Perfil (Sabado)

Pope urges forgivenes­s in Colombia

Peace demands ‘the commitment of everyone,’ Francis tells nation in pointed reference to sceptics of FARC,ELN deals.

- – TIMES/AFP/AP

Pope Francis appealed to Colombians to reject “vengeance” for the sufferings of their near half-century civil conflict and promote forgivenes­s to overcome lingering resentment­s as the country seeks lasting peace.

Cheering crowds greeted the 80-year-old Argentine pontiff this week as he prayed for the country to heal the wounds of war – though some warned that forgivenes­s was hard after so much violence.

Francis spoke alongside President Juan Manuel Santos, who has overseen a controvers­ial peace deal with the Revolution­ary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) and a ceasefire with the last active guerrilla group, the National Liberation Army (ELN), declared just last week.

“The steps taken give rise to hope, in the conviction that seeking peace is an open-ended endeavour, a task which does not relent, which demands the commitment of everyone,” Francis said. “May this determinat­ion help us flee from the temptation to vengeance and the satisfacti­on of short-term partisan interests.”

Santos won a Nobel Peace Prize last year for his part in the accord that has seen the FARC disarm and transform into a political party. It was a key step toward ending a many-sided territoria­l and ideologica­l conflict that has left 260,000 people confirmed dead, 60,000 unaccounte­d for and seven million displaced.

But the peace process has been fraught with division. Critics say the FARC rebels got off too lightly, with amnesties and alternativ­e sentences.

“This process is a lie... I believe in God, but I do not need intermedia­ries,” said Bogota resident Luis Eduardo Martínez, 63, commenting on the pope’s visit. “We who saw so many victims die have not lost our resentment. I hope God will allow me to let that resentment go, but it is still there.”

In a balcony address later to crowds of young people near Bogotá’s cathedral, Francis urged them to “dream big” for the country’s future.

“Your youthfulne­ss... makes you capable of something very difficult in life: forgiving. Forgiving those who have hurt us,” he said.

DIVISIONS

Francis last year tried unsuccessf­ully to mediate between Santos and the lead opponent of the FARC accord, conserva- tive leader Álvaro Uribe.

The former president wrote a Twitter message welcoming “His Holiness Francis” to Colombia on Wednesday, but without commenting on the peace process. Uribe, a fierce opponent of the peace deal, had written a letter to the pope a day earlier expressing concern that the deal with the rebels had fuel led a rise in drug-traffickin­g and created economic uncertaint­ies with the potential to destroy Colombia’s social fabric.

FARC leader Rodrigo “Timochenko” Londoño welcomed the pope on Thursday, tweeting his thanks to Francis “for supporting the peace and defending social and environmen­tal justice.”

Colombians narrowly rejected the accord in a referendum last year. But a reworked version was later pushed through Congress.

Santos thanked Francis for coming to“enco ura ge us to take the first step toward reconcilia­tion,” in a speech along side the pope on Thursday.

“There is no use in ending a war if we still see each other as enemies,” Santos added.

The highlight of Francis’ trip came yesterday with a meeting and prayer of reconcilia­tion between victims of Colombia’s conflict and former guerrillas in Villavicen­cio, a city south of the capital surrounded by territory long held by the FARC.

Francis beatified two Colombian priests killed during the decades of guerrilla warfare, declaring them martyrs who were killed out of hatred for the Catholic faith, with the Vatican emphasisin­g the trip’s focus on forgivenes­s.

 ?? AP/IVAN VALENCIA ?? Pope Francis greets the crowd as he arrives at Bolívar Square in Bogotá on Thursday.
AP/IVAN VALENCIA Pope Francis greets the crowd as he arrives at Bolívar Square in Bogotá on Thursday.

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