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Internationale Religionsführerkonferenz anlässlich des G8-Gipfels in Japan beendet./. Geistliche aus aller Welt fordern Umweltschutz statt Militärausgaben

Hannover (ots)

Mit einem "Ruf aus Sapporo" ist am Donnerstag,
dem 3. Juli, das internationale Religionsführertreffen anlässlich des
G8-Gipfels in Japan zu Ende gegangen. Hochrangige Vertreter der 
Weltreligionen fordern darin die Staats- und Regierungschefs der 
G8-Staaten auf, ihre Militärausgaben zu reduzieren und mit dem 
eingesparten Geld einen "Earth-Fonds" zum Schutz der Umwelt und zur 
Bekämpfung der Armut einzurichten. In Fortsetzung der 
Religionsführerkonferenz, die auf Einladung der Evangelischen Kirche 
in Deutschland (EKD) 2007 in Köln stattfand, fordern die Vertreter 
von Christentum, Judentum, Islam, Shintoismus und Buddhismus die 
Umsetzung der UN-Millenniumsentwicklungsziele, die unter anderem die 
Halbierung globaler Armut bis zum Jahr 2015 anstreben. Die knapp 100 
Delegierten aus mehr als 20 Ländern waren sich einig, dass die 
Umsetzung der Millenniumsentwicklungsziele wie auch die Maßnahmen zum
Schutz des Klimas in den kommenden Jahren aufmerksam begleitet und 
beharrlich eingefordert werden sollten.
Der Vorsitzende des Rates der EKD, Bischof Wolfgang Huber, zeigte 
sich am Ende der zweitägigen Konferenz zufrieden mit dem Ergebnis. 
"Die Vertreter der verschiedenen Religionen übernehmen gemeinsam 
Verantwortung für die Gestaltung einer gerechten und solidarischen 
Zukunft. Ich hoffe, dass sich dieser Einsatz für die Überwindung der 
Armut und die Bewahrung der Schöpfung auch im Blick auf die kommenden
G8-Gipfel in Italien und Kanada fortsetzen wird."
Das Abschlussdokument wurde in Anwesenheit der rund 300 
Teilnehmenden im Sapporo Convention Center an einen Vertreter der 
japanischen Regierung übergeben.
Sapporo/Hannover, 03. Juli 2008
Pressestelle der EKD
Silke Römhild
Im Folgenden finden Sie den "Ruf aus Sapporo" im englischen 
Wortlaut.
Call from Sapporo - World Religious Leaders Summit for Peace
On the occasion of the G8 Hokkaido Toyako Summit
July 3, 2008
Sapporo, Japan
INTRODUCTION
We, senior leaders of the world's religions, have convened in a 
World Religious Leaders Summit for Peace in Sapporo, Japan, just 
prior to the Group of Eight (G8) Hokkaido Toyako Summit.  We are 
united in our commitment to peace, which includes our concern for the
inviolable dignity of all people, the dire suffering of so many and 
the well-being of our shared Earth.
We carry forward important work begun in multi-religious meetings 
held just prior to the G8 summits in Moscow (2006) and Cologne 
(2007).  We have been convened by Religions for Peace-Japan in 
partnership with the World Conference of Religions for Peace.
We are united in our call to the G8 to take bold action to address
the threats that confront humanity, including the destruction of the 
environment and climate change, extreme global poverty and 
deteriorating food security, nuclear arms, terrorism and violent 
conflict.  Addressing these threats requires urgent action by the G8.
Action by all governments, civil society, private sector, 
religious communities and-in the final analysis-every member of the 
human family is required to advance the common good.  We urge the G8 
to respond in ways designed to engage these stakeholders in building 
our common future.
Religious communities have roles in building peace.  Before 
outlining these roles, we acknowledge with genuine sorrow that all 
religions have at times been misused in fomenting violence.*
We reject this misuse of religions and commit ourselves to 
engaging our communities for the common good.  Collectively, our 
religious communities are the world's largest social networks which 
reach into the furthest corners of the earth and include countless 
institutions dedicated to caring for people.  Religions share many 
moral traditions that can provide basic principles essential for just
and harmonious relations among persons and communities.  Moreover, 
religious traditions-each in its own way-cultivate spiritualities of 
compassion and love essential for genuine reconciliation and peace.  
Mobilizing these great social, moral and spiritual dimensions of the 
world's religions in service of the common good is essential for the 
well-being of the human family. We are united in the conviction that 
all religions obligate their followers to work for justice among all 
peoples, and to care for one another and our common home, the earth. 
We commit to doing so.
OUR COMMITMENT
As religious leaders, we are committed to the path of 
multi-religious cooperation for peace. Religious traditions-each in 
its own way-summons their followers to the path of multi-religious 
cooperation for the common good. This path:
- Leads to senior religious leaders from all faith traditions and 
billions of believers working together for a positive and holistic 
state of peace;
- Enjoins the world's believers to engage their moral heritages and 
spiritual traditions in taking individual responsibility for 
protecting our earth;
- Brings politicians, civil society and religious communities 
together to forge needed consensus on values that can serve as the 
basis of just and creative policies.
