BISHOPS RELEASE STATEMENT ON FOSSIL FUEL NON-PROLIFERATION AND JUST TRANSITION

Fossil fuels statement

The Bishops’ Conference of Scotland (BCOS) have released a statement encouraging world leaders to agree to and establish a Fossil Fuel Non-Proliferation Treaty, committing all nations to a rapid and just transition away from fossil fuels. The statement, which is released to mark the COP29 climate summit taking place in Azerbaijain from 11th – 22nd November, calls on Scotland to play its role in realising the common good by participating in a swift transition away from fossil fuels to protect people and our planet, both now and in the future, from further global warming caused by fossil fuel extraction. Crucially, in recognising the workers and communities in Scotland who rely on fossil fuel industries for their livelihood, the statement emphasises that any such transition must have justice at its core and ensure that no one is left behind, particularly those currently employed in this sector who must be ensured secure work in the move towards renewables. The full text of the statement can be downloaded here.
 
Justice & Peace Scotland encourage supporters to share the statement widely, particularly with MPs and MSPs encouraging the UK and Scottish governments to commit to fossil fuel non-proliferation and to ensure that no worker is left behind in their plans to meet climate targets. To find out more about the global movement for fossil-fuel non-proliferation and how you can support it, visit: www.fossilfueltreaty.org.

Newsletter September 2024Newsletter September - November 2024

Here's the first of our new newsletters from Justice and Peace Scotland, download now! See what we have been doing, and events to come this year...

 

 

 

 

 

Archbishop Nolan Visits Glasgow Mosque Alongside Faith Leaders

Archbishop Nolan Visits Glasgow Mosque Alongside Faith Leaders

Archbishop Nolan, President of Justice & Peace Scotland, recently visited Glasgow Central Mosque to meet with other Christian and Muslim leaders in a show of unity and solidarity amidst the recent violence and hatred that unfolded in the UK. Read the full story in the Scottish Association of Mosques press release.

Justice and Peace Scotland - If you want peace, work for justice


Justice and Peace Scotland advocates, campaigns, and facilitates action in the areas of peacebuilding, non-violence, social justice, care for creation, and human rights. We support Scotland’s Catholic community to live out the values of the gospel by responding to situations of injustice at local, national, and international levels. All our work is guided by Catholic Social Teaching and its associated principles such as upholding human dignity, solidarity, striving for the common good, and the preferential option for the poor and vulnerable.

Contact us for advice or support with any justice and peace activity in your parish, diocese, or school or to learn more about what we do, how you can get involved, and to find out more about our actions and campaigns. Justice and Peace Scotland can facilitate talks and workshops on a range of justice and peace topics for parish and community groups, schools, youth groups, or student societies.

Stay informed about events and campaigns by following us on social media.

@justiceandpeacescotland

@jandpscotland
Receive news and updates by joining our mailing list. Your details will not be used for any other purpose.

From Glasgow to Gaza: A Cry For Peace in The Holy Land – A declaration to mark the visit of Fr Gabriel Romanelli to Scotland

From Glasgow to Gaza: A Cry For Peace in The Holy Land – A Declaration to Mark the visit of Fr Gabriel Romanelli to Scotland

Archbishop William Nolan, Archbishop of Glasgow, and Rev. Sally-Foster Fulton, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, have signed a declaration prepared by Justice & Peace Scotland, SCIAF, and the Church of Scotland to mark the occasion of Fr Gabriel Romanelli’s visit to Glasgow. Fr Gabriel is the parish priest of the only Catholic church in Gaza, the parish of the Holy Family, and he visited Scotland on Friday April 26th to share his testimony and wishes for peace amidst the ongoing violence in The Holy Land.

On the occasion of Fr Gabriel Romanelli’s visit to Glasgow on 26th April 2024, we, the undersigned, express our solidarity with the people of the Holy Family Parish in Gaza, the Christian community of the Holy Land and people of all faiths and none across the region tormented by war.

In recent months, millions of innocent people have suffered the consequences of violence and war. Families and communities have been devastated. Many have lost hope for a peaceful future. Men, women and children have been robbed of their innate human dignity and their right to survive and thrive. Our cry is “Enough is enough”.

