Pope planning state visit to Lebanon and South Sudan

Pope Francis promised in his Christmas messages on Thursday to visit Lebanon and South Sudan as soon as he could.

The pope traditionally mentions countries in his Christmas Day message, but he singled out those two nations with Christmas Eve messages because of difficulties each has faced this year.

“I am deeply troubled to see the suffering and anguish that has sapped the native resilience and resourcefulness of the Land of the Cedars,” Francis said, referring to Lebanon, which has been struggling with a deep economic crisis and the aftermath of the Beirut port explosion on Aug. 4 that killed about 200 people.

Victims are still awaiting the result of an investigation into blast the ruined a swathe of the capital.

Francis expressed “my affection for the beloved people of Lebanon, whom I hope to visit as soon as possible”.

He said he hoped the country could “stand apart from conflicts and regional tensions”.

He is already due to visit Iraq March 5-8.

In a separate message written jointly with Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby, who is the spiritual leader of the worldwide Anglican communion, and Church of Scotland moderator Martin Fair, the three church leaders committed to making a previously delayed trip to majority Christian South Sudan “as things return to normalcy.”

The message was addressed to South Sudan’s leaders, former rivals who formed a national unity government in February after years of civil war ravaged the oil-producing yet poor nation.

A U.N. report said this month that implementing various aspects of a peace accord had stalled in the country, where floods in September displaced hundreds of thousands of people.

(This story corrects typographical error in first paragraph.)

Source: Reuters

 

The Liberum

The subtitle of The Liberum ("the voice of the people is the voice of God") reflects the concept that the collective opinions and will of the people carry divine importance. They embody truth and wisdom, particularly in a non-partisan arena that profiles itself as a marketplace of free ideas and thoughts.
See full bio >
The Liberum runs on your donation. Fight with us for a free society.
Donation Form (#6)

More articles you might like

Black March 2025: Justice, memory, and the protection of Syria’s Alawites

In Syria’s coastal regions, particularly Latakia, Tartus, and parts of Hama, between 7 and 9 […]

The day I realised new chapters don’t begin with certainty

We have romanticised new chapters to the point that we expect them to arrive wrapped […]

The day after the supreme leader died: A Post-Westphalian Levant

Empires rarely announce their endings; they fracture. The assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei […]

Growing up in a count

Before we understood where we stood on a map, we understood what was taken away.  […]

The killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader caused a geopolitical earthquake in the Middle East

A dramatic escalation in Middle East tensions transformed into outright war when U.S. and Israeli […]

The discipline paradox: Ramadan to the Eye of the Outsider

Before Qur’anic verses were recited, the Arab body knew the mathematics of scarcity. It walked […]