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magyar [20060328] [ny?lt lev?l] Olvasási ido: negyed?ra Engedjék szabadon a keresztény békemozgalmárokat (B?ke, Er?szakmentess?g, Kereszt?nys?g, Mozgalom, Politika)
Kivégzéssel fenyegetnek négy, nov. 26-án Irakban elrabolt keresztény békemozgalmárt: Norman Kember, James Loney, Harmeet Singh Sooden, Tom Fox.
Engedjék szabadon a keresztény békemozgalmárokat / Free the Christian Peacemaker Team

Annotáció: Az Irakban elrabolt 4 bekemozgalmar kivegzeset elhalasztották két nappal, dec. 10-re.

Dec. 10. épp az Emberi Jogok Világnapja lesz.

Alább friss hírek és írások angolul.
Elöl egy cikk, amit Tom Fox az elrablása elõtti napon írt.

Gondoljunk rájuk, imádkozzunk értük és elrablóikért, s a
http://www.freethecpt.org
webhelyen aláírhatod a négy elrabolt ártatlan ember elengedését kérõ levelet.
Több website-on is folyik aláírásgyûjtés, rohamosan nõ a szám.
Pl. http://freethecaptivesnow.org/main.php

További nagy segítség, ha továbbítod a kérõ levelet muzulmán ismerõseidnek, mert az õ fellépésüknek nagyobb súlya van.
Ha tudsz, segíts minél nagyobb médiát elérni.

Simonyi Gyula
BOCS Alapítvány
http://bocs.hu

--------

A BOCS Alapítvány, mint az IFOR (International Fellowship of Reconciliation) 86 éves, globális békehálózat (melynek minden világvallásból vannak csoportjai) magyar tagja már tíz éve,
kéri figyelmedet négy, nov. 26-án Irakban elrabolt és holnapi kivégzéssel fenyegetett keresztény békemozgalmár érdekében.

Alább az IFOR központ levele, amelyet muzulmán békecsoportok is támogatnak.
Angolul nem tudók számára a lényeg az, hogy gondoljunk rájuk, imádkozzunk értük és elrablóikért, s esetleg a
http://www.freethecpt.org
webhelyen aláírhatod a négy elrabolt ártatlan ember elengedését kérõ levelet.
További nagy segítség, ha továbbítod a kérõ levelet muzulmán ismerõseidnek, mert az õ fellépésüknek nagyobb súlya van.

A CPT (Christian Peacemaker Team, keresztény munkacsoport a békéért) 2002 október óta dolgozik Irakban. (A balkáni háború idején az ex-yu országokban is dolgoztak, a BOCS együttmûködött velük.) Az evangéliumi erõszakmentesség alapján állnak, ellenzik Irak megszállását, nem kémek, sem nem misszionáriusok, nem dolgoznak kormányoknak. Rengeteg interjút készítettek szenvedõ irakiakkal, számos esetben elsõként értesítették a médiát az USA mûködtette börtönökben és táborokban történt kínzásokról, a polgári lakosság elleni fegyveres bûnökrõl. Védelem nélkül iraki barátaiknál éltek, s reméljük, az iraki emberség és vendégszeretet megmenti õket.

Simonyi Gyula
elnök
BOCS Alapítvány

---------

The following reflection was written by Tom Fox the day before he
was abducted.

Why are We Here?
By Tom Fox
December 3, 2005

The Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) Iraq team went through a
discernment process, seeking to identify aspects of our work here in
Iraq that are compelling enough to continue the project and
comparing them with the costs (financial, psychological, physical)
that are also aspects of the project. It was a healthy exercise, but
it led me to a somewhat larger question: Why are we here?

If I understand the message of God, his response to that question is
that we are to take part in the creation of the Peaceable Realm of
God. Again, if I understand the message of God, how we take part in
the creation of this realm is to love God with all our heart, our
mind and our strength and to love our neighbors and enemies as we
love God and ourselves. In its essential form, different aspects of
love bring about the creation of the realm.

