Las Vegas Review-Journal

Pope goes to Colombia to help heal conflict’s wounds

- By Nicole Winfield and Joshua Goodman The Associated Press

BOGOTA, Colombia — Pope Francis arrived in Colombia on Wednesday to try to help heal the wounds of Latin America’s longest-running armed conflict, bolstered by a new cease-fire with a holdout rebel group but fully aware of the fragility of the country’s peace process.

During a deeply symbolic five-day visit that started Wednesday, Francis is expected to press Colombian leaders to address the social and economic disparitie­s that fueled five decades of armed rebellion, while encouragin­g ordinary Colombians to balance their need for justice with forgivenes­s.

In a video message on the eve of his departure, Francis urged all Colombians to take a “first step” and reach out to one another for the sake of peace and the future.

“Peace is what Colombia has been looking for and working for for such a long time,” he said. “A stable and lasting peace, so that we can see one another and treat one another as brothers, not as enemies.”

A year after the Colombian government signed the peace accord with the Revolution­ary Armed Forc- es of Colombia, or FARC, the nation remains bitterly divided over the terms of the deal even as guerrillas have laid down their arms and begun returning to civilian life. Even the Catholic Church hierarchy, which was instrument­al in facilitati­ng the peace talks and is now spearheadi­ng the process of reconcilia­tion, was divided over what many Colombians saw as the overly generous terms offered to rebels behind atrocities.

In Bogota, city workers were busy scrubbing downtown monuments and erecting the stage for a giant outdoor Mass.

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Pope Francis

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