  • We stand shoulder to shoulder with our brothers and sisters in Christ in Gaza and across the Holy Land. May they feel our solidarity and Jesus’ loving embrace.
  • We stand in solidarity with all the sons and daughters of Abraham, the peoples of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim faiths in the Holy Land, that all may know deep peace and reconciliation in their lifetimes.
  • We stand in support of agencies and individuals who are serving those suffering at their time of greatest need. May they be rewarded for their courage and compassion.
  • We stand united with all people of good will who are campaigning for an end to this violence. May we never lose hope and may our resolve not falter.
  • We stand together as disciples of Jesus Christ, who, in the very lands that are lacerated by hostility and violence today, called on his followers to be peacemakers. In the name of God, we call for an end to war, closure of heart and hatred to be replaced with dialogue, reconciliation, and peace.

Today we cry out to all people in positions of power to end this senseless violence. We pray to Almighty God that their hearts may be turned towards compassion, and that they may have the courage and wisdom to pursue the path of justice and peace for all who call the Holy Land home.

Most Rev. Archbishop William Nolan
+
Archbishop of Glasgow

Right Rev. Sally Foster-Fulton

Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland

Justice & Peace Scotland Statement on the passage of the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) bill – April 24th 2024

Statement on the passing of the Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigration) Bill, April 2024

The Safety of Rwanda bill is cruel and immoral. Justice & Peace Scotland firmly oppose its approach. Read our statement in full below and share to encourage others to continue to advocate for more humane approaches to asylum and immigration.

Justice & Peace Scotland are dismayed at the passing of the Safety of Rwanda Bill. This marks a terrible day for the upholding of international law, respect for human rights, and the progression of UK politics. Refugees and all who come to our shores are made in the image and likeness of God and should be treated with the dignity they deserve, not cruelty and inhumanity.

The Rwanda scheme would enable the Government to forcibly expel people seeking asylum - including children, torture survivors, and victims of war – putting them at grave risk of further harm and human rights abuses. People will be removed to a country they have no connection to, despite the ruling of our own country's Supreme Court that it is unsafe for them.

It is a human right to seek asylum and those who come to the decision to leave their homes behind do not make the choice lightly. Human beings seeking asylum or migrating for a better life do so because of problems that other human beings create: they move because of violence, war, torture, oppression, persecution, political instability, poverty, hunger, and ultimately because they have no alternative. The passing of this morally questionable act, that serves to only further traumatise some of the most vulnerable members of society, betrays who we are as a nation that has historically provided refuge to those in need, and undermines long-standing UK values of hospitality, welcome, friendship, and compassion.

The Rwanda scheme evidences a blatant disregard for international law as it violates the UK’s international legal obligations as a state party to the Refugee Convention. Protecting refugees requires cooperation and responsibility sharing from all countries, not just those adjacent to crisis zones, as clearly defined in the Convention and its associated legal instruments. The UK government, instead of continuing to sow seeds of division and hostility, should be pursuing practical measures to address irregular flows of refugees and migrants, based on international cooperation and respect for international human rights law.

In place of this inhumane and cruel policy, we echo calls for a new plan for supporting refugees and an approach to asylum in the UK that is fair, kind, and gets the system working again for everyone. Specifically, we call for hospitable alternatives to the Rwanda plan that will safeguard refugees and their rights such as provision of a humanitarian visa scheme, allowing people to travel easily and access protection quickly; the expansion and better management of country resettlement schemes, such as those implemented for Syrians and Ukrainians; and the opportunity for those in need to apply for asylum before arriving in the UK, all of which would eliminate the need for people to travel here via irregular means.

Lockdown In A Refugee Camp?

Categories: BLOG | Published: 17/04/2020 | Views: 389

As COVID 19 spreads round the globe, Justice & Peace Scotland vice chair Marian Pallister reflects on the plight of refugees and victims of conflict.