I have read that the word in the Greek Bible that is translated
as "love" in the word "agape". Again, I have read that this word is
best expressed as a profound respect for all human beings simply for
the fact that they are all God's children. I would state that idea
in a somewhat different way, as "never thinking or doing anything
that would dehumanize one of my fellow human beings."

As I survey the landscape here in Iraq, dehumanization seems to be
the operative means of relating to each other. U.S. forces in their
quest to hunt down and kill "terrorists" are as a result of this
dehumanizing word, not only killing "terrorist", but also killing
innocent Iraqis: men, women and children in the various towns and
villages.

It seems as if the first step down the road to violence is taken
when I dehumanize a person. That violence might stay within my
thoughts or find its way into the outer world and become expressed
verbally, psychologically, structurally or physically. As soon as I
rob a fellow human being of his or her humanity by sticking a
dehumanizing label on them, I begin the process that can have, as an
end result, torture, injury and death.

"Why are we here?" We are here to root out all aspects of
dehumanization that exists within us. We are here to stand with
those being dehumanized by oppressors and stand firm against that
dehumanization. We are here to stop people, including ourselves,
from dehumanizing any of God's children, no matter how much they
dehumanize their own souls.


Christian Peacemaker Teams is an ecumenical violence-reduction program with roots in the historic peace churches. Teams of trained peace workers live in areas of lethal conflict around the world. CPT has been present in Iraq since October, 2002.
To learn more about CPT, please visit http://www.cpt.org.

--------

CPTnet
7 December 2005

IRAQ: Love Your Enemies. Free the Captives. End the War

[The Iraqi group holding the four missing CPTers has extended their deadline
for the release of all Iraqi prisoners until Saturday, 10 December 2005.]

We remain concerned about the well-being of our team-mates Harmeet, James,
Norman, and Tom, and we ask for their release. We also remain concerned
about the well-being of all Iraqis who are suffering under occupation.

Those who are with our team-mates have demanded the release from captivity
of the Iraqi detainees held in United States' and Iraqi prisons.

Christian Peacemaker Teams believes that no single person, no single nation
can meet the demands of Justice.

No single person, no single nation can meet the demands of Peace.

But we believe that it is everyone's responsibility to do their part to
bring each combatant and each captive home to their families and to end the
war and occupation.

December 10th is International Human Rights Day.

Christian Peacemaker Teams calls for all people of conscience around the
world to initiate non-violent public actions for peace and for prayer on
December 10th in support of international human rights and in support of
ending war and occupation.
_______________

Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) seeks to enlist the whole church in
organized, nonviolent alternatives to war and places teams of trained,
peacemakers in regions of lethal conflict. Originally a violence-reduction
initiative of the historic peace churches (Mennonite, Church of the Brethren
and Quaker), CPT now enjoys support and membership from a wide range of
Christian denominations.

To express concerns, criticisms or affirmations to CPT's Chicago office
send messages to [email protected]. To express concerns, criticisms or
affirmations to CPT's Canadian office, send messages to
[email protected].

*********

See updates online at: British hostage deadline 'extended'
Scotsman Report: Iraq Kidnappers Extend Deadline
ABC News BBC News
Stuff.co.nz
Aljazeera.com
Reuters AlertNet
http://today.reuters.co.uk/news/NewsArticle.aspx%3Ftype%3DtopNews%26storyID%3D2005-12-07T221609Z_01_KWA777408_RTRUKOC_0_UK-IRAQ-HOSTAGES-DEADLINE.xml

---------

LONDON (Reuters) - An Iraqi group holding four Westerners extended by 48 hours on Wednesday a deadline to kill them unless Iraqi detainees are freed, as a jailed cleric made an appeal from his prison cell for the hostages' release.

The militant group had threatened to kill the hostages on Thursday but extended the deadline until December 10, Al Jazeera television reported on Wednesday.

The channel showed brief video footage of two men it said were British hostage Norman Kember and an American hostage who was not identified.

