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Pope calls for unity against militant atrocities

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Pope Francis has in his Christmas message on Friday at the St. Peter’s Basilica in Vatican City, urged the World to unite to end atrocities by Islamist militants.
The Pope, marking the third Christmas since his election in 2013, said this has become imperative because the militants were causing immense suffering in many countries.
He said the World must unite for an end to the civil wars in Syria and Libya.
“May the attention of the international community be unanimously directed to ending the atrocities which in those countries, as well as in Iraq, Libya, Yemen and sub-Saharan Africa.
“Even now reap numerous victims, cause immense suffering and do not even spare the historical and cultural patrimony of entire peoples,” he said.
He was clearly referring to Islamic State militants who have carried out numerous attacks in those countries and destroyed many cultural heritage sites.
“In October, Islamic State militants blew up the Arch of Triumph, a jewel in the exquisite collection of ruins in the Syrian oasis city of Palmyra.
The pontiff condemned recent “brutal acts of terrorism,” including the Nov. 13 attacks by Islamist militants that killed 130 people in Paris, and the downing of a Russian plane over Egypt’s Sinai peninsula that killed 224 people on Oct. 31. Both were claimed by Islamic State.

“Only God’s mercy can free humanity from the many forms of evil, at times monstrous evil, which selfishness spawns in our midst.
“The grace of God can convert hearts and offer mankind a way out of humanly insoluble situations,’’ he said.
He called for peace between Israelis and Palestinians in the area where Jesus was born.
“Where peace is born, there is no longer room for hatred and for war.
“Yet precisely where the incarnate Son of God came into the world, tensions and violence persist, and peace remains a gift to be implored and built,” he said.
He asked God to bring consolation and strength to Christians who are being persecuted around the world and called for peace in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi, South Sudan and Ukraine.
The Pope noted that the human dignity of far too many people around the world was trampled on, including that of refugees and migrants.
“Even today great numbers of men and women are deprived of their human dignity, and like the child Jesus, suffer cold, poverty and rejection.
“May our closeness today be felt by those who are most vulnerable, especially child soldiers, women who suffer violence, and the victims of human trafficking and the drug trade,’’ he said.
Meanwhile, the Pope’s words were echoed by the Archbishop of Canterbury, in his Christmas Day address, in which the leader of the world’s 80 million Anglicans said Christians in the Middle East faced extinction at the hands of Islamic State.
Archbishop Justin Welby said IS was “igniting a trail of fear, violence, hatred and determined oppression”.
He branded the group “a Herod of today”, in a reference to the ruthless king of Judea at the time of the birth of Jesus Christ.
“They hate difference, whether it is Muslims who think differently, Yazidis or Christians, and because of them the Christians face elimination in the very region in which Christian faith began,’’ he said.

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