I have spent lockdown at home in Argyll. Will the Wood delivered a load of logs, the farm shop has kept me supplied with vegetables, both of which I was able to pay for on line, and my only foray to the Co-op was civilised if a little lacking in results. I have even been able to join Justice and Peace Scotland standing committee meetings by video conferencing. I can, if I’m sensible, stay well.
 
And in other people’s lives?
 
If you are a regular reader of Justice and Peace Scotland blogs, you will know that as an organisation, we have been closely involved with the young refugees in northern France. They have relatives in the UK but are held in a limbo that sees them struggle to survive in makeshift camps periodically destroyed by the French authorities. They are fed, clothed, and provided with sleeping bags and other necessities by volunteers – all of which can disappear in a few violently destructive minutes when police swoop. Now these youngsters are pushed even further from their goal to reunite with whatever relatives are still living after the conflicts they have escaped. The UK government has maintained a hostile approach to their situation.
 
The French COVID19 lockdown means a round up and dispersal to accommodation centres of those living rough around Calais and neighbouring ports.
 
In Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh, the plight of the Rohingya refugees is a disaster waiting to happen. You’ll recall that Justice and Peace Scotland took SCIAF’s photographic exhibition of images taken in the camp to parishes across Scotland. I went with those images around my own diocese of Argyll and the Isles and shared the tears of those who engaged with the refugees’ plight.
 
Now, unable to go back home or to move on to a future settled life, the Rohingya, who escaped massacre in Myanmar, face COVID19, spreading across Asia and threatening the most vulnerable.
 
Most vulnerable? The undernourished, those with underlying health conditions, the poor living in overcrowded conditions. Cox’s Bazar to a T.
 
There are Syrian refugees in camps around the Mediterranean. In Turkey, they are ostracised as a burden on a failing state unable to care for its own virus-struck citizens. As country after country falls foul of COVID19, refugees (some welcomed, some in little better than concentration camps) are at the bottom of the pile when it comes to care, and at the front of the queue in terms of contracting the virus.
Just imagine the skeletal infants in Yemen being exposed to – after the bombs and the bullets and the starvation – the coronavirus.
 
Countries in the global South – Kenya, Tanzania, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe, South Africa, DR Congo – all now have COVID19 cases. Some of those countries shelter refugees. Not one has the medical infrastructure to efficiently combat the virus. Did we?
 
UNHCR and the world’s faith groups may offer the only care. This virus has made us hope for a better world when it has wrought its damage. Please God we will have a more humane and welcoming attitude to the world’s weakest. I pray for justice, and for peace.
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share

Return to previous page
https://www.justiceandpeacescotland.org.uk/Home/ctl/details/itemid/3079/mid/531

Download the 'Prayer For Our Earth' Service booklet here.   

Now that COP26 is over, we hope you will think about using this booklet in schools, groups and parishes to pray for our collective ecological conversion, that we will no longer see ourselves as "consumers" - here to exploit the earth's resources, but as stewards of God's creation with the aim of passing on a healthy planet to the next generation.

 

Last updated: 30 October 2024

Important Resources


Image: Scottish Bishops Statement on Nicaragua

The Scottish Bishops' Conference have released a statement urging a 'sincere search for peace' following the recent imprisonment and expulsion of clergy and citizens by the government in Nicaragua.  



Image: Holy Land Coordination Group Statement

Bishops, including Archbishop Nolan, from across Europe and North America who make up the Holy Land Coordination Group  have released this statement following their recent visit to Jordan to support the Christian population there. image Mazur/cbcew.org.uk.



Image: Justice & Peace Sunday 2023 - video

Archbishop Nolan, President of Justice & Peace Scotland, delivers his yearly message to be read at all services in Scotland across the weekend of 7th/8th January 2023, the Feast of the Epiphany.  



Image: The Letter - Premiere

From 5.30pm on Tuesday 4th October, The Feast of St Francis, The Letter - A Message From Our Earth will be available to watch here.



Image: Archbishop Nolan's message at the close of Challenge Poverty Week

Archbishop Nolan has called for the UK Government to end the delay that is causing so many people so much anxiety and stress, and give an assurance that benefits will go up in line with inflation.