The Jordanian cleric jailed in Britain for links to al Qaeda called for their release in a video appeal aired on Wednesday. He said the men, kidnapped on November 26 in Baghdad, should not be punished for the policies of their governments.

"I, your brother Abu Qatada ... beseech my brothers in the Swords of Truth in Iraq, who are imprisoning the four Christian peace activists, to release them in accordance with the fundamental principle of mercy of our faith," he said in an appeal aired on Arab television networks on Wednesday.

"Our prophet said mercy should be shown unless there is a reason in Sharia (Islamic law) that prevents it," he added in a videotape supplied to Al Jazeera and Al Arabiya channels by his lawyers.

British authorities say Abu Qatada was a leading inspiration for al Qaeda in Europe.

Kember, two Canadians and the American were working with a Christian peace group when they were seized by an Iraqi group calling itself the "Swords of Truth".

The group accuses the four of spying for foreign forces in Iraq, a charge denied by their colleagues.

Kember, 74, called on Prime Minister Tony Blair for help in separate footage shown on BBC News 24 on Tuesday.

"I ask Mr Blair to take British troops out of Iraq and leave the Iraqi people to come to their own decisions on their government."

Kember's wife, Pat, also issued a statement calling for his release.

"My husband Norman doesn't believe in violence, neither does his family," she said.

"We believe everyone should live in peace, and that is why Norman went to Iraq. He wanted the Iraqi people to know that there are many people who feel sorry for their suffering."

(Additional reporting by Miral Fahmy in Dubai and Marcin Grajewski in Brussels)

------------


Love your enemies
Peace activist Tom Fox has lived in Baghdad by the words of Jesus. Now he
faces murder by terrorists. Was his mission in vain?

By Michelle Goldberg
www.salon.com

Dec. 07, 2005 | Living in Iraq, Tom Fox wrote of his struggles to transcend
rage and fear, to forgive his enemies even as they threatened his life and
murdered people around him. Now his faith is being put to the ultimate test.
On Nov. 26 in Baghdad, the 54-year-old musician from Virginia and three
other volunteers with the pacifist group Christian Peacemaker Teams were
kidnapped by a previously unknown band of insurgents calling themselves the
Swords of Truth Brigade. This weekend, their captors released a video
threatening to execute the four men unless all the prisoners in Iraqi and
coalition custody are released by Thursday, Dec. 8.

The grotesque irony is that few have worked as assiduously on behalf of
Iraqi detainees as Christian Peacemaker Teams, the last Western human rights
organization to operate in Iraq outside the Green Zone. CPT volunteers were
among the first to document reports of abuse at Abu Ghraib. Despite the
growing danger, they've remained in Iraq to help ordinary Iraqis track down
relatives who've been seized by coalition soldiers. Muslim groups throughout
Iraq and the Middle East -- including the Iraqi Islamic Party, the country's
largest Sunni party, and the Association of Muslim Scholars, a group of
prominent Sunni clerics said to have ties to the insurgency -- have called
for the Christian Peacemakers' release. But right now, CPT members says none
of their contacts know who the Swords of Truth are, or how to reach them.

Ever since he first arrived in Iraq in 2004, Fox has tried to prepare
himself for this situation. In October that year, he and 24-year-old Matt
Chandler, a recent college graduate from Oregon, were the only two Christian
Peacemakers in Baghdad, and they felt the danger of kidnapping increasing.
That September, the Italian aid workers Simona Torretta and Simona Pari were
abducted and held for three weeks before being released. A few weeks later
Margaret Hassan, CARE International's head of operations in Iraq, would be
taken, held for a month, and murdered.

Wanting to prepare for the worst, Fox and Chandler drafted a statement
outlining their position on their own potential abductions -- a position
that begins with empathy for their captors, and a demand that no violence be
used to rescue them. Each sent a copy to the members of the five-person
support team that all CPT volunteers assemble at home before entering war
zones.

