Miami Herald (Sunday)

Pope implores South Sudan to protect its women

- Associated Press

UBA, SOUTH SUDAN

Pope Francis warned Saturday that South Sudan’s future depends on how it treats its women, as he highlighte­d their horrific plight in a country where sexual violence is rampant, child brides are common and the maternal mortality rate is the highest in the world.

On his second and penultimat­e day in Africa, Francis called for women and girls to be respected, protected and honored during a meeting in the South Sudanese capital Juba with some of the 2 million people who have been forced by fighting and flooding to flee their homes. Women, girls and children make up the majority of those displaced.

The encounter was one of the highlights of Francis’ three-day visit to the world’s youngest country and one of its poorest. Joined by Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby and the Presbyteri­an head of the Church of Scotland, Francis is on an historic ecumenical pilgrimage to draw global attention to the country's plight and encourage its stalled peace process.

The aim of the threeway visit is to encourage South Sudan’s political leaders to implement a 2018 peace accord ending a civil war that erupted after the overwhelmi­ngly Christian country gained independen­ce from mostly Muslim Sudan in 2011.

Greeted by song and high-pitched ululation, Francis urged the hundreds of people gathered at Freedom Hall to be “seeds of hope,” that will soon bear fruit for the country of 12 million.

“You will be the trees that absorb the pollution of years of violence and restore the oxygen of fraternity,” he said.

The head of the U.N. mission in South Sudan, Sara Beysolow Nyanti, told Francis that women and girls were “extremely vulnerable” to sexual and gender-based violence, with U.N. statistics estimating some four out of 10 have been victim to one or more forms of assault. She said women and girls were at risk for rape when they were just out doing their daily routines and chores.

“If the women of South Sudan are given an opportunit­y to develop, to have space to be productive, South Sudan will be transforme­d,” she told Francis.

The pope picked up her theme in his remarks, saying women were the key to South Sudan’s peaceful developmen­t.

“Please, protect, respect, appreciate and honor every woman, every girl, young woman, mother and grandmothe­r,” he said. “Otherwise, there will be no future.”

According to UNICEF, 75% of girls in South Sudan don’t go to school because their parents prefer to keep them at home and set them up for a marriage that will bring a dowry for the family.

Half of South Sudan’s women are married before age 18, and they then face the world’s highest maternal mortality rate.

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