Pope appeals for promotion of
dialogue in Burkina Faso
Displaced people wait for help at a village in Dablo area, Burkina Faso. |
Pope Francis prays for the victims of terror attacks in the
West African nation of Burkina Faso and appeals for the promotion of
interreligious dialogue and harmony.
By Linda Bordoni
Pope Francis says his thoughts are with the people of
Burkina Faso which is “suffering from recurrent episodes of violence, and where
a recent attack killed almost one hundred people”.
Speaking during the weekly General Audience in St. Peter’s
Square, the Pope made a powerful appeal to authorities to protect vulnerable
civilians and step up their efforts to find a solution to the violence.
“I encourage civil and religious authorities and all those
motivated by good will to multiply their efforts, in the spirit of the Abu
Dhabi Document on Human Fraternity, to promote interreligious dialogue and
harmony”, he said.
The Pope also entrusted the victims of the attacks to God
and prayed for the wounded and the many displaced people suffering from “these
tragedies”.
Pope Francis’ appeal comes on the heels of a deadly
attack by fundamentalist Islamic militants in which scores of people were
killed and injured.
Al Qaeda affiliates
The Jama’at Nasr al-Islam wal Muslimin (JNIM), that ambushed
a gendarme-escorted workers convoy from the Boungou gold mine, near Nassougou,
is a regional affiliate of al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and has been active
in Burkina Faso since 2017.
The attack comes as several West African countries
battle Islamist insurgents who are increasingly disrupting business and forcing
governments to abandon large swathes of territory. The raids have spread from
Sahel countries such as Mali, Niger and Burkina Faso toward the borders with
coastal nations, including Ghana and Ivory Coast
It is not the first time that Pope Francis has prayed for
victims of attacks in Burkina Faso. In May 2019 he expressed his pain over an
attack by gunmen on a Catholic church in Burkina Faso after Sunday Mass in
which six people were killed, including a priest.
Agreement between Holy See and Burkina Faso
In July an agreement was signed between Burkina Faso and the
Holy See in which “the two parties, although safeguarding the independence and
autonomy that are their own, commit to collaborate for the moral, spiritual and
material wellbeing of the human person and for the promotion of the common
good”.
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