Should a volunteer be taken hostage, the statement said, "CPT will attempt
to communicate with the hostage takers or their sponsors, and work against
journalists' inclinations to vilify and demonize the offenders. We will try
to understand the motives for these actions and to articulate them while
maintaining a firm stance that such actions are wrong ... We reject the use
of violent force to save our lives, should we be kidnapped, held hostage, or
caught in the middle of a violent conflict situation. We also reject
violence to punish anyone who harms us ... We forgive those who consider us
their enemies, therefore any penalty should be in the spirit of restorative
justice rather than violent retribution."

There is no reason to believe the insurgents who captured the Christian
Peacemakers will be moved by their forgiveness or their frequently stated
refusal to dehumanize anyone, even those who would dehumanize them. Margaret
Hassan spent 30 years living in Iraq and devoted her life to the welfare of
the Iraqi people, but that didn't stop her killers. Innocents and
humanitarian workers have been shown no special mercy by terrorists who
often appear to have no goal other than spreading chaos and committing mass
slaughter.

Fox and his colleagues must have known this -- in their dispatches from the
field, a fervent, otherworldly idealism mixes with a sober appraisal of
growing danger. But Fox and the other hostages -- James Loney, a 41-year-old
from Toronto who serves as program coordinator for CPT Canada; Harmeet Singh
Sooden, a 32-year-old electrical engineer from Montreal; and Norman Kember,
a 74-year-old retired professor of medical physics from London -- decided to
stay in Iraq, anyway. Their choice can seem reckless and crazy, maybe
vainglorious, but the fact remains that in a region being flayed by
religious and nationalistic hatreds, the members of CPT chose to risk their
lives on behalf of human solidarity.

To some, including Fox's daughter, who didn't want him to go to Iraq, the
risk wasn't worth it. The Christian Peacemakers' deaths won't change
anything in a country coming hideously undone. But in a world torn between
competing religious chauvinisms, they are a welcome reminder that deep faith
can make people generous rather than punitive, humble instead of jingoistic.

For decades Fox has been to committed to Christianity, which he combines
with an expansive interest in other faiths. For him, being in Iraq to
witness the devastation and to do his small part to help is a way to take
Jesus at his word. He has been scared, but he seems to see his fear as a
spiritual obstacle to be overcome.

"It seems easier somehow to confront anger within my heart than it is to
confront fear," he wrote on his blog in October 2004, during the spate of
kidnappings of aid workers. "But if Jesus and Gandhi are right then I am not
to give in to either. I am to stand firm against the kidnapper as I am to
stand firm against the soldier. Does that mean I walk into a raging battle
to confront the soldiers? Does that mean I walk the streets of Baghdad with
a sign saying 'American for the Taking'? No to both counts. But if Jesus and
Gandhi are right, then I am asked to risk my life and if I lose it to be as
forgiving as they were when murdered by the forces of Satan. I struggle to
stand firm but I'm willing to keep working at it."

People involved with Christian Peacemaker Teams are quick to note that
thousands of Iraqis have gone through what their friends are going through
without garnering international attention. Speaking of Fox, Pearl Hoover,
pastor of the Northern Virginia Mennonite Church and a member of Fox's
five-person support team, says, "Part of his being there was to be a
presence with people at their own level of risk. As I understand it,
thousands of people are being held hostage in Iraq. It's just that Tom
happens to be connected to the West and the outside world. Who knows what
other families are wondering what happened to their loved ones? That's not
being covered in international news." Hoover isn't trying to minimize what's
happening to Fox; rather, she says, she is asking that the same concern be
shown for all the Iraqis who are also in his situation.

After Sept. 11, Fox, who spent two decades as a clarinet player in the
Marine Corps Band, yearned to do something different and lead a more
meaningful with his life. A Quaker, he was drawn to the CPT's peaceful
mission, and though he'd never been to the Middle East, he volunteered to go
to Iraq. Hoover says he didn't have a martyr complex or a self-destructive
streak -- something she looks out for in people who sign up to put
themselves in harm's way.

