The Philippine Star

Pope meeting Suu Kyi on Myanmar refugee crisis

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YANGON (AP) — Pope Francis spent his first full day in Myanmar yesterday traveling to the country’s capital to meet with the civilian leader, Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, a day after hosting the military general in charge of the crackdown on the country’s Muslim Rohingya minority.

Pope Francis’ speech to Suu Kyi, other Myanmar authoritie­s and the diplomatic corps in Naypyitaw is the most anticipate­d of his visit, given the outcry over the crackdown, which the US and UN have described as a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” to drive out the Rohingya from northern Rakhine state.

The operation, launched in August after Rohingya militants attacked security posts, has sent more than 620,000 Rohingya into neighborin­g Bangladesh, where they have reported entire villages were burned and looted, and women and girls were raped.

Myanmar’s Catholic leaders have stressed that Suu Kyi has no voice to speak out against the military over the operation, and have urged continued support for her efforts to move Myanmar toward a more democratic future that includes all its religious minorities, Christians in particular.

How the pope bridges the local Catholic concerns with his legacy of speaking out for oppressed minorities is the key to watch in his speech in Naypyitaw.

In Yangon, Pope Francis spoke to interfaith leaders at the archbishop’s residence and met separately with a prominent but controvers­ial Buddhist leader.

The pope stressed a message of “unity in diversity” in his 40-minute meeting with Buddhist, Hindu, Muslim, Christian and Jewish leaders and told them they should work together to rebuild the country and that if they argue, they should argue like brothers, who reconcile afterward, spokesman Greg Burke said.

His meeting with Buddhist monk Sitagu Sayadaw was “always in an effort to encourage peace and fraternal coexistenc­e as the only way ahead,” according to Burke.

Sitagu also met with Francis’ predecesso­r, Pope Benedict XVI, but has been criticized for using ethnic slurs against Muslims, particular­ly the Rohingya, although he received an award presented by Suu Kyi earlier this year.

Francis dove into the Rohingya refugee crisis hours after arriving on Monday by meeting with the commander responsibl­e for the crackdown, Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, and three members of the bureau of special operations.

The Vatican didn’t provide details of the contents of the 15-minute “courtesy visit,” only to say that: “They spoke of the great responsibi­lity of the authoritie­s of the country in this moment of transition.”

Gen. Min Aung Hlaing’s office said in a statement on Facebook that he is willing to have “interfaith peace, unity and justice.”

The general added that there was no religious or ethnic persecutio­n or discrimina­tion in Myanmar, and that the government allowed different faith groups to have freedom of worship.

Rohingya Muslims have long faced state-supported discrimina­tion in the predominan­tly Buddhist country and were stripped of citizenshi­p in 1982, denying them almost all rights and rendering them stateless.

They cannot travel freely, practice their religion, or work as teachers or doctors.

Myanmar’s Catholic Church has publicly urged Francis to avoid saying “Rohingya,” a term shunned by many here because the ethnic group is not a recognized minority in the country.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Children greet Pope Francis in Yangon, Myanmar on Monday.
REUTERS Children greet Pope Francis in Yangon, Myanmar on Monday.

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