Venezuela: Pope wants to verify
will of both parties
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| Pope Francis speaks with reporters during the return flight from the United Arab Emirates. |
Pope Francis is reserving the right to verify the intentions
of the two parties in Venezuela, before considering a mediation on the part of
the Holy See. Meanwhile, the Church in Venezuela continues to insist on a
peaceful solution.
By Benedetta Capelli
Responding to journalists’ questions regarding the ongoing
crisis in Venezuela, and the possibility of a mediation on the part of the Holy
See, the ad interim Director of the Vatican Press Office, Alessandro Gisotti,
said: "The Holy Father reserves the right to verify the will of both
parties by ascertaining whether the conditions exist for following this path”.
Mediation if requested by all parties
On the flight back from Abu Dhabi to the Vatican, Pope
Francis spoke to journalists on board, in similar terms: “We will see what can
be done”, said the Pope. “But for a mediation to happen, you need the will of
both sides: both sides need to request it. This is a condition must make them
think first, before asking for help or for the presence of an observer, or for
mediation. Both sides, always”.
During the in-flight press conference, Pope Francis
confirmed the commitment of the Vatican Secretariat of State to solving the
Venezuelan crisis. He recalled the talks between government and opposition that
took place in Santo Domingo, mediated by former Spanish President Zapatero,
representative of UNASUR, the Union of South American Nations. He also spoke of
how Vatican diplomacy worked through Archbishop Emil Paul Tscherrig, who is
presently Apostolic Nuncio to Italy and to the Republic of San Marino, and
Archbishop Claudio Maria Celli. Unfortunately, the result, said Pope Francis,
was nothing but “smoke".
Thinking of Venezuela while in Panama
The crisis in Venezuela reached a turning point on January
23rd when the Leader of the National Assembly, Juan Gerardo
Guaidó Márquez, declared himself interim President of the country. It was the
same day of the Pope arrived in Panama to celebrate World Youth Day. He
addressed the people of Venezuela during the Angelus on January 27th: “Here
in Panama I have thought a lot about the Venezuelan people, to whom I feel
particularly united these days”, said the Pope. “In the face of the current
serious situation, I ask the Lord that a just and peaceful solution be sought
and reached to overcome the crisis, with respect for human rights and seeking
exclusively the good of all the inhabitants of the country. I invite you to
pray, placing this intercession under the protection of Our Lady of Coromoto,
Patroness of Venezuela”.
The Pope’s appeals
This is not the first appeal Pope Francis has made on behalf
of Venezuela. When the crisis began in 2014, he sent a message encouraging
dialogue, speaking of "the heroism of forgiveness and mercy":
elements we need, said the Pope, to free ourselves "from resentment and
hatred" and to take "a truly new path", one that requires
patience and courage", but "the only one that can lead to peace and
justice", he said.
More recently, in May 2017, Pope Francis wrote to the
Venezuelan Bishops, urging them to build bridges. He expressed his "deep
sorrow for the clashes and violence" that, according to recent estimates
of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, have cost the lives of 43 people
and about 850 arrests, in the last few days alone.
A country on its knees
The humanitarian situation in Venezuela is the greatest
cause of concern of the Bishops of the country, which has been on its knees for
years, despite its massive oil reserves. The latest figures tell the story:
according to the FAO, 12% of the population is undernourished, and the rate of
malnutrition is at its highest in 25 years. The UN estimates that about 2.3
million Venezuelans have fled the country since 2015.
The voice of the Venezuelan Bishops
Bishop José Trinidad Fernández, is Auxiliary Bishop of
Caracas and Secretary General of the Venezuelan Episcopal Conference. "We
don't want bloodshed, for any reason in the world”, he says. "We know the
people of Venezuela are peaceful”, so “a negotiated and peaceful solution is
needed, one that respects everyone. The commandment 'Thou shalt not kill' is
particularly valid at this moment and this must be a process of peace, not of
war", he says. Bishop José Trinidad Fernández continues, by saying:
"Ours is a request for dialogue that we have reiterated many times in our
pronouncements. A dialogue that must lead to that peaceful transition and that
political change the people are asking for. A political change, to go to clear
and transparent elections".
The humanitarian situation
The Church in Venezuela is also deeply concerned about the
dramatic situation of the population, the lack of food and medicine: "We
must open the country to humanitarian aid”, they say, emphasizing the “dramatic
and unprecedented situation” in which the country finds itself. Speaking on
behalf of the Venezuelan Bishops’ Conference, the Secretary General says:
"We bishops are inspired by the recent Message of the Pope for the world
Day of Peace, in which he speaks of the need for a good policy in the service
of peace”. This is what we are trying to do at this moment, he continues,
because “we no longer want to see people being arbitrarily detained, or
children looking for food in the garbage".

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