Arab Times

Work for peace, Pope tells Trump

Smiles replace spats

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VATICAN CITY, May 24, (AFP): Pope Francis urged Donald Trump to use his US presidency to promote peace around the world as the two leaders swapped sparring for smiles in their first face-to-face meeting, at the Vatican on Wednesday.

Trump’s audience with the 80-yearold pontiff, a keenly-anticipate­d highlight of his first overseas tour, lasted just under half an hour and concluded with both men beaming, for the cameras at least.

“He is something,” the president later said of his host. “We had a fantastic meeting.”

The Vatican described the discussion­s as “cordial” and stressed the two men’s joint opposition to abortion and shared concern for persecuted Christians in the Middle East.

There was no mention from either side of the two men’s profound difference­s on climate change, migration, the death penalty and other issues.

Trump told his host as he left: “Thank you. Thank you. I won’t forget what you said.”

The Pope had presented Trump with a medallion engraved with an olive tree, the internatio­nal symbol of peace.

“I give it to you so you can be an instrument of peace,” he said in Spanish. “We can use peace,” Trump replied.

In a lighter moment, Francis referred to Trump’s imposing bulk by asking his wife Melania, “What do you feed him on? Potica?” - a reference to a calorie-laden cake from Slovenia, Melania’s country of birth.

Trump presented the Pope with several gifts, including a collection of first editions by Martin Luther King and a bronze sculpture.

Francis gave Trump copies of the three major texts he has published as

“At least 20 dead bodies were spotted in the water,” he said. Rescue group MOAS said it had already recovered 34 bodies. “Most are toddlers,” the group’s co-founder Chris Catrambone said on Twitter.

The coastguard called in more ships to help with the rescue, saying about 1,700 people were packed into about 15 vessels.

More than 1,300 people have died this year on the world’s most dangerous crossing for migrants fleeing poverty and war across Africa and the Middle East.

In the past week, more than 7,000 migrants have been plucked from unsafe boats in internatio­nal waters off the western coast of Libya, where people smugglers operate with impunity. (RTRS) Pope, including one on the environmen­t which urges the industrial­ised world to curb carbon emissions or risk catastroph­ic consequenc­es for the planet.

Trump, who has threatened to ignore the Paris accords on emissions and described global warming as a hoax, vowed to read them.

In the last year, the two men have swapped jibes and debated on subjects ranging from migration to unbridled capitalism, as well as the environmen­t.

A Vatican statement highlighte­d “the joint commitment in favour of life, and freedom of worship and conscience.”

Since his November election, Trump has pleased the Catholic hierarchy by axing rules protecting tax-funded financing of family planning clinics that offer abortions.

Protocol

Melania, who is a Catholic, and daughter Ivanka were both dressed all in black with lace veils, in keeping with traditiona­l protocol that is no longer obligatory for visiting female dignitarie­s.

The audience took place in the private library of the Apostolic Palace, the lavish papal residence that Francis does not use, having opted instead for modest lodgings in a guesthouse for visiting clerics.

Afterwards, the Trumps were given a private tour of the Sistine Chapel and St Peter’s Basilica.

The president then called on Italy’s president and met briefly with Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni. “We’re loving Italy very much,” Trump said at that stop. “It was an honour to meet the Pope.”

Melania meanwhile visited a children’s hospital and Ivanka met women

‘Philippine­s need modern arms’:

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte told Russian leader Vladimir Putin that the Philippine­s needs modern arms to fight Islamic State and that he expected Russian support.

Duterte also said he had to halt his visit to Moscow and return home as there was still fighting with ISIS’s militants there.

Putin said he hoped the conflict in the Philippine­s would be resolved “with minimum losses”. He also said there were the prospects for economic and military cooperatio­n between Moscow and Manila. (RTRS)

Montenegro readies to join NATO:

trafficked from Africa for the sex trade on a visit to the St Egidio religious community.

Team Trump was due in Brussels on Wednesday afternoon for meetings with EU and NATO officials before returning to Italy for the G7 summit in Sicily on Friday and Saturday.

Francis and Trump’s past spats include the Pope describing plans for a border wall with Mexico as not Christian and Trump evoking a possible Islamist attack on the Vatican which would make the pontiff glad to have him as president.

But there have also been conciliato­ry moves. In 2013, Trump tweeted that “the new Pope is a humble man, very much like me” while Francis had promised to judge the man not the image.

Wednesday’s meeting neverthele­ss provided a reminder of their difference­s in style, Trump arriving at the Vatican in a jumbo-sized SUV that couldn’t have been further removed from the modest Fiats and Fords Francis prefers.

Trump’s Vatican visit was the third leg of his overseas trip, after stops in Saudi Arabia and Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

“No president has ever visited the homelands and holy sites of the Jewish, Christian, and Muslims faiths all on one trip,” said US National Security Advisor HR McMaster. Trump was bringing “a message of tolerance and of hope to billions,” he said.

The high-profile trip has diverted attention from Trump’s domestic pressures over alleged campaign collusion with Russia.

With his poll numbers at a record low, he will be hoping for a boost after rubbing shoulders with the popular Pope.

Montenegro’s Prime Minister Dusko Markovic did not mince his words when Russia last month announced a ban on imports from the Balkan country’s biggest winemaker.

“It is clear that the decision is in the context of (Montenegro’s) NATO membership,” he said, pointing out that Russian citizens had “lost an opportunit­y to consume the best wines”.

On May 25, Markovic will sit on the leaders’ table at a NATO summit in Brussels and a few days later, his country of 620,000 people should formally become the alliance’s 29th member.

The process has riled Moscow, which has long considered Montenegro’s predominan­tly Slavic Orthodox population to be within its sphere of influence.

But the accession is expected to pass without the chaos that some had feared on the streets of the ex-Yugoslav republic, where NATO membership remains a divisive issue.

In 2015, news of Montenegro’s accession spurred sometimes violent protests in the capital Podgorica, organised by proRussian opposition parties.

Much of the scepticism stems from NATO’s bombing of Serbia and Montenegro in 1999 during the Kosovo war.

But after Montenegro declared independen­ce from Serbia in 2006, closer ties with the West were hotly pursued by former premier Milo Djukanovic, who dominated the country for a quarter century until stepping down at the end of last year.

Russian Senator Alexey Pushkov wrote on Twitter that the military value of Montenegro was “zero”.

But according to Srdjan Vucetic of the Centre for Internatio­nal Policy Studies, “its political and strategic import is considerab­le”.

“Viewed from the Kremlin... any gain for NATO is a loss for Russia,” he wrote. (AFP)

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