, to An Taoiseach and the Irish Government, to the various members of Dáil Éireann and the Seanad. I am also grateful to the Office of the First Minister and Deputy First Minister and the various members of the Northern Ireland Executive and Assembly for their warm congratulations. I also gratefully acknowledge the kind sentiments of support conveyed by the British Government. I feel humbled in the face of such compelling good wishes and support on the part of our political community. I assure all those with political and civic responsibility of my continued commitment to working with them for the common good of the whole of this island, with due regard for our distinct areas of responsibility.

I hope that those who have worked so hard to establish peace in recent years will see in this honour a further expression of Pope Benedict’s confidence in what has been achieved in Northern Ireland. Recently the Holy Father expressed his hope that the peace which is already bringing renewed hope in Northern Ireland will inspire others across the world to recognise that only forgiveness, reconciliation, and mutual respect can bring lasting peace. I know that the continued success of the political institutions in Northern Ireland and the effort to move to the deeper dimensions of reconciliation, are matters close to the heart of the Pope. I believe this announcement is in part an expression of his desire to see that process continue to succeed and become a model for the rest of the world.

I have learnt so much in recent years about the importance of dialogue, listening to others and showing respect. I wish to take this opportunity to thank all those from the Protestant community who have sent me their good wishes today. I thank the other Archbishop of Armagh, Archbishop Alan Harper who telephoned me this morning to convey his good wishes. I also thank the Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, Dr John Finlay, and the President of the Methodist Church in Ireland, Rev Roy Cooper, for their good wishes. It has been a privilege for me to have been part of the work of the four main Church Leaders over the past eleven years. I hope that they will see in this announcement a renewed expression of the commitment of the Catholic Church to the vital work of ecumenical dialogue, and greater understanding and reconciliation between the various traditions of Northern Ireland.

In making this announcement I believe the Holy Father wishes to acknowledge what he described in his address to the Bishops of Ireland last October during our Ad Limina visit as the ‘outstanding contribution that Ireland has made to the life of the Church’. In honouring the See of St. Patrick I believe he wishes to pay tribute to what he described on that same occasion as ‘the constant witness of countless generations of Irish people to their faith in Christ and their fidelity to the Holy See.’ For my part, as successor to Patrick in the historic See of Armagh, may I quote Patrick from his fifth century Confession: `Who am I, 0 Lord, and to what have you called me, you who assisted me with such divine power that today I constantly exalt and magnify your name… So indeed I must accept with serenity whatever befalls me, be it good or evil, and always give thanks to God, who taught me to trust in Him always without hesitation, and who must have heard my prayer so that I… dared to undertake such a holy and wonderful work.’

I am deeply humbled and at the same time honoured that the Holy Father has called me to such a holy and wonderful work in service of the Universal Church. In the words of Pope Benedict to the Bishops of Ireland last year, my constant mission must be to “be bold in speaking of the joy that comes from following Christ.” With my fellow bishops here in Ireland I echo the Pope’s call to “correct the idea that Catholicism is merely a collection of prohibitions” and to “emphasize the Good News, the life-giving and life-enhancing message of the Gospel.” My hope is that this appointment will in some sense help people to appreciate again the value of the heritage of their Christian faith. I hope it will bring a renewed sense of the unity we share in Baptism, especially among the young. The future belongs to those who speak with authentic hope. The Christian message offers that hope to the world. That hope calls us to a deeper solidarity as a human family.

Today’s announcement further deepens the bonds of communion between the Universal Church and the Church in Ireland. That communion is expressed in the first instance through the vital relationship between the Pope and each Bishop across the world. As President of the Irish Bishops’ Conference, I want to thank all my brother Bishops in the Conference for their good wishes and support as well as their prayers, not just today but since I first came to Armagh. They perhaps more than others will understand how much I will need such prayers as I undertake my new responsibilities on behalf of the Church. On this day when I give thanks to the Father, Son and Holy Spirit for the privilege of being a priest of the Catholic Church, I wish to acknowledge with love and gratitude the people who played a profound part in forming whatever human and spiritual values have led me to this day. I am thinking first of my late mother Annie and father Andrew Brady. I am thinking of the priest who baptised me and brought me into the life of the Church, of the other priests who inspired me and taught me the joy of following Christ. I want to thank my brother Con and my sister Kitty and their spouses Bernadette and Gus, and my niece and nephews. As well as keeping my feet firmly on the ground, my family’s support and common sense have been a tower of strength to me throughout my priestly life. I want to express my particular gratitude to the priests and people of my home Parish of Laragh in County Cavan, to the community of St. Patrick’s College, Cavan, where I was student and teacher, to St. Patrick’s College, Maynooth where I studied, and to the Pontifical Irish College where I was both student and Rector. I hope that priests, religious and seminarians, and young people across Ireland will find renewed encouragement in this expression of confidence by the Holy Father in the faith and future of the Church in Ireland. I salute the people of Ballyhaise where I was Parish Priest. And finally, I thank the priests and people of the Archdiocese of Armagh, who have been so welcoming and supportive over these past twelve years. I cannot adequately express what a privilege it is for me to serve as their Bishop. They are represented here today by my faithful co-worker and Auxiliary Bishop, Gerard Clifford, Ms Kate Acton, Armagh Diocesan Youth Director, and Mr Peter Gildea of the Armagh Parish Pastoral Council.

