Indian and Pakistani Churches
urge for peace between their nations
Indian forces remain on high alert along the border with Pakistan (ANSA) |
Indian Cardinal Oswald Gracias and Pakistani Archbishop
Joseph Arshad are urging for peace as fears of a war loom large with the
escalation of tensions between the two nations.
By Robin Gomes
The Catholic bishops of India and Pakistan are appealing for
peace and dialogue as tensions and armed exchanges between the two
nuclear-armed neighbours escalate.
Indian Church
"We pray and work for peace between
India and Pakistan. We call on the rulers to choose the path of dialogue,
the situation today is very delicate and we must not make false or hurried
steps,” said Indian Cardinal Oswald Gracias Archbishop of
Bombay.
“We condemn any act of terrorism against Indian forces. But
we say 'no' to any war option: we must work for a peaceful solution, in favour
of South Asia and will be meaningful for the whole world," Card. Gracias,
the president of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of India (CBCI),
told the Vatican’s Fides news agency.
Tensions between the south-Asian neighbours have surged
dramatically since a suicide car bomb attack by the Pakistan-based
Jaish-e-Mohammed Islamist militant group on Feb. 14 in
India-administered Kashmir that killed at least 40 Indian paramilitary police.
India launched an air raid against militants in Pakistani
territory on Feb 26, saying it had intelligence that Jaish was planning more
attacks.
The following day both India and Pakistan said they shot
down each other's fighter jets, with Pakistan capturing an Indian pilot.
Pakistani Church
Pakistani Archbishop Joseph Arshad, the Bishop
of Islamabad-Rawalpindi urged leaders of both nations “to resume peace talks
and resolve all issues through dialogue”.
"The people of Pakistan and India want peace," the
archbishop, the president of the Pakistan Catholic Bishops' Conference (PCBC),
told AsiaNews.
The Indian retaliatory air strike near the town of Balakot,
some 50 kilometres from the Indo-Pakistani border was the deepest cross-border
raid launched by India since the last of its three wars with Pakistan in 1971,
with world powers urging restraint.
Arch. Arshad urged the international community to
help diffuse the situation that is leading to loss of life and the ruin of the
region.
Despite difficulties, he said that everyone should
seek every possible path to avoid war, which, he said, always lead
to sorrow and grave consequences for all. He urged for prayers that the
Almighty God grant wisdom to the leaders of the nations to resolve their
differences so that peace and prosperity may prevail, leading to a better
future for the people of the region and in the world.
Pakistan's prime minister, Imran Khan, pledged
on Thursday his country would release a captured Indian fighter pilot,
a move that could help defuse the most serious confrontation in two decades
between the rival nations.
Fresh fighting was reported on Thursday along the so-called
Line of Control that divides disputed Kashmir between the two rivals. India's
army says Pakistani soldiers are targeting nearly two dozen Indian forward
points with mortar and gunfire.
Terrorism allegation
India accuses Pakistan of allowing militant groups to
operate on its territory and says Pakistani security agencies played a role in
the attack on the Indian paramilitary police. Pakistan denies it provides
safe haven to militants.
In December 2001, Jaish fighters, along with members of
another Pakistan-based militant group, Lashkar-e-Taiba, launched an attack on
India's parliament, which almost led to a fourth war.
Kashmir is a Muslim-majority region at the heart of decades
of hostility between India and Pakistan. The neighbours both rule parts of the
region while claiming the entire territory as theirs.
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