"For [Fox] it was a very measured approach," she says. "He acknowledged it
was a risky thing to do, but he wasn't apologizing for it, and he wasn't
saying, 'Bring on the trouble.' He was simply saying, 'I want my life to be
meaningful.' And I think that's something that someone who's not mentally
balanced would not say. He wasn't looking to die. And that's where his
message is completely different than people who choose war or people who
choose suicide bombing. He went there because he wanted to look for peace
wherever it was and to nurture that peace."

Christian Peacemaker Teams try to create small zones of peace and
reconciliation in the midst of war. The organization was founded in 1988 by
a coalition of Christian denominations including the Quakers and the
Mennonites. Based in Chicago and Toronto, CPT sends trained volunteers to
the most dangerous spots on the planet, including Colombia, the West Bank
and the Congo, to act as witnesses and advocates for ordinary people caught
in violent conflict. They plan projects based on the needs they see on the
ground and the voids they believe they can fill. In Iraq, that means working
on behalf of detainees in American custody, many of whom, according to
military documents obtained by the ACLU, have turned out to be innocent.

As English-speaking Westerners in Iraq, the Christian Peacemakers are able
to navigate the occupation bureaucracy better than locals, and they serve as
a crucial go- between for families desperate to find imprisoned relatives
caught in coalition military sweeps. They live in an unguarded apartment in
an ordinary Baghdad neighborhood, where Iraqis can seek them out when they
need help.

"They would come and say, 'We don't know where our family members are, we
don't have any access to them, we don't know if they need medical attention,
we don't know if they have legal support. Can you help us find them?" says
Kryss Chupp, CPT's training coordinator in Chicago. "And so CPTers would
accompany these families to the different authorities involved to try and
gain basic information about where these people were located and get access
for the families to their detained family members."

Through that process, Chupp says, "team members began hearing more and more
about the kind of abuses that were going on at the hands of coalition forces
in U.S.-run prisons." In January 2004, Christian Peacemaker Teams released a
report documenting the abuse -- including electrocution, beating and
starvation -- suffered by detainees who were later released. When the Abu
Ghraib scandal broke four months later, many journalists covering the story
cited CPT's work.

The litany of horrors Fox kept hearing -- coupled with all the other
torments visited on Iraq -- clearly got to him. On his blog, he wrote about
trying not to simply shut down in the face of so much anguish. "The ability
to feel the pain of another human being is central to any kind of peace
making work," he wrote. "But this compassion is fraught with peril. A person
can experience a feeling of being overwhelmed. Or a feeling of rage and
desire for revenge. Or a desire to move away from the pain. Or a sense of
numbness that can deaden the ability to feel anything at all."

He continued. "How do I stay with the pain and suffering and not be
overwhelmed? How do I resist the welling up of rage towards the perpetrators
of violence? How do I keep from disconnecting from or becoming numb to the
pain? After eight months with CPT, I am no clearer than I [was] when I
began. In fact I have to struggle harder and harder each day against my
desire to move away or become numb. Simply staying with the pain of others
doesn't seem to create any healing or transformation. Yet there seems to be
no other first step into the realm of compassion than to not step away."

Fox didn't step away. The day before he was taken, he wrote a brief missive,
posted on the Web site Electronic Iraq, titled "Why Are We Here?" He
concluded, "We are here to root out all aspects of dehumanization that
exists within us. We are here to stand with those being dehumanized by
oppressors and stand firm against that dehumanization. We are here to stop
people, including ourselves, from dehumanizing any of God's children, no
matter how much they dehumanize their own souls."

To outsiders, such faith can seem naive or even foolishly reckless. Rush
Limbaugh, for one, was pleased by the Christian Peacemakers' kidnapping,
saying, "Well, here's why I like it. I like any time a bunch of leftist
feel-good hand-wringers are shown reality."

