Christian Peacemaker Teams 29 November 2005
CPT Hebron contacted EI about the four members of the Christian Peacemaker Teams who were abducted in Iraq last Saturday. The four men are two CPTers and two delegates, one American, one British, and two Canadian. One, a CPT staff member, was to have come to work with CPT Hebron after his time in Iraq. Another worked in Palestine last year, and was active in demonstrating against Israel’s West Bank Barrier in Jayyous. The four men were en route to a meeting with members of the Islamic Scholars Association when they were abducted just 100 yards from the mosque where their meeting was scheduled. The full text of CPT’s official press release follows.
CPTNet Nov 30, 2005, 1 am (Baghdad)
“Update on Missing Persons in Iraq”
We were very saddened to see the images of our loved ones on Al Jazeera television recently. We were disturbed by seeing the video and believe that repeated showing of it will endanger the lives of our friends. We are deeply disturbed by their abduction. We pray that those who hold them will be merciful and that they will be released soon. We want so much to see their faces in our home again, and we want them to know how much we love them, how much we miss them, and how anxious and concerned we are by what is happening to them.
We are angry because what has happened to our teammates is the result of the actions of the U.S. and U.K. government due to the illegal attack on Iraq and the continuing occupation and oppression of its people. Christian Peacemaker Teams (CPT) has worked for the rights of Iraqi prisoners who have been illegally detained and abused by the U.S. government. We were the first people to publicly denounce the torture of Iraqi people at the hands of U.S. forces, long before the western media admitted what was happening at Abu Ghraib. We are some of the few internationals left in Iraq who are telling the truth about what is happening to the Iraqi people We hope that we can continue to do this work and we pray for the speedy release of our beloved teammates.
We can confirm the identities of those who are being held as follows:
![](https://electronicintifada.net/sites/default/files/styles/original_800w/public/2005-11/tom-fox-150.jpg?itok=U0OuuNNa×tamp=1448949295)
Tom Fox (CPT)
![](https://electronicintifada.net/sites/default/files/styles/original_800w/public/2005-11/tom-fox.jpg?itok=kXJhbMnI×tamp=1448949295)
Tom Fox worked with CPT’s Hebron team from December 2004-January 2005. Above, a photo of Tom participating in a demonstration against the Apartheid Wall in Jayyous. (CPT)
Mr. Fox is an accomplished musician. He plays the bass clarinet and the recorder and he loves to cook. He has also worked as a professional grocer. Mr. Fox devotes much of his time to working with children. He has served as an adult leader of youth programs and worked at a Quaker camp for youth. He has facilitated young people’s participation in opposing war and violence. Mr. Fox is a quiet and peaceful man, respectful of everyone, who believes that “there is that of God in every person” which is why work for peace is so important to him.
![](https://electronicintifada.net/sites/default/files/styles/original_800w/public/2005-11/norman-kember-150.jpg?itok=IHZkC4HU×tamp=1448949295)
Norman Kember (CPT)
![](https://electronicintifada.net/sites/default/files/styles/original_800w/public/2005-11/james-loney-150.jpg?itok=RA2J3FTa×tamp=1448949295)
James Loney (CPT)
James is a peace activist, writer, trained mediator, and works actively with two Toronto community conflict resolution services. He has spent many years working to provide housing and support for homeless people.
In a personal statement from James to CPT, he writes: “I believe that our actions as a people of peace must be an expression of hope for everyone. My hope in practising non-violence is that I can be a conduit for the transformative power of God’s love acting upon me as much as I hope it will act upon others around me.”
![](https://electronicintifada.net/sites/default/files/styles/original_800w/public/2005-11/harmeet-singh-sooden-150.jpg?itok=44OtWjeT×tamp=1448949295)
Harmeet Singh Sooden (CPT)
Related Links
Christian Peacemaker Teams has been present in Iraq since October 2002, providing first-hand, independent reports from the region, working with detainees of both United States and Iraqi forces, and training others in non-violent intervention and human rights documentation. Christian Peacemaker Teams is a violence reduction program. Teams of trained peacemakers work in areas of lethal conflict around the world.