Finally, as I prepare to be created a Cardinal in Rome next month by Pope Benedict on the weekend of the Solemnity of Christ the King, I would appeal to everyone of goodwill to remember me in their prayers. Pray that this good work which the Lord has begun, through his grace and not mine, may be brought to fulfilment. Pray that I may be a worthy shepherd of the Lord’s flock. Pray also that Ireland will be renewed in its faith and that the Kingdom of God will reign among us – an eternal and universal kingdom:
a kingdom of truth and life,
a kingdom of holiness and grace,
a kingdom of justice, love, and peace (Preface of Christ the King).
Thank you.
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No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Mozlink’ for any or all of the articles/images placed here. The placing of an article does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
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Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Pope Urges Governments to do More to End World Hunger

VATICAN CITY - 17 Oct. The lives of millions of people are in danger because they do not have enough to eat, Pope Benedict said yesterday, in a message to Jacques Diouf, director general of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) for the occasion of World Food Day. The Holy Father writes: "The theme chosen for this year's Day, is inviting the international community to face up to one of the most serious challenges of our time: freeing from hunger millions of human beings, whose lives are in danger because of a lack of daily bread. We must realize that the efforts made thus far do not seem to have significantly diminished the number of hungry people in the world," the Pope observes, "despite the fact that everyone recognizes that food is a primary right. ... The available data shows that the lack of fulfillment of the right to food is due not only to natural causes but, above all, to situations provoked by human behavior which lead to a generalized social, economic and human deterioration."

The Pope goes on to recall how "an ever greater number of people - because of poverty or bloody conflicts - find themselves obliged to abandon their homes and their loved ones in order to seek sustenance outside their own lands, Despite international agreements, many of them are rejected" he adds, highlighting the "pressing" need for a concrete undertaking in which "all members of society, both in the individual and the international spheres, feel committed to cooperating in order to make the right to food possible." The lack of fulfillment of this right, he says, "constitutes an evident violation of human dignity and of the rights deriving therefrom."

The Holy Father then goes on to praise the FAO's expert understanding of "the problems of the agricultural world and of food insecurity, and its proven capacity to present plans and programs for their solution" as well as the organization's "acute sensitivity to the aspirations of those calling for more human living conditions." He concludes: "The Catholic Church feels closely involved ... in this task and, through her various institutions, wishes to continue collaboration in order to support the desires and hopes of those individuals and peoples towards whom the activity of the FAO is directed."
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Disclaimer
No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Mozlink’ for any or all of the articles/images placed here. The placing of an article does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
Mozlink

Monday, October 15, 2007

Current Pace on UN anti-poverty Goals too Slow

By THABO MBEKI, President of Sth Africa
Seven years ago, in 2000, in its Millennium Summit in New York, the United Nations General Assembly addressed the challenge of global poverty. As part of its Millennium Declaration, it identified various Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) that had to be achieved by 2015. Effectively this year’s General Assembly is the half-way point on the journey towards the realisation of the MDGs. The General Assembly will therefore have to pose the critical questions: What progress has been made towards the achievement of the MDGs, and what more should be done to ensure that the world
community of nations realises this objective? CORRECT AND honest answers to these questions are of vital importance to the billions across the globe who continue to suffer from the terrible scourges of poverty, hunger and underdevelopment.

When it was adopted in 2000, the Millennium Declaration brought great hope to these masses. It communicated the message that the international community, combining both developed and developing countries, had, at last, resolved to make poverty history, everywhere in the world. In moving words, the Millennium Declaration said: “We will spare no effort to free our fellow men, women and children from the abject and dehumanising conditions of extreme poverty, to which more than a billion of them are currently subjected. We are committed to making the right to development a reality for everyone and to freeing the entire human race from want. We resolve therefore to create an environment — at the national and global levels alike — which is conducive to development and to the elimination of poverty.”

