SA Bishops appeal for
peaceful and fair elections
(FILE) Former South African President Nelson Mandela with his wife Winnie Mandela on 13 Feb 1998. On 8 May 2019 South Africans go to the polls again (ANSA) |
As South Africans head to the polls on 8 May, the Catholic
Bishops say the exercise of the right to vote is both a sacred and moral duty.
The invite their compatriots to remember that many people suffered and died for
them to attain universal suffrage.
English Africa Service - Vatican City
South African Catholic Bishops Conference (SACBC) President,
Sithembele Sipuka has appealed for peace in the country which has seen an
electoral campaign marred by Xenophobic attacks.
Violence generates an accumulation of hate
“Fellow South Africans, brothers and sisters, we beg
you in the name of our common humanity and spiritual values to behave
peacefully before, during and after the elections. Each citizen has a “grave
responsibility to create the environment of tolerance and acceptance which
enables every South African to support and vote for the party that they choose,
without fear of violence and intimidation,” said the Bishop of Umtata as he
quoted from a 2019 Pastoral letter written by the Bishops to the Faithful.
Bishop Sipuka has condemned all acts of violence emphasising
that violence has only brought about “the accumulation of hate and
ruin, not the reconciliation of the contending parties.”
Politicians: Desist from inflammatory statements
To political parties, the Bishop asks them to refrain from
intimidation tactics and hate speech.
“We also challenge the political leaders ‘to refrain
from inflammatory, intimidating and inappropriate statements,’ ‘to take
visible, decisive action when candidates and their supporters are involved in
acts of intolerance, intimidation, harassment and disturbance,’ and to ensure
that they respect the electoral process and subsequent results,” Bishop Sipuka
said.
The Southern African Bishops also urge South Africans to
pray earnestly and intercede for the nation during the upcoming electoral
activities underlying the importance of prayer, “before we vote, as we vote,
and after we vote for the common good.”
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