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War On Iraq A Crime Against Peace: Vatican Prelate

"They are preparing to reply with thousands of bombs to a people that has been asking for bread for the last 12 years," Martino
 

VATICAN CITY, March, 17 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - Military intervention against Iraq would be a crime against peace demanding vengeance before God, the head of the Vatican's Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace said Monday, March 17.

"War is a crime against peace which cries for vengeance before God," said Archbishop Renato Raffaele Martino, speaking on Vatican Radio, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP).

He stressed the deeply unjust and immoral nature of war, saying it was condemned by God because civilians were the worst sufferers.

Martino, formerly Vatican permanent representative to the United Nations, strongly denounced the determination of the United States and its allies to disarm Iraq by force.

"Do not reply with a stone to the child who asks for bread," he said: "They are preparing to reply with thousands of bombs to a people that has been asking for bread for the last 12 years."

Stressing that the Roman Catholic Church would continue to insist on the need and the urgency of peace, he said: "As always, it will be the Good Samaritan who will bind the wounds of a wounded and weakened people."

Echoing the same meaning, Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Sheikh Mohamed Sayyed Tantawi expressed Sunday, March 16, his objection to the description of the looming military aggression against Iraq as new "Crusade", highlighting that Christians are against war.

"All revealed religions call for peace, stability, reform and abhorrence of war," Tantawi said during his meeting with the head of supreme council of Anglican churches in Scotland.

"The 'Crusade' term carries a sense of racism which is fully rejected by Islam and Christianity" he added.

Pope John Paul II, one of the most prominent opponents of war on Iraq, urged UN Security Council members Sunday to continue negotiations on the disarmament of Iraq and avert a looming military conflict.

"I want to remind UN members and particularly those who make up the Security Council that the use of force is the last resort after having exhausted all peaceful solutions, as stipulated by the UN charter," the pope told tens of thousands of worshippers gathered in St. Peter's Square for Sunday services.

"I lived through World War II and I survived the Second World War. For this reason I have the duty to say 'never again war'," he said.

"We know that it is impossible to say peace at any price but we all know how important our responsibility is," he added.

The head of the Roman Catholic Church has met with a range of world leaders in his efforts to prevent a war, including British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Tareq Aziz.

He has also called on Christians to fast to empathize with the suffering of the Iraqi people, and dispatched a special envoy to Washington in a bid to soften the White

House's hawkish stance against Baghdad.

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