http://www.granma.cu/ingles/2006/febrero/mar21/09relig.html

 
Religious leader comments on historical changes underway in Latin America



PORTO ALEGRE (Brazil), February 20-Samuel Kobia, secretary general of the World 
Council of Churches (WCC), commented on the political changes taking place in 
Latin America with the election of new governments in Bolivia and Chile. 

He qualified as historical advances the election of Evo Morales as the first 
indigenous president of Bolivia, and that of Michelle Bachelet as the first 
woman to be elected president of Chile.

Kobia noted that the WCC's 9th General Assembly, underway in this Brazilian 
city, is occurring soon after those important events, which in his opinion is 
an example of significant changes in the region in the last two years. 

In addressing the issue of justice in the world, the religious leader said that 
the gift of life has been abused, and that human greed and thirst for power 
have created structures that force people to live in poverty.

He explained that now, where there is much more food for all, some 852 million 
people on the planet are going hungry, while every day 25,000 people die of 
starvation. He added that that horror is not something alien to Latin America, 
where globalization is making borders smaller, but is also exacerbating 
differences in power and wealth. 

According to Kobia, there are reasons for suspecting that something is going 
wrong in the world if in the 21st century, the fortunes of the three richest 
people in the world amount to more than the total gross domestic product of the 
48 least-developed countries.

Political arguments and economic rationalization cannot counteract the basic 
immorality of a world with so much inequality, he affirmed. 

The WCC's 9th General Assembly, which began on February 14, brings together 
more than 4,000 people from 348 Protestant, Orthodox and Anglican churches, 
which in turn represent more than 560 million believers in more than 100 
countries. 

At that religious organization's most important event, there is an observer 
delegation from the Vatican, as well as Nobel laureates, including Anglican 
Archbishop Desmond Tutu of South Africa; Adolfo Pérez Esquivel of Argentina; 
and Rigoberta Menchú of Guatemala. (AIN


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