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Water For Life: Statement of the World Council of Churches, adopted
at the Ninth General Assembly, Porto Alegre, Brazil: 14-23 February
2006
1. Water is a symbol of life.
The Bible affirms water as the cradle of life, an expression of God’s
grace in perpetuity for the whole of creation (Gen 2:5ff). It is a
basic condition for all life on Earth (Gen 1:2ff.) and is to be preserved
and shared for the benefit of all creatures and the wider creation.
Water is the source of health and well-being and requires responsible
action from us human beings, as partners and priests of Creation (Rom
8:19 ff., Rev 22). As churches, we are called to participate in the
mission of God to bring about a new creation where life in abundance
is assured to all (John 10:10; Amos 5:24). It is therefore right to
speak out and to act when the life-giving water is pervasively and
systematically under threat.
2. Access to freshwater supplies is becoming an urgent matter
across the planet.
The survival of 1.2 billion people is currently in jeopardy due
to lack of adequate water and sanitation. Unequal access to water
causes conflicts between and among people, communities, regions
and nations. Biodiversity is also threatened by the depletion and
pollution of fresh water resources or through impacts of large dams,
large scale mining and hot cultures (irrigation) whose construction
often involves the forced displacement of people and disruption
of the ecosystem. The integrity and balance of the ecosystem is
crucial for the access to water. Forests build an indispensable
part in the ecosystem of water and must be protected. The crisis
is aggravated by climate change and further deepened by strong economic
interests. Water is increasingly treated as a commercial good, subject
to market conditions.
3. Scarcity of water is also a growing source of conflict.
Agreements concerning international watercourses and river basins
need to be more concrete, setting out measures to enforce treaties
made and incorporating detailed conflict resolution mechanisms in
case disputes erupt.
4. Christians Bear Witness
Both locally and internationally there are positive and creative
responses to raise the profile of Christian witness to water issues.
5. Ecumenical Water Action
Churches in Brazil and in Switzerland, for instance, have made a
Joint Ecumenical Declaration on Water as a Human Right and a Common
Public Good – by itself an excellent example for ecumenical
co-operation. The Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew states that water
can never be regarded or treated as private property or become the
means and end of individual interest. He underlines that indifference
towards the vitality of water constitutes both a blasphemy to God
the Creator and a crime against humanity. Churches in various countries
and their specialised ministries have joined together in the Ecumenical
Water Network in working for the provision of freshwater and adequate
sanitation and advocating for the right to water. Access to water
is indeed a basic human right. The United Nations has called for
an International Decade for Action, Water for Life, 2005 to 2015.
6. Wider Cooperation is Essential
It is essential for churches and Christian agencies to work together
and to seek co-operation with other partners, including other faith
traditions and NGOs, and particularly those organizations that work
with vulnerable and marginalized populations who hold similar ethical
convictions. It is necessary to engage in debate and action on water
policies, including dialogue with governments and multilateral or
corporate institutions. This is essential to promote the significance
of the right to water and to point to alternative ways of living,
which are more respectful of ecological processes and more sustainable
in the longer term.
PROPOSALS
That the 9th Assembly of the World Council of Churches meeting
in Porto Alegre, Brasil 14-23 February 2006:
| a) |
adopts the statement on Water for Life and calls
on the churches and ecumenical partners to work together with
the aim to: |
| b) |
promote awareness of and take all necessary measures for preservation
and protection of water resources against over-consumption and
pollution as an integral part of the right to life; |
| c) |
undertake advocacy efforts for development of legal instruments
and mechanisms that guarantee the implementation of the right
to water as a fundamental human right at the local, national,
regional and international levels; |
| d) |
foster co-operation of churches and ecumenical partners on
water concerns through participation in the Ecumenical Water
Network; |
| e) |
support community based initiatives whose objectives are to
enable local people to exercise responsible control, manage
and regulate water resources and prevent the exploitation for
commercial purposes; |
| f) |
urge governments and international aid agencies to give priority
to and allocate adequate funds and other resources for programmes
designed to provide access to and make water available to local
communities and also promote development of proper sanitation
systems and projects, taking into account the needs of people
with disabilities to have access to this clean water and sanitation
service; |
| g) |
monitor disputes and agreements related to water resources
and river basins to ensure that such agreements contain detailed,
concrete and unambiguous provisions for conflict resolution; |
| h) |
contribute to the International Decade for Action, Water for
Life, 2005 – 2015, by exploring and highlighting the ethical
and spiritual dimension of water crisis. |
Approved February 2006.
This statement is also posted at the World Council of Churches
website
http://www.wcc-assembly.info/en/theme-issues/assembly-documents/plenary-presentations/committee-reports
/public-issues-committee/water-for-life-statement.html
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