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Retired general tells religious leaders child soldiers are new weapon By Doug Koop Catholic
News Service WINNIPEG (CNS) -- Child soldiers
have become the "new low-technology weapon" of today's wars,
said the retired Canadian general who led UN peacekeeping forces during
the Rwandan genocide. Retired Gen. Romeo Dallaire,
now a Canadian senator from Quebec, told more than 70 delegates and
130 observers at the opening session of the June 21-23 World Religions
Summit that child soldiers "can be very effective. There are more
than 300,000 of them at any one time involved in 30 conflicts." "This is not just a
crime against humanity," said Dallaire. "It is a sin."
He also told the gathering
at the University of Winnipeg that the old world order of the Cold War
has been replaced by a "new world disorder." He lamented the
short-term thinking that he said drives today's political decision-makers. "They are swimming in
the complexity and ambiguity of our times. They are thinking of tomorrow's
headlines, not of what will still be significant five years from now,"
he said. They need "the depth
that faith provides," he said, adding that the world is begging
for visionary, not reactive, leadership. Catholics worked alongside
spiritual leaders from all the major faith traditions as they gathered
in Winnipeg to craft a statement to influence political leaders at the
highest levels. "The suffering of the
poor is the starting point," said Alberto Quattrucci of the Community
of Sant'Egidio in Rome. "There is no struggle against poverty;
there is solidarity with the poor. "The Bible doesn't speak of poverty, but of the poor. They always have a name," he said. "To build a society starting with the poor is to build a society sustainable for everyone."
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