April 14, 2003
CHICAGO - U.S. and Korean churches are building
on their longstanding relationship to launch a new effort to address
the burgeoning political and humanitarian crisis on the Korean peninsula,
related to the recent breakdown in dialogue between the United States
and North Korea and the escalation in war rhetoric.
Friday (April 11) in Chicago, the top executives
of the National Council of Churches (NCC) and Church World Service
(CWS) convened an urgent meeting with representatives of member
churches to outline a common advocacy strategy on U.S. Korea policy.
They began to lay plans for a consultation in
Washington, D.C., with North and South Korean church leaders, proposed
for June 2003, and for a U.S. ecumenical delegation visit to North
and South Korea later this year. And they resolved to continue humanitarian
assistance to the millions of North Koreans whose survival depends
on external food aid.
Our partners in Korea have urged us to work with
them to find ways to lower tensions and to stave off the potential
of a greater humanitarian crisis, said the Rev. John L. McCullough,
Executive Director of Church World Service, New York City, and a
United Methodist. We believe that there is an imperative for a diplomatic
resolution to these issues, he said, expressing CWS opposition to
Washingtons apparent new pre-emptive strike policy.
Dr. Bob Edgar, General Secretary of the National
Council of Churches, New York City, also a United Methodist, encouraged
consultation participants to also be thinking about how our response
to the pending crisis on the Korean Peninsula relates to an overall
U.S. foreign policy. My fear is that were going to find ourselves
in a very violent century if we dont find a way to live as brothers
and sisters with one another.
In Fridays consultation, participants agreed
on the need to address the United States confrontational policy
toward North Korea and refusal to engage in direct talks with North
Korea. The current political impasse must be resolved by peaceful
means and not military means, and the United States should not use
food as a weapon, they agreed.
The growing tensions between the U.S. and North
Korea (DPRK) have severely disrupted the political climate conducive
to continued improvement in inter-Korean talks and the flow of urgently
needed humanitarian food aid, the Rev. McCullough said. Humanitarian
workers in the field say that halting humanitarian aid to North
Korea will not break this political stalemate; rather, it will leave
millions of people in a situation where they could easily slip back
into a state of crisis.
According to the World Food Program, North Korea
will need about two million metric tons of grain - a subsistence
ration of about half a pound of grain per adult per day - from external
sources, purchased or donated, in 2003. In February, U.S. Secretary
of State Colin Powell announced an initial U.S. contribution of
40,000 tons of commodities, adding that a further 60,000 tons would
be made available if improvements in the World Food Programs ability
to access the needy and monitor distributions are allowed.
The situation this year is certainly grave given
that the international community will be able to bring in at most
250,000 metric tons, leaving the country short by 1.75 million metric
tons, said Victor W.C. Hsu, Senior Advisor to the CWS Executive
Director, New York City, and a member of the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.). North Korea does not have at its disposal the foreign
currency to buy and import the deficit amount, he said.
Church World Service, the global humanitarian
agency of the NCCs 36 member denominations, has provided $4,250,029
in food aid to North Korea since the outbreak of the food crisis
in 1996, and has played a leadership role in InterAction in encouraging
humanitarian assistance to the famine-stricken DPRK.
In March 2003, CWS sent 660 metric tons (1.5
million pounds) of fortified wheat flour to North Korea in response
to a direct appeal from the World Food Program. Mr. Hsu spent April
1-5 in North Korea monitoring delivery of the flour. He visited
seven of the 20 beneficiary institutions, which serve two especially
vulnerable groups: children under age seven and pregnant and nursing
mothers.
The Koreans kept asking me, When is the next
shipment? Mr. Hsu said. They are in need of all sorts of aid, whether
its medicine or food. The need is massive.
Regular visits by U.S. denominational and ecumenical
leaders to the DPRK since 1985 and return visits by church leaders
from both North and South Korea provide an indication of their significant
ecumenical commitment to advocacy for peace and justice on the Korean
peninsula and their pioneering role in opening ecumenical and political
relationships with North Korea.
The consultation in Washington, D.C., among church
leaders from the United States, North and South Korea - proposed
for June 16-20,2003 - would be the first since 1997 and would include
advocacy with U.S. policy makers. The primary Korean partners would
be the National Council of Churches of Korea (South Korea), the
Korean Christians Federation (North Korea) and the Korean Church
Women United.
The proposed CWS/NCC ecumenical delegation visit
to North and South Korea later in 2003 would continue the dialogue
and common advocacy and would include delivery of humanitarian assistance
to North Korea.
The 17 participants in the April 11 planning
meeting included representatives of several denominations active
on Korea issues, including the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), United
Methodist Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, Episcopal
Church, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), American Baptist
Churches in the U.S.A., and Church of the Brethren. A program officer
for International Orthodox Christian Charities, Inc., also attended.
National Council of Churches News Service
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