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Carnley
regrets Australia's "high profile support" for
unilateral U.S. attack on Iraq
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SYDNEY,
October 19 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - The head of Australia's
Anglican Church sparked official anger Saturday, October 19, after
suggesting the government's staunch support for U.S. foreign policy
had prompted the deadly bombing of Australians in Bali.
Addressing
the annual synod of the Anglican Diocese in the western city of Perth
late Friday October 18, Archbishop Peter Carnley said it was only a
matter of time before Australian lives were lost due to the
government's policy, said Agence France-Presse (AFP).
"Given
the bombing of Afghanistan and the dispersal in disarray of al-Qaeda
and Taliban forces, and Australia's high profile support of President
George Bush's stance in relation to a possible war on Iraq, it was
surely only a matter of time before Australian lives were sacrificed
in some form of retaliatory action," Carnley said.
"Many
regret that initially Australia gave such high profile support for the
U.S.A. in relation to threatened unilateral military action against
Iraq," he stressed.
"Australian
Churches have repeatedly urged diplomatic approaches to the resumption
of arms inspections in Iraq," Carnley recalled.
He
said the car bombing which targeted a Bali nightclub, known as a
hangout for young Australian tourists, "suggests that this
terrorist attack was aimed both at Australia, as one of the allies of
the United States of America and, at the same time, at what is seen by
militant Muslims to be the decadence of western culture."
Carnley
joined other Church and community leaders in August in signing an open
letter to the government urging it not to back any unilateral U.S.
military action against Iraq.
He
said it was crucial to be even-handed in foreign affairs and in
dealing with the root causes of terrorism.
"There
will be no peace in the Middle East without justice for the poor and
marginalized and dispossessed," he said.
Foreign
Minister Alexander Downer derided Carnley for his views on Saturday,
saying such suggestions about the motives of the attackers were
meaningless in the absence of evidence about who was behind the
bombing.
"If
Archbishop Carnley has further information for us, we'd obviously very
much appreciate it," he told Australian Broadcasting Corporation
radio.
Downer
alleged that the prime suspects in the bombing, which on Saturday
October 12, killed some 180 people, more than 100 of them believed to
be Australian, were members of the Al-Qaeda network working with
Indonesia Islamic groups like Jemaah Islamiah.
In
the wake of the bombing, Australian Prime Minister John Howard said
there were strong suspicions that al-Qaeda was behind the attack, put
stressed there was no solid evidence substantiating the accusation.

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