The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Pope wraps up contentiou­s Myanmar visit

-

YANGON: Pope Francis yesterday wrapped up a visit to Myanmar defined by his decision not to address the Rohingya crisis in public, and flies to Bangladesh, where huge numbers of refugees from the Muslim minority languish in refugee camps.

Christians make up less than 0.5 percent of mainly Muslim Bangladesh, but have in recent years come under attack from Islamist radicals.

Just days before Francis’ arrival, a Catholic priest disappeare­d in a village in northern Bangladesh.

In Myanmar the pontiff walked a diplomatic tightrope, staying silent on allegation­s that the army is waging an ethnic cleansing campaign against Rohingya Muslims. He also refrained from mentioning the minority by name during his four-day trip.

Myanmar’s government denies the Rohingya are an ethnic group, insisting they are ‘Bengali’ immigrants who are not entitled to full citizenshi­p. But the Vatican rejected suggestion­s the decision not to confront the issue publically represente­d a failure of moral leadership.

A spokesman late Wednesday

This is a blessing for us to see the Pope. We are a very small community but he came for us.

said the Pope’s presence alone drew attention to Myanmar’s myriad troubles and his ‘moral authority’ remained undimmed.

Francis had previously expressed concern over the Rohingya’s persecutio­n.

But he was urged not to mention their name in Myanmar to avoid provoking hardline Buddhists, who were quick to claim the Pope’s avoidance of the term ‘Rohingya’ as a victory.

The pontiff has been warmly embraced by Myanmar’s minority of Catholics — who make up just over one per cent of the population.

Yesterday, Francis led a mass at a cathedral in downtown Yangon, which was also broadcast on a big screen in the church’s basketball court where throngs of faithful craned for a view of their religious leader.

“This is a blessing for us to see the Pope. We are a very small community but he came for us,” Tony Ravi, among those in the crowd, told AFP.

In his homily the pope urged young people to defend ‘human rights’ and ‘justice’ — the central theme of his public addresses throughout his landmark visit.

All eyes will now be fixed on the pontiff as he heads to Bangladesh, a country struggling to provide for the more than 620,000 Rohingya who have crushed into its refugee camps after fleeing persecutio­n in Myanmar. He will arrive in Dhaka yesterday afternoon.

The Catholic priest who disappeare­d on Monday in the same village as suspected Islamist extremists hacked a Catholic grocer to death last year.

Walter William Rosario, 40, had been organising for some 300 Catholics to travel to Dhaka for the pope’s mass. Since 2015 at least three Christians, including two converts from Islam, have been hacked to death in attacks blamed on the militant Jamayetul Mujahideen Bangladesh (JMB). — AFP

Tony Ravi, Myanmar’s Catholic

 ??  ?? A car is stranded on a road that collapsed due to heavy flooding in the southern Thai district of Songkhla. — AFP photo
A car is stranded on a road that collapsed due to heavy flooding in the southern Thai district of Songkhla. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Pope Francis (centre) waves to well-wishers as he exits St Mary’s Cathedral after a mass in Yangon on the last day of a four-day visit. — AFP photo
Pope Francis (centre) waves to well-wishers as he exits St Mary’s Cathedral after a mass in Yangon on the last day of a four-day visit. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Pope Francis leads mass at the St. Mary’s Cathedral in Yangon. — AFP photo
Pope Francis leads mass at the St. Mary’s Cathedral in Yangon. — AFP photo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia