Pope: Weakened multilateral
system affects most vulnerable
Pope Francis’ New Year’s address to members of the
Diplomatic Corp is devoted to the importance of multilateral diplomacy and good
will between nations to avoid the oppression of the most vulnerable.
The Pope began this multfaceted and lengthy annual address
to the Diplomatic Corps by noting agreements that had been ratified by the Holy
See and a number of states over the past year. One such accord was the
signing of a Provisional Agreement between the Holy See and the People’s
Republic of China on the Appointment of Bishops in China.
The Pontiff said he was thankful that, “for the first time
after so many years, all the bishops in China are in full communion with the
Successor of Peter and with the universal Church. He then added that, “it
is to be hoped that further contacts regarding the application of the signed
Provisional Agreement will help resolve questions that remain open and make
needed room for an effective enjoyment of religious freedom.”
Multilateralism
Taking up the theme of multilateralism, Pope Francis noted
that this year marked the hundredth anniversary of the League of Nations which,
he said, represented “the beginning of modern multilateral diplomacy,
whereby states attempt to distance their reciprocal relations from the
mentality of domination that leads to war.”
The Pope underlined that “an indispensable condition for the
success of multilateral diplomacy is the good will and good faith of the
parties, their readiness to deal with one another fairly and honestly, and
their openness to accepting the inevitable compromises arising from
disputes. Whenever even one of these elements is missing, the result is a
search for unilateral solutions and, in the end, the domination of the powerful
over the weak, he said.”
Some attitudes, such as nationalism the Pontiff emphasized,
could be traced back “to the period between the two World Wars, when populist
and nationalist demands proved more forceful than the activity of the League of
Nations. The reappearance of these impulses today is progressively
weakening the multilateral system, resulting in a general lack of trust, a
crisis of credibility in international political life, and a gradual
marginalization of the most vulnerable members of the family of nations.”
The primacy of justice and law
Pope Francis recalled that Saint Paul VI, at the United
Nations, had spoken of “the purpose of multilateral diplomacy, its
characteristics and its responsibilities in the contemporary context, but also
of its points of contact with the spiritual mission of the Pope and thus of the
Holy See.”
One of those points of contact, he said was the primacy of
justice and law, adding that at present, it was troubling “to see the
re-emergence of tendencies to impose and pursue individual national interests
without having recourse to the instruments provided by international law for
resolving controversies and ensuring that justice is respected, also through
international Courts.”
Such an attitude, he added, “is at times the result of
a reaction on the part of government leaders to growing unease among the
citizens of not a few countries, who perceive the procedures and rules
governing the international community as slow, abstract and ultimately far
removed from their own real needs.”
Then, quoting from his Message for this year’s World Day of
Peace, on the theme: Good Politics at the Service of Peace, he
said, “there is a close relationship between good politics and the peaceful
coexistence of peoples and nations. Peace is never a partial good, but
one that embraces the entire human race… Politics must be farsighted and
not limited to seeking short-term solutions.”
The defense of those most vulnerable
Focusing on a point of contact close to his heart, that of
defending the most vulnerable, Pope Francis emphasized the Church’s
commitment to assisting those in need and he called on the international
community and its agencies “to give a voice to those who have none. “I
would mention”, he continued, “the victims of other ongoing wars, especially
that in Syria with its high death toll. Once more, I
appeal to the international community to promote a political solution to a
conflict that will ultimately see only a series of defeats.”
The Pope also recalled the Christian communities
living in the Middle East and displaced persons who have been forced
to flee their homes due to conflict or hardship in their own countries.
Highlighting the plight of migrants, Pope Francis again
appealed to governments “to provide assistance to all those forced to emigrate
on account of the scourge of poverty and various forms of violence and
persecution, as well as natural catastrophes and climatic disturbances, and to
facilitate measures aimed at permitting their social integration in the
receiving countries.”
The Pope also paid particular attention to another
vulnerable category, that of children, saying, “here I cannot refrain from
speaking of one of the plagues of our time, which sadly has also involved some
members of the clergy. The abuse of minors is one of the
vilest and most heinous crimes conceivable. Such abuse inexorably sweeps
away the best of what human life holds out for innocent children, and causes
irreparable and lifelong damage. The Holy See and the Church as a whole are
working to combat and prevent these crimes and their concealment, in order to
ascertain the truth of the facts involving ecclesiastics and to render justice
to minors who have suffered sexual violence aggravated by the abuse of power
and conscience. My meeting with the episcopates of the entire world next
February is meant to be a further step in the Church’s efforts to shed full
light on the facts and to alleviate the wounds caused by such crimes.”
To be a bridge between peoples and builders of peace
Peace and peace building was another key theme in this
address with the Pontiff noting that in the course of the past year, there had
been some significant signs of peace, starting with the historic agreement
between Ethiopia and Eritrea, and an agreement signed by the leaders of South
Sudan. Positive signs, he said were also arriving from the Korean Peninsula.
Pope Francis remarked that he was following with special
concern “the developing situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo.” “I
likewise express my closeness to all those suffering from fundamentalist
violence, especially in Mali, Niger and Nigeria, and from continued internal
tensions in Cameroon, which not rarely sow death even among civilians”, he
said.
The Pontiff also expressed the hope that peaceful
institutional means could be found to provide solutions to the ongoing
political, social and economic crisis in Venezuela and the hope too that
dialogue between Israelis and Palestinians would resume.
Rethinking our common destiny
Pope Francis stressed another feature of multilateral
diplomacy that of rethinking our common destiny. He stressed that this
common destiny involved rethinking our relationship with the planet and
underlined that “international relations cannot be held captive to military
force, mutual intimidation, and the parading of stockpiles of arms.”
In his concluding remarks the Pope expressed the hope that
this New Year would see a “strengthening of the bonds of friendship uniting us
and renewed efforts to promote that peace to which our world aspires.”

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