Letter from National Conferences of Catholic
Bishops
to the Leaders of the G8 Nations
June 17, 2008
Hon. Yasuo Fukuda
Prime Minister, Japan |
Hon.
Silvio Berlusconi
President
of the Council of Ministers, Italy |
Hon. Stephen Joseph Harper
Prime Minister, Canada |
Hon. Dmitry Anatolyevich Medvedev
President, Russian Federation |
Hon. Nicolas Sarkozy
President, French Republic |
Hon. Gordon Brown
Prime Minister, United Kingdom |
Hon. Angela Merkel
Chancellor, Federal Republic of Germany |
Hon. George W. Bush
President, United States of America |
Dear Leaders of the Group of 8 Countries:
As the G8 Summit in Japan approaches, we write on behalf of the
Catholic bishops’ conferences to the leaders of our respective
nations to urge you to deepen your commitments and actions to reduce
global poverty and address global climate change.
As our Holy Father, Pope Benedict XVI said at his visit to the
United Nations in April: “[Q]uestions of security, development
goals, reduction of local and global inequalities, protection of
the environment, of resources and of the climate, require all international
leaders to act jointly and to show a readiness to work in good
faith, respecting the law, and promoting solidarity with the weakest
regions of the planet. I am thinking especially of those countries
in Africa and other parts of the world which remain on the margins
of authentic integral development, and are therefore at risk of
experiencing only the negative effects of globalization.”
Our religious and moral commitment to protect human life and promote
human dignity moves us to be particularly concerned for the poorest
and most vulnerable members of the human family, especially those
in developing countries. The experience of the Catholic Church
in serving the needs of poor communities leads us to applaud the
Summit’s focus on development and Africa.
It is critically important that you reaffirm and build upon the
substantial commitments made in Gleneagles in 2005 and in Heiligendamm
in 2007. In 2005 the world’s richest countries promised to
spend an additional $50 billion per year on development assistance
by 2010, with half that amount going to Africa. This commitment
must be met and additional commitments should be made in the areas
of health care, education and humanitarian aid. The September 2008
UN summit on the Millennium Development Goals will offer a crucial
opportunity to mobilize more broadly the international community.
The global food crisis, which disproportionately devastates poor
communities, and the terrible toll of HIV-AIDS, malaria and other
diseases, make concerted action even more urgent. We ask you to
consider concrete proposals that mitigate the impact of the world
food crisis on poor communities, increase health and education
spending, and move towards just world trade policies that respect
the dignity of the human person in their working life. To ensure
long-term success of these measures, the poor must be empowered
to be drivers of their own development. Promoting their self-help
capacities and their participation in economic, social, political
and cultural processes are essential prerequisites for development.
Once again the agenda of your Summit includes global climate change,
an issue of particular concern to people of faith based on our
commitment to protect God’s creation. As Catholic bishops,
we have a special concern for the impact of climate change on the
poor. The poor, who have contributed least to the
human activities that aggravate global climate change, are likely
to experience a disproportionate share of its harmful effects,
including potential conflicts, escalating energy costs, and health
problems. This is true in our own countries as well as in Africa
and elsewhere in the developing world. The costs of initiatives
to prevent and adapt to the harmful consequences of climate change
should be borne more by richer persons and nations who have benefited
most from the emissions that have fueled development and should
not unduly burden the poor. Specific mechanisms should be created
to help poor persons and nations adapt to the effects of global
climate change and adopt appropriate technologies that will enhance
their development in ways that do not contribute to global climate
change.
The G8 Summit will explore many issues of critical importance to
human life and dignity. We pray that your meeting will be blessed
by a spirit of collaboration that enables you to advance the global
common good by taking concrete measures to reduce poverty and address
climate change.
Sincerely yours,
Most Rev. Peter Takeo Okada
Archbishop of Tōkyō
President, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Japan
Most Rev. Vernon James Weisgerber
Archbishop of Winnipeg
President, Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops
His Eminence André Vingt-Trois
Archbishop of Paris
President of the Bishops’ Conference of France (Conférence
des évêques de France)
Most Rev. Robert Zollitsch
Archbishop of Freiburg
President of the German Bishops’ Conference (Deutsche Bischofskonferenz)
His Eminence Angelo Cardinal Bagnasco
Archbishop of Genoa
President, Bishops’ Conference of Italy
Most Rev. Joseph Werth
Bishop of the Diocese of the Transfiguration of the Lord in Novosibirsk
President, Conference of Catholic Bishops of the Russian Federation
His Eminence Keith Patrick Cardinal O’Brien
Archbishop of Edinburgh and St Andrews
President, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Scotland
His Eminence Cormac Cardinal Murphy-O'Connor
Archbishop of Westminster
President, Catholic Bishops’ Conference of England and Wales
His Eminence Francis Cardinal George
Archbishop of Chicago
President, United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
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