Fox's son and daughter were clearly unhappy to see their father go to Iraq;
his daughter released a brief statement mingling pride, frustration and
grief. "My father made a choice to travel to Iraq and listen to those who
are not heard," she says. "His belief that peaceful resolutions can be found
to every conflict has been tested time and again, but he remains committed
to that ideal, heart and soul. This is very difficult for my brother and me.
We want to be with our dad again. I didn't want him to go to a country where
his American citizenship could potentially overshadow his peaceful reasons
for being there. But this is who my father is and I am strengthened by it. I
write this with the utmost respect and agreement with what he stands for."

The combination of awe at her father's kindness and frustration at his
implacable rejection of political realism is easy to understand. At times,
the attempts by members of CPT to avoid demonizing their friends' abductors
can be so hard for nonbelievers to grasp that they approach self-parody. I
ask Cliff Kindy, a member of Christian Peacemaker Teams' steering committee
who has taken three five-month trips to Iraq, what he thinks of his
colleagues' kidnappers. He responds that instead of "kidnappers," he prefers
the word "hosts."

"If you start using words like 'kidnap' or 'holding for ransom' or
'abducting,' then it begins to depersonalize human beings," he says. "If Tom
and Jim [Loney] are 'captives,' you put them in a box. It takes away from
their humanity, and also the people who are hosting them. They have family
members -- they may be married, they may have children. They are somebody's
children. They have dreams and hopes for their country." He's convinced that
Fox and Loney, whom he knows well, will be trying to "humanize these other
people who are there with them. And maybe that's how changes come. Even if
they die, they'll be a spark that brings a change."

This may sound idealized and abstract, but Kindy puts it in practical terms.
"Groups all over Iraq, like the Islamic Scholars Board, religious leaders
and human rights groups, are speaking out on behalf of these CPTers," he
says. "We didn't come into Iraq with armed guards, we don't wear flak
jackets, we don't ride in Humvees or tanks. And I think we're alive today
because that's how we operated in Iraq. There's no way anybody who is armed
could have done the things we've done. We've been in the razor-wire cities.
We've been in the homes of Iraqi families in Fallujah, Ramadi, Karbala. Abu
Hishma village that was razor-wired for eight months, we slept overnight in
that city. People would say, 'Well, that's naive.' In fact, it's realistic.
If you're going to run around with guns, you're going to get killed."

Kindy knows pacifism isn't a shield in a war zone. But dying in pursuit of
nonviolence is a worthy sacrifice to Christian Peacemakers. Kindy says he
suspects and hopes that, whatever happens, Christian Peacemakers will
maintain its presence in Iraq. "One of the things we need to learn from the
military is that there are risks that are important to take -- risks worth
putting our lives on the line for," he says. "If, in our peacemaking, we
can't have that same level of commitment, that would be sad."

-- By Michelle Goldberg



----- Original Message -----
From: David Mumford
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 4:40 PM
Subject: Norman Kember, James Loney, Harmeet Singh Sooden and Tom Fox


Dear Friends,
Tomorrow, Thursday 8th December, is the day on which Norman Kember and the other Christian Peacemaker Team people, Tom Fox, Harmeet Singh Sooden and James Loney are being threatened with death.

Please keep them all in your prayers.
If you wish, please consider adding your name to the petition below, please do so.
If your IFOR branch, group or affiliate would consider posting a message on the al Jazeera website, then please do so.
With thanks to all those who have sent messages, participated in prayer vigils, written letters and kept those who have been abducted in their thoughts and prayers.

David Mumford
International Coordinator
International Fellowship of Reconciliation
Spoorstraat 38
1815 BK Alkmaar,
Netherlands
tel: +31 72 512 3014
fax: +31 72 515 1102



1. This is the text of a petition from Arundhati Roy and others. If you wish to add your name to it, please do so via the www address given.

An Urgent Appeal
Add your name at: http://www.freethecpt.org
Four members of Christian Peacemaker Teams were taken this past Saturday, November 26, in Baghdad, Iraq. They are not spies, nor do they work in the service of any government. They are people who have dedicated their lives to fighting against war and have clearly and publicly opposed the invasion and occupation of Iraq. They are people of faith, but they are not missionaries. They have deep respect for the Islamic faith and for the right of Iraqis to self-determination.

