7 AUG 98 . LC100
Lambeth Conference adopts tough stand on international debt
by Nan Cobbey
Lambeth Conference Communications
A Lambeth Conference resolution on international debt and economic justice approved Thursday (August 6) demands action by governments and banks, but also by churches.
Bishop Peter Selby of Worcester (England) told the world's 740 Anglican bishops the goal had been to provide "the kind of resolution that could be taken home by all members of this conference" no matter what country or what national political positions had been taken on debt.
The tough stand on debt will also have an impact for the churches, Bishop Seby warned. "We thought it critical," he said, "to put a resolution before you that was not a moral free lunch . . . not an exhortation to other people to do something, but that affected our lives as churches and as a Communion."
The resolution asks the bishops to challenge their dioceses to set aside funds from their own church budgets to help fund international development programs and to cooperate with people of other faiths in advocacy programs. The bishops are also asked to commit themselves to supporting a series of requests to both creditor and debtor nation governments, including establishment of a Mediation Council which would include developing nations.
The "vast expansion" in the power and quantity of money and the "huge increases" in borrowing, are "damaging," both materially and spiritually, the resolution states.
It calls debt relief, including cancellation of unpayable debts, "not sufficient," and recommends that negotiations be speeded up, saying "children are dying, societies unraveling under the burden."
Amendment sharpens resolution
An addition to the resolution from Bishop Alfred Reid of Montego Bay (Jamaica) strengthened the already sharp positions by providing "for sanctions against private sector persons . . . who act corruptly."
"It is important to condemn the corrupt and unjust tyranny of power by transnational corporations and local private sector elites," Bishop Reid said. Their powers "exceed the powers of elected governments, both North and South. It is an unholy alliance between the geopolitical designs of the North and international private capital that creates poverty in the South and makes third world debt unsustainable."
Bishop Keith Sutton of Lichfield Diocese (England) encouraged the conference to pay attention to the lesson learned last May when "tens of thousands of people descended on Birmingham" [England] to deliver a message to the leaders of the G8 nations meeting there. Their "summit" had originally refused to put international debt on the agenda, said Bishop Sutton. The crowds, "the united ecumenical witness of churches in the UK and beyond," changed their minds, he said.
"This is a vital ecumenical action which we can all take in our own countries," said Bishop Sutton. "What better way of celebrating the third millennium of Our Lord."
(For more detail on the report of the Lambeth discussions on international debt, see Conference Press Release #87)
On August 5, the conference meeting in plenary session approved 11 "agreed" resolutions proposed by Section One (Called to Full Humanity). In these the Lambeth Conference: