The Star Malaysia

Prayers for peace

Pope leads Dhaka mass before meeting Rohingya refugees.

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DHAKA: Pope Francis led a giant open-air mass in Dhaka ahead of finally coming face to face with Rohingya refugees whose desperate plight has dominated his landmark tour of Myanmar and Bangladesh.

The meeting comes a day after Francis urged the world to take “decisive measures” to resolve the crisis that has forced more than 620,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee ethnic unrest in Myanmar for overstretc­hed camps in Bangladesh.

Amid tight security, Francis, the first pope to visit Muslim-majority Bangladesh in 31 years, arrived in a locally-made pope-mobile – a pickup truck covered in glass – at Suhrawardy Udyan park where nearly 100,000 people waited to celebrate the mass.

Buses of faithful came from all over the country. Many queued for hours to get into the park guarded by thousands of security forces.

Suborna Costa, 34, hoped the prayers of the 80-year-old pontiff will help end her family woes.

Costa’s husband is ill, her brother went missing in Turkey after he illegally tried to enter Italy and one of her sisters has been unable to speak since childhood.

“For years we don’t have any good news in my family. My parents have been in shock since we lost contact with our brother,” she said.

The worries of the Rohingya masses who have packed camps on the Myanmar border have dominated the papal tour.

Francis arrived in Dhaka on Thursday from Myanmar, where he walked a diplomatic tightrope, publicly avoiding allegation­s that the army is waging an ethnic cleansing campaign against the Rohingya.

He has not used the word Rohingya in public, referring to them as “the refugees from Rakhine state” – their home in Myanmar where they have been persecuted for decades and refused citizenshi­p.

Francis praised Bangladesh for giving refuge to the Rohingya.

“This has been done at no little sacrifice. It has also been done before the eyes of the whole world,” he said, calling on other countries to offer “immediate material assistance to Bangladesh in its effort to respond effectivel­y to urgent human needs”.

Francis will speak with 16 Rohingya refugees, including two children, at a meeting with leaders of other faiths.

Farid Uddin Masoud, a top Muslim cleric who will attend, said he hoped the pope would speak out for the Rohingya.

“When I meet him, I would like to tell him about our plight and about the kind of persecutio­n we have been facing,” 35-year-old refugee Abul Fayaz said in Cox’s Bazar.

“We want him to help us get citizenshi­p, ensure our safety, help us move freely and most importantl­y make a way so we can say our prayers with freedom.”

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 ?? — AFP ?? Grand welcome: Pope Francis waving to Bangladesh­i Christians while arriving to lead mass in Dhaka.
— AFP Grand welcome: Pope Francis waving to Bangladesh­i Christians while arriving to lead mass in Dhaka.

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