Print

Print


Title: Lutherans Support Ban On Land Mines
ELCA NEWS SERVICE

August 20, 1997

LUTHERANS SUPPORT BAN ON LAND MINES
97-CA-44-MR

    PHILADELPHIA (ELCA) -- The Evangelical Lutheran Church in America will
join forces with others around the world calling for the elimination of
land mines, based on action taken at the fifth biennial Churchwide Assembly
being held here Aug. 14-20.  More than 800 voting members of the ELCA
elected to support an international ban on the use, production, stockpile
and sale, transfer or export of anti-personnel land mines.
    "The principle casualties of land mines are civilians, women going to
market, farmers in their fields and children playing," said Sandra G.
Gustavson, Athens, Ga.  "At least 100 million anti-personnel land mines
have been laid in more than 60 countries, killing or maiming someone,
somewhere, every twenty minutes."  Gustavson is an ELCA Church Council
member.
    The Rev. Theodore F. Schneider, bishop of the ELCA's Metropolitan
Washington, D.C. Synod, said "the concern is urgent because land mines
continue to maim after war is over."  Schneider presented 116,000
signatures on petitions against land mines to U.S. Senator Patrick J. Leahy
(D-Vt.) on May 15.
    ELCA members will ask the government of the United States to sign an
international treaty that bans anti-personnel land mines immediately and to
increase support for international and bilateral programs for humanitarian
mine clearance and mine victim assistance.
    "I was very excited to see that the assembly took such a positive,
immediate and complete action to encourage the president and the U.S.
Congress to really work for a global ban," said the Rev. Mark Brown,
assistant director for international affairs, Lutheran Office for
Governmental Affairs, Washington, D.C.
    The Rev. Howard Wennes, bishop for the ELCA's Grand Canyon Synod,
commended Women of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America -- the
women's organization of the ELCA -- for their leadership on this issue.
Lutheran women collected 67,000 signatures -- one for each of the quilts
Lutheran World Relief sent to Angola in 1995.  Lutheran World Relief works
on behalf of the ELCA and the Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod.
    Two days after the ELCA vote, President Bill Clinton announced that
U.S. officials will participate in the "Ottawa process" negotiations on a
treaty to ban anti-personnel land mines.  "Our work is still cut out for us
and for our many partners advocating for an immediate and complete
international ban," said Brown.
    "While the U.S. will participate in the Ottawa process, basic U.S.
policy regarding land mines has not changed.  The United States is still
likely to introduce a number of exceptions and delays into the process and
this would water-down what comes out of Ottawa.  So the advocacy of ELCA is
even more crucial between now and the December treaty signing in Ottawa,
Canada," said Brown.

For information contact:

Ann Hafften, Director (773) 380-2958 or [log in to unmask]
http://www.elca.org/co/news/current.html