C.P.T. first came to Iraq in October 2002 to oppose the US invasion, and it has remained in the country throughout the occupation in solidarity with the Iraqi people. The group has been invaluable in alerting the world to many of the horrors facing Iraqis detained in US-run prisons and detention centres. C.P.T. was among the first to document the torture occurring at the Abu Ghraib prison, long before the story broke in the mainstream press. Its members have spent countless hours interviewing Iraqis about abuse and torture suffered at the hands of US forces and have disseminated this information internationally.

Each of the four C.P.T. members being held in Iraq has dedicated his life to resisting the darkness and misery of war and occupation. Convinced that it is not enough to oppose the war from the safety of their homes, they made the difficult decision to go to Iraq, knowing that the climate of mistrust created by foreign occupation meant that they could be mistaken for spies or missionaries. They went there with a simple purpose: to bear witness to injustice and to embody a different kind of relationship between cultures and faiths. Members of C.P.T. willingly undertook the risks of living among Iraqis, in a common neighbourhood outside of the infamous Green Zone. They sought no protection from weapons or armed guards, trusting in, and benefiting from, the goodwill of the Iraqi people. Acts of kindness and hospitality from Iraqis were innumerable and ensured the C.P.T. members' safety and wellbeing. We believe that spirit will prevail in the current situation.

We appeal to those holding these activists to release them unharmed so that they may continue their vital work as witnesses and peacemakers.


********************************************************************************************************************

Palestinian NGO Network statement on CPT hostages
November 30th 2005
The Palestinian NGO Network (PNGO) strongly condemns the kidnapping of the four human rights workers from the Christian peacemaker team (CPT), Tom Fox, Norman Kember, James Loney and Harmeet Singh Sooden, who were abducted by an unknown militant group.

CPT volunteers have been present in Iraq since 2002 to work for the rights of Iraqi prisoners who have been illegally detained and abused by the USA, and in documenting human rights abuses. In addition, the CPT volunteers have been very active in Palestine in accompanying Palestinians mainly in Hebron city to provide a civil protection for them against Israeli's violations.

PNGO strongly condemns the hostage taking of civilians to attain political goals and calls for the immediate and unconditional release of all hostages held in Iraq.

PNGO considers the act of hostage-taking to be harmful to the liberation of Iraq and Iraq's just struggle for self-determination and freedom, apart from being detrimental to the Arab cause as a whole.

PNGO calls on all Palestinian civil society organizations to show solidarity with the victims and their families by raising their voices and explicitly condemning the hostage-takings in Iraq.

PNGO urges Iraqi civil society organizations to use all available means to bring about the immediate release of the hostages currently held in Iraq and to work on preventive measures to ensure that such acts are not repeated.

PNGO network

***********************************************************************************************************************
Christian Peacemaker Team does *not* want political pressure put on governments but they do want Muslims worldwide to appeal through the Arab media to the abductors. CPT especially would like Muslim clerics to make this appeal.

Please, if you have friends or acquaintances who are Muslim or Arab, ask them to write or call Al-Jazeera and any other Arab media in support of the release of CPT hostages.

I am also attaching the statement from the Palestinian NGO Network.
Messages can be sent to the 'feedback section' on the al-Jazeera website at: www.Aljazeera.net.
The following website prints readers comments which may be seen by the kidnappers: http://www.aljazeera.com/me.asp?service_ID=10045


David Mumford
International Coordinator
International Fellowship of Reconciliation
Spoorstraat 38
1815 BK Alkmaar,
Netherlands
tel: +31 72 512 3014
fax: +31 72 515 1102

Földrajzi hely (amirol szól): Iraq

Fordító (az aktuális anyag nyelvére): Simonyi Gyula

Csoport, mozgalom, irányzat (ahonnan származik): Bocs Alap?tv?ny, IFOR

Nyelvi változatok: