Pope Francis. Photo: AFP |
Source: Vatican Radio
As world leaders opened their G8 summit in
Northern Ireland yesterday, British Prime Minister David Cameron in a letter
sent to Pope Francis pledged to restore “strong and sustainable growth to the
world economy” through progress on what’s being called the ‘3 Ts’ – taxation,
trade and transparency.
The UK assumed the one-year Presidency of G8 in January 2013.
The G8 Summit, is taking place at
Lough Erne on 17 and 18 June 2013, entitled A G8 meeting that goes back to first principles.
In his reply to the Prime
Minister, made public at the weekend, Pope Francis offered “abundant blessings”
for summit participants and stressed the importance of keeping human beings“ at
the center of all political and economic activity”.
In an earlier letter to the Pope,
Cameron stressed among others, thus:
“Many of the world's poorest countries are shackled by a lack of transparency, corrupt practices and weak capacity. Too often, a veil of secrecy allows corrupt corporations and officials in countries to flout the law and prevent development.”
“Many of the world's poorest countries are shackled by a lack of transparency, corrupt practices and weak capacity. Too often, a veil of secrecy allows corrupt corporations and officials in countries to flout the law and prevent development.”
“Too often, mineral wealth
in developing countries becomes a curse rather than a blessing, as a lack of
transparency fosters crime and corruption” Such wealth, the G8 president stated,
often “brings conflict, greed, and environmental damage".
Freedom from
violence, good governance and justice are not only fundamental to achieving
poverty eradication, but goods in themselves that all citizens of the world
have equal right to enjoy, said Cameron.
Pope Francis stressed the importance of ensuring
transparency and responsibility on the part of governments, measures that
indicate the “deep ethical roots of these problems”. The Pope said that his
predecessor Benedict XVI has likewise made clear that “the present global
crisis shows that ethics is not something external to the economy.”
“Concern
for the fundamental material and spiritual welfare of every human person is the
starting point for every political and economic solution”, the Pope said.