Card Ranjith backs Sri
Lanka’s anti-drug campaign
A haul of narcotics seized in Colombo was destroyed by the Sri Lanka Police Narcotics Bureau on April 1, 2019 |
The Archbishop of Colombo organized a march and protest
against drug crimes on March 31. President Sirisena and Prime Minister
Wikcremasinghe also addressed the participants.
By Robin Gomes
A prominent Catholic Churchman in Sri Lanka is urging the
faithful to rally around the government’s fight against the menace of drug
abuse.
It is "our duty to support the president in an effort
to protect our children from the danger of drugs,” said Cardinal Malcolm
Ranjith, Archbishop of Colombo, at an anti-narcotics march and rally he
promoted in the capital, Colombo, on Sunday, March 31.
At the end of Sunday Mass, 3 parishes, including children
studying the catechism, raised placards and banners and marched in silence and
converged on Vystwyke Park in Kotahena for the rally. More than 2,000
people, including dozens of Catholics and Buddhists as well as local clergy,
joined the initiative titled, “Say no to drugs.”
President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil
Wikcremasinghe were at his side on the stage in Vystwyke Park in Kotahena.
Drug problem
Recently, the president launched a campaign against drug
trafficking, reintroducing the death penalty. "We are strengthening
the laws and will go for strict punishments," the president said adding he
would set a date for the resumption of execution.
If we do not act immediately, the drug threat will enter our
economic system,” warned Card. Ranjith at the rally.
Sirisena said a special event is being organized on April 3
for schoolchildren and others to pledge support for the battle against illicit
drugs.
Prime Minister Wikcremasinghe went further. "We need
help from neighbouring countries. We cannot do this alone," he said.
Card. Ranjith requested the "president to punish the
culprits who are behind this drug mafia without fear." "Drug
dealers target schoolchildren and the youth, so,” he said, “we should protect
our future generations."
The island nation has become a major transit point for
traffickers and it suffers from widespread domestic drug addiction.
Sri Lankan authorities destroyed over 769 kilograms of
narcotics on Monday and earlier in January, US$108 million worth of drugs from
a single intercepted shipment was burned.
A phone hotline has been established for members of the
public to report drug dealers.
Cannabis and heroin are the most widely used drugs in Sri
Lanka and authorities have expressed concern that the island nation could
also become a major transit point for international traffickers.
Police have arrested more than 50 people on trafficking
charges since the middle of last year.
Statistics of the National Dangerous Drugs Control Board
show that arrests for drug crimes have soared in the past six years.
The Church and the death penalty
While supporting the fight against drug abuse and
drug-related crimes, the Catholic Church teaching, however, is against the
death penalty.
In August last year, Pope Francis allowed a revision in the
Catechism of the Catholic Church making capital punishment inadmissible.
Earlier, the Catechism did not exclude recourse to the death
penalty in “very rare, if not practically nonexistent” circumstances.
Soon after the revision in the Catechism of the Catholic
Church on capital punishment, the Catholic Bishops' Conference of Sri Lanka
(CBCSL) issued a statement fully endorsing the stand while vowing to fight the
menace of drug-related crimes.
While capital punishment has not been implemented since
1976, there are about 1,300 prisoners on death row in Sri Lanka, including 48
for drug convictions.
Religious leaders, including Catholic bishops, priests, nuns
and laymen, have protested Sirisena’s move to end a 43-year old moratorium on
the death penalty. They have also condemned the increased use of illegal
drugs among schoolchildren in Sri Lanka.
In preparation for Sunday’s event, Card. Ranjith had urged
all parishes and institutions to stage silent demonstrations denouncing all
drug peddlers. (Source: UNANEWS, AsiaNews)
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