SHARED SECURITY
An overarching notion that we believe can help express the 
comprehensive character of our moral and religious concerns is 
"Shared Security."  Shared Security builds on the concept of Human 
Security by focusing on the fundamental inter-relatedness of all 
persons and the environment.
Shared Security includes a comprehensive respect for the 
interconnectedness and dignity of all life.  It is based upon our 
mutual interdependence and the most universal and fundamental fact 
that all humans live in one world. It recognizes that the well-being 
of one is related to the well-being of others and ultimately to the 
earth that we all share.  It calls us to recognize that past, present
and future are linked.  Together, we must acknowledge past failings, 
face present challenges and accept our responsibilities to future 
generations.
Shared Security is concerned with the full continuum of human 
relations-from relationships among individuals to the ways that 
peoples are organized in nations or international organizations. It 
respects state sovereignty, but also supports democratic and 
transparent cooperation among states and peoples.
It follows that the security of one actor of international 
relations must not be detrimental to others.  International actors 
who are responsible for global decision-making must act transparently
and be open to the contributions of all stakeholders, including 
religious communities which represent a major part of civil society. 
A similar concern for a just world order, respecting different 
national and religious traditions, was made at the Moscow World 
Summit of Religious Leaders (2006).
As religious leaders, we recognize that there is a foundational 
moral imperative for advancing Shared Security:  We are all 
responsible for one another's well-being.
CALLS TO ACTION
We call upon the G8 to include in their discussions and plans of 
action the following areas of concern:
1. The Destruction of the Environment and Climate Change
Japan, the host of this year's G8 Summit, possesses a spiritual 
term, mottainai, meaning "do not waste, use everything in a fashion 
commensurate with its true value."  This concept recognizes the 
mysterious "giftedness" of all existence, and urges that natural 
resources must be used appropriately, while simultaneously 
encouraging responsible and sustainable consumption. The concept also
provides a base for recognizing that it is unethical to burden future
generations with excessive pollution or other gross environmental 
imbalances.  Development must be environmentally sustainable.
We must also draw attention to the link between the health of the 
environment and war. In addition to killing people, disrupting the 
lives of entire societies and thwarting development, war destroys the
ecosystem.  Massive defense expenditures, a global total of US$ 1.34 
Trillion in 2007 according to the Stockholm International Peace 
Research Institute, both directly assaults the ecosystem and 
squanders monies that urgently need to be directed to sustainable 
development. It is a grave contradiction to advocate for a reduction 
of global warming gas emissions while simultaneously maintaining or 
even expanding military expenditures.
We urge the G8 Summit to:
- Commit to a reduction of total national defense and military 
expenditures and utilize the saved funds to establish an Earth Fund 
dedicated to environmental protection.
- Establish a new binding framework to follow up the Kyoto Protocols 
that limits global average temperature rise to avert catastrophic 
climate change.
- Provide leadership to expand energy efficiency and conservation 
efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emission rates.
- Advance policies and practices that increase forestation and other 
forms of carbon dioxide sequestration.
- Recognize that trading "global warming gas emission rights" has at 
best limited value, and could disproportionately penalize the least 
developed.
- Facilitate major investments in the development of new sources of 
energy and technology essential to sustainable development, 
specifically without jeopardizing food security.
- Implement the recommendations contained in the Kobe 3R Action Plan 
(Reduce, Reuse, Recycle).
2. Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
The massive scale of extreme poverty at a time of unprecedented 
wealth is a moral scandal.  Poverty is exacerbated by structural 
injustices in the global economy which must be addressed. At the 
mid-point of the Millennium Development Campaign, religious leaders 
gathered at the Cologne World Summit of Religious Leaders (2007). 
They recognized an urgent need to not only fulfill the pledges, but 
in some instances, to exceed the commitments made.  Meeting these 
challenges is even more urgent, not least due to the growing food 
crisis.  Here again, we call for the funds achieved from the 
reduction of defense budgets to be allocated in support of 
sustainable development and poverty reduction.
We request the G8 Summit to:
- Take leadership to ensure the achievement of the MDGs, including
delivery on the Gleneagles aid quantity and quality promises, 
particularly reaching the goal 0.7% of Gross National Income for 
Official Development Assistant.
