Bishops condemn Pakistan church
attack
Methodist Church in Quetta following the suicide attack.- AFP |
The President of the Pakistan Bishops’ Conference has
condemned an attack on a Methodist church in Quetta in which 13 people were
killed.
By Richard Marsden
A senior Pakistan archbishop has deplored
the “cowardly and inhumane” suicide attack on a Methodist Churchby
Islamic extremists which killed 13 worshippers and injured 60 others.
The statement by Archbishop Joseph Arshad, the
President of the Pakistan Bishops’ Conference, came as a group funeral was held
today at the Christian cemetery in the southwestern city of Quetta, following
the Sunday’s deadly attack at the city’s Bethel Methodist Church.
Archbishop Arshad issued the statement in his capacity as the
President of the Justice and Peace Commission of the Bishops Conference. In it,
he called on the authorities "to bring those responsible to justice, and
to address the root causes of this intolerance." He stressed the urgent
need to “strengthen measures for the protection of all citizens, especially
during this Christmas period.”
The massacre in Quetta, the capital of the Balochistan
province, happened when two bombers carrying assault rifles stormed the church,
triggering a gunbattle. One assailant was killed by police and the other opened
fire at worshippers and detonated an explosive vest.
Archbishop Arshad praised the prompt response of the police
and security forces who he said “contributed to ensuring the life of almost 400
faithful present in the church.”
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for the
attack, said to be the first by the organisation on a church in the country.
Archbishop Arshad’s statement, co-signed by senior members
of the Justice and Peace commission, said: “The massacres of innocent lives
increase in Pakistan. Let us pray to our Lord Jesus Christ so that, as a
nation, he can give us strength, wisdom, tolerance and peace. May God give the
victims’ families the strength to endure the loss of their loved ones and a
speedy recovery for the wounded.”
The statement issued to the Fides News Agency cites a
Supreme Court ruling from 2014 which calls on the government to adopt a series
of concrete measures to protect religious minorities. It also highlights the
national Action Plan against terrorism as a "maximum priority to eliminate
extremism from the country".
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