Of great importance to us as Africans, the Millennium Declaration made it a point specifically to recognise and acknowledge the special needs of the African continent. In this regard it said: “We will support the consolidation of democracy in Africa and assist Africans in their struggle for lasting peace, poverty eradication, and sustainable development, thereby bringing Africa into the mainstream of the world economy.” These pledges were fully in keeping with the objectives set by the African Union and its development programme, the Partnership for Africa’s Development (Nepad). We therefore welcomed them as a firm signal that the peoples of the world were fully committed to walk the long and hard road to Africa’s renewal, side by side with us. THIS COMMITMENT was further confirmed when the United Nations General Assembly adopted a resolution to formally support Nepad, which has been followed by practical steps to give effect to this resolution.

However, it is commonly agreed that between now and 2015, the second half of the period the General Assembly had set for the achievement of the MDGs, far more will have to be done than was the case during the first half. Indeed, the 2007 General Assembly will have to make the honest admission that the world community of nations has so far not lived up to the solemn undertakings it made to the poor in Africa and the rest of the world. A clear sense of the challenge ahead of us can be found in the assessment made by the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) about how many of the 53 African countries are likely to achieve the MDGs.

With regard to MDG 1, to halve extreme poverty and hunger by 2015, the ECA says only 13 African countries are likely to reduce poverty to the required degree;
— only 14 countries are likely to achieve MDG 2 of providing universal primary education;
— only seven countries are likely to achieve MDG 3, promoting gender parity at the level of secondary school education and promoting equality of women;
— a mere eight are likely to achieve MDG 4 of reducing child mortality;
— just nine countries are likely to achieve MDG 5, cutting the maternal mortality rate;
— for MDG 6, only eight countries are likely to meet the HIV and Aids reduction targets, and only 13 with regard to malaria;
— only 11 countries are likely to meet the water requirements in rural areas and only seven, the urban sanitation requirements of MDG 7, ensuring environmental sustainability;
— MDG 8 targets the development of a global partnership for development

The Economic Commission for Africa thus tells a dismal and distressing story: the overwhelming majority of countries on our continent will, for the foreseeable future, remain mired in a deeply dehumanising state of poverty, misery, and underdevelopment.
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Disclaimer
No responsibility or liability shall attach itself to either myself or to the blogspot ‘Mozlink’ for any or all of the articles/images placed here. The placing of an article does not necessarily imply that I agree or accept the contents of the article as being necessarily factual in theology, dogma or otherwise.
Mozlink

Sunday, October 14, 2007

Darfur Bishop to Visit Ireland

- MEDIA RELEASE -


For Release on October 7th 2007

Darfur Bishop seeks more
Irish Missionaries for Sudan

Bishop Macram Gassis of the Diocese of El Obeid in Sudan, which includes the territory of Darfur, will visit Ireland from October 19th to 26th. Bishop Gassis has been invited to Ireland by the Irish Missionary Union (IMU) to heighten our awareness of the great suffering endured for so many years by the people of Sudan and especially today, by those living in Darfur. Bishop Gassis appeals to the various Irish missionary organizations to send more personnel to help with the reconstruction of Sudan.

“His visit will remind all Irish people of the suffering in Darfur and the great service rendered by missionaries in so many troubled spots of the world.” said Sr. Miriam Duggan, President of the Irish Missionary Union. A Franciscan Missionary for Africa and a medical doctor herself, Sr. Miriam spent over 30 years working in neighbouring Uganda. She added “October will be a time for all to pray for our suffering brothers and sisters throughout the world. The presence of Bishop Gassis, is a concrete reminder to all of us of how fortunate we are here in Ireland and of our responsibility to respond to the situation in Sudan”.

During the month of October and especially on Mission Sunday October 21st. , the Irish Church proudly celebrates its long missionary tradition of Gospel witness. The 2,183 Irish born missionaries still serving in 84 different countries across the world, represent Ireland’s largest emigrant grouping abroad, people who are bringing hope, aid and assistance to so many marginalized people in our world.

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For further information contact; Fr. Eamon Aylward, ss.cc,
St. Paul
’s, Mt. Argus, Lower Kimmage Road, Dublin 6W Tel: 4923325/6.
Website
www.imu.ie E/mail executive@imu.ie

NOTES FOR EDITORS
Irish Missionary Union: The Irish Missionary Union is an umbrella organisation representing approximately 87 Irish missionary sending organizations, both religious and lay.

Sr. Miriam Duggan FMSA: President of the Irish Missionary Union and Congregational Leader of the Franciscan Missionary Sisters for Africa, can be contacted at 01-2838376.
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