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Friends don't let their friends execute their citizens!

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2004

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Indonesia must act now to end violence, Alliance says
December 11 2001

Enthusiasm abounds in Ghana's churches, Alliance team finds
November 30 2001

Statement on September 11 and its aftermath
October 15 2001

United churches in their relationship to the Lutheran World Federation and the World Alliance of Reformed Churches
October 14 2001

USA - Warc sends message of condolence
September 16 2001

Reformed-Roman Catholic dialogue, Cape Town
August 28 2001

"These decisions and practices have negative consequences"
August 2 2001

A world view
July 28 2001

"Fullness of life" to be at centre of next Reformed world gathering
July 28 2001

International alliance of Reformed churches comes to Holland
July 28 2001

"Justice has not been done" if people can't control their lives, Warc told
July 27 2001

In the face of global injustice, "this is the time for action" by churches
July 27 2001

Find spiritual strength or risk losing relevance, churches warned
July 27 2001
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"Don't make promises you can't keep" - Song
July 27 2001

CS Song calls for a new deal between the poor and the poor in spirit
July 26 2001

We do not meet alone
July 26 2001

Back in the USA
July 18 2001

South Africa - a painful church split is being healed
July 3 2001

Friends don't let their friends execute their citizens!
June 11 2001

El Salvador - the task of reconstruction
June 6 2001

Reformed churches witness in Latin America
June 6 2001

The right to be free from hunger - and much more
April 20 2001

First Reformed dialogue with the Seventh-day Adventists
April 7 2001

OAIC-Reformed dialogue
March 7 2001

Indulgences: Reformed, Lutherans, Roman Catholics confer
February 10 2001

Oriental Orthodox dialogue ends
January 28 2001

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June 11 2001

Today Timothy McVeigh will be killed by the US government, acting in the name of the American people.

On this day, the World Alliance of Reformed Churches reaffirms its unconditional opposition to the death penalty.

It makes no sense to kill people who kill people to show that killing people is wrong: there is a contradiction between what we say and what we do.

McVeigh is scheduled to die by lethal injection at the federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, for his role in the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P Murrah federal building in Oklahoma City, which killed 168 people, including 19 children. His death will end a 30-year de facto moratorium on federal executions in the USA.

Twelve years ago, our 22nd general council (Seoul, 1989) called for the universal abolition of the death penalty. This stance is shared by many of our member churches.

"Our conviction," the Seoul council said, "is grounded in our theological understanding of the justice of God, which demands that the inherent worth of every human life be accorded dignity, not contingent on the moral rectitude of human beings."

"Because human beings are created in the image of God and because of Jesus' life, death and resurrection, we affirm that each human life is of value."

We agree with Amnesty International that, while the worst abuses of capital punishment may be removed by legislation, the punishment itself can never be freed of its cruelty or its potential for irreversible error. The death penalty deliberately imitates what it seeks to condemn: the deliberate taking of human life. It offers no constructive contribution to addressing violent crime and those victimized by it.

The Alliance is active in speaking against capital punishment. The 57th session of the UN Commission on Human Rights, which took place in Geneva in March and April this year, was addressed on our behalf by Rev. Melodee Smith of the United Church of Christ, a witness of US executions and a victims' rights advocate as well as an attorney for people on death row.

"I come from a very proud country," Smith told the commission. "Although I learned from childhood that killing is wrong and that countries which kill their own citizens are not to be respected for this injustice... even now I find it hard to challenge my own government, like many of the USA's friends here in this room who do not want to embarrass colleagues by objecting or intervening in any way other than polite admonition."

But she drew courage from a powerful US campaign against drinking and driving, which used the slogan, "Friends don't let their friends drive drunk!". She suggested that the commission adopt a similar ethic of concern for states that retain the death penalty: "Friends don't let their friends execute their citizens!"

The World Alliance of Reformed Churches supports all moves towards a moratorium on capital punishment as a step on the way to the universal abolition of the death penalty.

 

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