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World
church body to monitor Zimbabwe elections, U.N. head told
Peter
Kenny, Episcopal Life Online
March 05, 2008
http://www.episcopal-life.org/81808_95464_ENG_HTM.htm
[Ecumenical News International,
Geneva] The general secretary of the World Council of Churches,
the Rev. Samuel Kobia, has told his U.N. counterpart, Ban Ki-moon,
that the ecumenical body and its member churches in Africa are planning
for the monitoring of elections scheduled in Zimbabwe on March 29.
In a statement released
after Ban met Kobia on March 3 at the invitation of the WCC leader,
the world church body said that in private talks, the U.N. general
secretary had said the WCC had played an important role in the democratization
of his home country, Korea.
The WCC also said it
had reached an agreement with Ban for the United Nations and the
WCC to work more closely on several global issues, particularly
climate change.
"We would like to
maintain a close partnership with the WCC," Ban was quoted
as saying in the WCC statement. "You have high moral power
and what you are doing is based on your Christian beliefs."
Their discussions touched
on democratic electoral processes with references by Kobia to Kenya
and to the upheaval in Armenia after recent disrupted elections.
"I want to thank you for helping in Kenya as you did,"
said Kobia, who is also a pastor of the Methodist Church in Kenya.
Ban spoke of plans to
place a focus on issues of intolerance which have led to some of
the struggles and violence surrounding electoral processes. "This
is another area where the WCC can make a contribution," said
the U.N. secretary general. "The world has suffered for too
long with intolerances."
Kobia said WCC work on
inter-religious dialogue and cooperation helps understanding and
tolerance between people of different faiths. He also announced
that the WCC and its member churches in Africa were "planning
for monitoring" of the Zimbabwe elections.
Separately, the acting
Anglican bishop of Harare, Sebastian Bakare, had told church, civic
and opposition leaders who gathered in Harare on February 25 to
pray for peaceful elections that lawlessness and violence perpetrated
by those entrusted with ensuring law and order were destroying Zimbabwe.
Zimbabweans will on March
29 choose a president, parliament and local councils. The Zimonline
non-governmental news agency reported, however, that observers say
a repressive environment in which intimidation and organized violence
against perceived government opponents leaves little likelihood
for the polls to be free and fair.
Bakare was quoted as
saying that chaos in the run-up to the polls was promoting anarchy.
"The environment of lawlessness is destroying us," the
bishop stated.
Bakare was part of a
three-member committee of senior bishops that met President Robert
Mugabe and main opposition leader Morgan Tsvangirai in 2007 in a
failed attempt to broker dialogue between the political rivals.
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