- Provide urgently needed global leadership to address the growing 
crisis of food shortages, including needed emergency responses.
- Meet its pledges of increased resources to scale up the response to
HIV and AIDS, Malaria, and other infectious diseases, and to ensure 
universal access to HIV and AIDS prevention, treatment and care 
services by 2010.
- Dedicate resources to empower women and girls as key agents in 
overcoming poverty.
- Make the legal empowerment of the poor a key objective in its 
development assistance strategies.
- Fulfill its commitment to ensuring a development friendly outcome 
of the Doha Round of trade negotiations.
3. Nuclear Disarmament
Mindful that the 2008 G8 Summit is taking place in Japan, the only
country that has suffered the horror of a nuclear attack, we 
religious leaders stand in solidarity with our Japanese hosts to call
for the elimination of all nuclear weapons.  We believe that the 
attempt to militarily dominate the sea, space, neutral territories or
states creates obstacles on the way to nuclear and conventional 
disarmament.  We also believe that conventional disarmament and 
efforts to ban military technologies and initiatives that could 
provoke a new arms race should go hand in hand with efforts to 
advance nuclear disarmament.
We request the G8 Summit to:
- Pursue rigorous implementation of nuclear reduction and 
nonproliferation policies leading to the goal of total nuclear 
disarmament. As stipulated in article 6 of the Treaty on 
Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons (NPT), the five acknowledged 
nuclear-weapon states must act on their commitments to work toward 
eliminating existing nuclear weapons as rapidly as possible.  States 
with nuclear weapons that have not acknowledged them must acknowledge
their possession, make similar commitments to their elimination and 
enter into the NPT.
- Push for prompt ratifications and entry into force of the 
Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and commit to take no action leading 
toward the reintroduction of any form of nuclear weapons testing.
- Continue to demonstrate positive leadership for the implementation 
of UN Security Council Resolution 1540 and other global initiatives 
to control the transfer of nuclear materials and stop further 
proliferation.
4. Terrorism and Violent Conflict
Terrorism-the intentional killing of innocent people as a way of 
achieving a political objective-is never morally justified whether it
is perpetrated by individuals, groups or states.  Moreover, military 
responses to terrorism injure innocent persons, provide additional 
motivation for terrorist groups and endanger basic freedoms in the 
societies attempting to protect themselves from terrorism.
Violent military conflict-the attempt to settle serious disputes 
by military force-typically results in the loss of innocent lives, 
disruption of society, thwarting of development and destruction of 
the environment.
Every effort must be made to utilize non-violent means to thwart 
terrorism and resolve disputes to advance peace.
We call upon the G8 to:
- Provide global leadership designed to combat the victimization 
of groups based on culture or creed.
- Work to end occupation and establish just, honorable and 
comprehensive peace in all countries or territories which are 
occupied.
- Re-affirm and strengthen its commitment to standards of 
international law in its efforts to counteract terrorism and promote 
international security.
- Acknowledge and support the importance of multi-religious 
partnerships to help address the problems of terrorism and violent 
conflict.
- Work to limit the production and export of arms into areas of 
violent conflict.
- Promote a culture of peace by advancing non-violent conflict 
resolution and peace education.
CONCLUSION
The G8 has the responsibility to use boldness and wisdom to 
advance the common good in partnership with the religious communities
and all other stakeholders.
We - leaders of diverse religious communities - re-commit 
ourselves to working together and with other partners of good will to
address the threats that confront us all.  While we labor to meet the
challenges of our day, we are deeply mindful of religious traditions 
which have taught-each in its own way-compassion, forgiveness and 
reconciliation, and that these are essential for genuine peace.
We respectfully urge the G8 to recognize, facilitate and 
effectively support the importance of multi-religious cooperation, as
it takes needed steps to advance the common good.
*We recall and embrace as our own an historic multi-religious 
acknowledgement on the misuse of religion:
"As men and women of religions, we confess in humility and penitence 
that we have very often betrayed our religious ideals and our 
commitment to peace.  It is not religion that has failed the cause of
peace, but religious people.  This betrayal of religion can and must 
be corrected." (From the global multi-religious Declaration adopted 
at the Religions for Peace First World Assembly in Kyoto, Japan, 
1970.)

Pressekontakt:

Evangelische Kirche in Deutschland
Hans-Christof Vetter
Herrenhäuser Strasse 12
D-30419 Hannover
Telefon: 0511 - 2796 - 269
E-Mail: christof.vetter@ekd.de

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