Bangladesh priest goes missing ahead of visit from Pope Francis
ACATHOLIC priest has disappeared in Bangladesh, police said yesterday, as the Muslimmajority country stepped up security ahead of a landmark visit by Pope Francis that follows a rise in Islamist attacks on religious minorities.
Walter William Rosario, a 40-year-old priest and headmaster of a Catholic school, went missing on Monday in a village in northern Bangladesh where suspected Islamist extremists last year hacked a Catholic grocer to death.
Gerves Rosario, bishop of the nearby city of Rajshahi, said he believed the priest had been kidnapped and that Catholics in the region were deeply worried.
“He was organising for around 300 Catholics to travel to Dhaka to see the Pope and attend his holy mass. But his disappearance has marred their joy. They don’t want to go to Dhaka any more,” he said.
News of his disappearance comes as Bangladesh tightens security in the capital Dhaka ahead of the arrival today of the first pontiff to visit Bangladesh in more than three decades.
Police in Natore district said they had launched a major search for Rosario after his family reported him missing.
“He has been missing since late Monday. His mobile has been switched off,” local police chief Biplob Bijoy Talukder said.
The family received a phone call from someone using the missing man’s number to demand a ransom, but Talukder said police believed this was a hoax.
They have not ruled out the possibility he was abducted by Islamist extremists, who have carried out attacks on religious minorities in the region in the past four years.
Since 2015 at least three Christians, including two converts from Islam, have been hacked to death in attacks blamed on the militant Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh.
Bikash Hubert Rebeiro, the priest in Bonpara village where Rosario grew up, described him as a “good man” whose disappearance had cast a pall over the pope’s visit.
“Our joy is gone,” he said by phone. “Everyone in the village is shocked. His elderly mother has being crying nonstop.”
Rebeiro said Rosario’s family was friendly with the relatives of Sunil Gomes, the Catholic grocer murdered outside his shop last year.
Christians make up less than 0.5 percent of Bangladesh’s 160 million people and have for centuries lived in harmony alongside the Muslim majority. But community leaders say a rise in Islamist extremism has strained relations.
Bangladesh authorities have escalated security in Christian areas of Dhaka in recent days as tens of thousands descend on the capital for an open-air mass on Friday.
“The pope’s visit is a matter of honour for us. We are organising the highest level of security for him,” police spokeswoman Sahely Ferdous said.
The three-day visit will be dominated by the plight of more than 620,000 Rohingya Muslims who have fled ethnic unrest in Myanmar and taken refuge in Bangladesh.
In an open-air mass delivered in Yangon yesterday Pope Francis urged Myanmar’s Buddhist clergy to conquer “prejudice and hatred”, a carefully worded appeal to powerful monks in a country facing intense scrutiny over its persecution of the Muslim Rohingya.
Their arrival in Bangladesh has added to the huge challenges already facing the poor, overpopulated country, which has seen a substantial rise in Islamist extremism in recent years.
In July last year Islamist militants stormed a Dhaka cafe and massacred 22 hostages including 18 foreigners in an attack claimed by Islamic State.