Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Pope Francis wraps up Asia tour after meeting Rohingyas

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DHAKA, Dec 2 ( AFP) - Pope Francis wrapped up a high-stakes Asia tour Saturday after meeting Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh in a highly symbolic gesture of solidarity with the Muslim minority fleeing violence in Myanmar.

The Catholic leader visited a hospital in Dhaka run by the order of Mother Theresa on the final day of a visit to Bangladesh and Myanmar that has been dominated by the plight of the Rohingya.

Pope Francis is known for championin­g the rights of refugees and has repeat e d ly expressed support for the long- suffering Rohingya, whom he has described as his “brothers and sisters”.

The usually forthright pontiff walked a diplomatic tightrope during his four days in Myanmar -the first papal visit to the country -- avoiding any direct reference to the Rohingya in public while appealing to Buddhist leaders to overcome “prejudice and hatred”. In Bangladesh he addressed the issue head-on, meeting a group of Rohingya refugees from the squalid camps in southern Bangladesh in an emotional encounter in Dhaka. Among them was a 12-year-old girl who told him she had lost all her family in a Myanmar army attack on her village before fleeing across the border earlier this year.

“Your tragedy is very hard, very great, but it has a place in our hearts,” he told them. “In the name of all those who have persecuted you, who have harmed you, in the face of the world's indifferen­ce, I ask for your forgivenes­s.”

The pope referred to the refugees as Rohingya, using the term for the first time on the tour after the archbishop of Yangon advised him that doing so in Myanmar could inflame tensions and endanger Christians. The word is politicall­y sensitive in the mainly Buddhist country because many there do not consider the Rohingya a distinct ethnic group, regarding them instead as incomers from Bangladesh. He had faced criticism from some rights activists and refugees for failing to address the issue publicly.

The pope did not visit the refugee camps, where only a handful were aware that one of the world's most high- profile leaders was championin­g their cause just 500km away.

One refugee expressed gratitude that the pope had finally uttered the word Rohingya, and said he believed the meeting would have a big impact.

Analysts were more cautious. Alyssa Ayres, senior fellow with the Council on Foreign Relations, said the pope's recognitio­n helped raise global awareness of the humanitari­an crisis, “but it unfortunat­ely does very little to address the big questions about their future”.

More than 620,000 Rohingya have crossed into Bangladesh since a militant attack on police posts in late August sparked a deadly crackdown by the Myanmar military.

They have given consistent accounts of mass rape, killings and villages deliberate­ly burned to the ground by soldiers and Buddhist militia.

The two countries last month signed an agreement to begin repatriati­ng refugees, but rights groups say they are concerned about plans to house them in camps away from their former homes -- many of which have been destroyed.

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