Here is another, slightly different and updated alert from the news service
of the Presbyterian Church USA
Maynard Pittendreigh
-----Original Message-----
From: PCUSA NEWS [mailto:PCUSA.NEWS@...]
Sent: Tuesday, June 14, 2005 3:36 PM
To: PCUSANEWS@...
Subject: [PCUSANEWS] Mission trips to Haiti discouraged
Note #8764 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:
05310
June 13, 2005
Mission trips to Haiti discouraged
WMD says escalating violence endangers visitors, church partners
by Alexa Smith
LOUISVILLE The Worldwide Ministries Division of the Presbyterian Church
(U.S.A.) is urging congregations and presbyteries to cancel planned mission
trips to Haiti.
The PC(USA) also is evacuating missionaries from volatile areas until peace
is restored.
Human-rights groups say more than 600 people have been killed in Haiti
since October. The escalating unrest is attributed to multiple causes,
including drug trafficking and political unrest. Armed supporters and
opponents of ousted President Jean Bertrand Aristide are forming gangs and
battling in the slums of Haiti's major cities.
Middle-class Haitians often are victims of the killings and abductions.
"Our church partner in Haiti is getting nervous about groups and about
mission personnel, so, until further notice, we're telling groups not to
go," said Maria Arroyo, the denomination's liaison to the Episcopal Diocese
of Haiti.
Arroyo said foreign nationals reportedly are being targeted for kidnapping.
A massive drought that led to crop failures last year is aggravating an
economy already decimated by rampant unemployment. Haiti is the hemisphere's
poorest nation.
Arroyo said countless Presbyterians are linked to mission projects in
Haiti, most notably the St. Croix Hospital in Leogane, west of Port au
Prince; an agricultural school in Cap Haitian in the north; and a clinic and
churches on the island of La Gonave, near Port au Prince.
Three presbyteries Greater Atlanta, Coastal Carolina and Peaks have formal
partnerships with church groups in Haiti.
"We just don't know how many congregations have ongoing ministries there,
but we know a large number do," said the Rev. Jo Ella Holman, who has been
trying for two years to establish a network of churches and presbyteries
working in Haiti.
Holman said the PC(USA) is as concerned about the Haitian church as about
its own members and missionaries.
"We're asking: In what ways does our presence put our partners at risk?"
she said. "In some situations, an international presence deters violence and
decreases risk; in others, it actually increases the risk. And we think this
is one of the latter (situations)."
An interim government is operating in Haiti, bolstered by a 7,400-member
United Nations peacekeeping force trying to maintain order as the country
prepares for elections in October and November.
"As Haiti approaches its national elections, the country has experienced an
upsurge in violence," said Bill Simmons, coordinator of WMD's security team.
"WMD cannot encourage or facilitate travel to Haiti by any volunteer mission
group. When it is determined that the situation has stabilized, WMD will
revisit this decision."
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