Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Religious Leaders, Charities call on Government to end UK poverty by 2020

from Christian Today

Religious leaders, charities, and campaign leaders are set to call on the Government to end poverty in the UK by 2020.

by Anne Thomas

Religious leaders, charities, and campaign leaders are set to call on the Government to end poverty in the UK by 2020.

The National Poverty Hearing, the first gathering of its kind for 10 years, will "challenge the myth that poverty is not real in the UK", organisers said. The event takes place today at the Westminster Central Hall.

Poverty campaigners, faith groups, trade unions and politicians will all attend the day-long hearing in central London.

Noted figures who will take part in the event include Archbishop of Canterbury, Most Rev Rowan Williams, Chief Rabbi Sir Jonathan Sacks, and Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor.

Niall Cooper, from Church Action on Poverty, which is co-ordinating the event, said the hearing would end with a call to all political parties to commit to ending poverty in the UK by 2020.

Mr Cooper said: "While some progress has been made in tackling poverty-related issues in the past 10 years, poverty continues to damage the lives of very many people.

"We need to build a movement dedicated to making poverty in the UK history. The National Poverty Hearing is a unique opportunity for faith groups, charities and unions to illustrate real experiences of poverty in our backyard."

He continued: "Three million adults and 400,000 children are not being properly fed by today's standards. About nine million people in Britain cannot afford housing that is properly heated, free from damp and in a safe and habitable condition. In a rich country, this is a national scandal."

The Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, said: "It is sometimes hard in our modern, highly connected world to keep in mind what the grinding effect of unremitting poverty can be.

"In turning a spotlight on poverty in our own communities, this hearing will, I hope, focus our attention on what still needs to be done to lift the burdens from those who can in all senses least afford to carry them."

Ten years on from Church Action on Poverty’s first National Poverty Hearing, organisations including Shelter, Help the Aged, Church Urban Fund, End Child Poverty, Barnardos, Oxfam, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, the Refugee Council and others are to stage the event.

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