Los Angeles Times

Pope defends his public silence over the Rohingya

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ABOARD THE PAPAL PLANE — Pope Francis on Saturday defended his silence in Myanmar over the plight of Rohingya refugees, saying a public denunciati­on would have “slammed the door in the face” of his hosts and prevented his message from being heard.

Francis said he chose instead to speak in general terms about human rights in public so that he could engage more frankly in private about what the U.N. has said is a textbook campaign of ethnic cleansing against the Muslim minority in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

Speaking to reporters en route home from Myanmar and Bangladesh, Francis said he was “very, very satisfied” that his message had been received in his private meetings with Aung San Suu Kyi and Myanmar’s powerful military chief, Gen. Min Aung Hlaing.

“It’s true I didn’t have the pleasure of slamming the door in their face publicly with a denunciati­on,” Francis said. “But I had the satisfacti­on of dialogue, and letting the other side dialogue, and in this way the message arrived.”

Human rights groups and Rohingya themselves had expressed disappoint­ment that Francis had declined to even refer to the Rohingya by name, much less call out Myanmar’s military for sparking Asia’s worst refugee crisis in decades. Francis waited until he arrived in neighborin­g Bangladesh to demand the internatio­nal community intervene to resolve the crisis and help Bangladesh cope with the influx of more than 620,000 refugees fleeing a crackdown in Rakhine state.

In Dhaka, Francis finally uttered the word “Rohingya” at an emotional encounter Friday with a group of refugees.

Francis said he was well aware of the criticism leveled at Suu Kyi for having failed to speak out enough, or soon enough about the atrocities being committed against the Rohingya. But he said it was difficult to judge what is possible in a country undergoing a political transition after decades of military dictatorsh­ip. He said in such cases, it’s likely that a country will take “two steps forward, one step back” as it progresses.

“So the possibilit­ies have to be evaluated through this optic,” he said.

Despite his apparent sympathy toward Suu Kyi’s tenuous position in dealing with the Burmese military, Francis said he made sure his true feelings were known in private, especially during his meeting Monday with the general. “I didn’t negotiate the truth,” Francis said. Without divulging the contents of the encounter, Francis said: “I did it in such a way that he understood that it’s not viable to redo today the way things were done in the past.”

Francis also said that he wept during his encounter with Rohingya refugees on Friday, in which he begged their forgivenes­s for the hurt they had endured and the “indifferen­ce of the world.”

“The presence of God today is also called ‘Rohingya,’ ” he told them.

Francis said he hadn’t planned how the encounter would unfold, and at one point got mad because it appeared the organizers were going to kick the Rohingya out after they greeted him. Francis said they deserved to hear something from him directly, and he spoke.

“What did I feel?” he asked. “In that moment I cried. I tried not to show it.”

He added: “They wept too.”

 ?? Andrew Medichini Pool Photo ?? FRANCIS meets with people at the Mother Teresa House in Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Andrew Medichini Pool Photo FRANCIS meets with people at the Mother Teresa House in Dhaka, Bangladesh.

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