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Pope: Safety of Libya Citizens Utmost Concern

Tuesday, 22 Mar 2011 10:13 AM

By Edward Pentin

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Pope Benedict XVI said he was following the military campaign in Libya “with great apprehension” over the weekend as reports emerged today that some Vatican officials fear the conflict may turn into a protracted war with civilian casualties.

Addressing pilgrims in Rome on March 20, the Pope appealed “to those who have political and military responsibilities to concern themselves above all with the safety and well-being of the citizens, guaranteeing access to humanitarian aid.”
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Pope Benedict XVI


Allied forces, made up mainly of U.S., British, and French military, began a series of strikes against Libya's air defenses March 19 as part of a United Nations-approved effort to protect pro-democracy protesters from retaliation by Col. Moammar Gadhafi. Last week, Gadhafi threatened to attack the protesters, mostly located in and around Benghazi in eastern Libya, “without mercy.”

The Pope said he was following “the latest events with great apprehension” and praying for those involved in "the dramatic situation." He added that he was also praying that "peace and harmony would soon come to Libya and the entire North African region."

As is the case with most international conflicts and prudential matters of policy, the Pope stopped short of explicitly taking sides. The Vatican says, at least for now, it has no more to say officially about the military action beyond what the Pope said on Sunday.

According to some reports in the Italian media, the Vatican recognizes the legitimacy of humanitarian air raids against Gadhafi's forces. Similar to its position on the war in Afghanistan, the Holy See acknowledges that such intervention may be necessary. But unidentified diplomatic sources cited in Famiglia Cristiana, an Italian Catholic weekly, also claim the Vatican is unhappy the international community failed to pursue dialogue with the Libyan regime before taking military action.

It adds that some officials are reportedly concerned that the goals and interests of the allied forces are unclear, and that the military action could turn into a protracted war. If that happens, they fear that humanitarian concerns “will take a back seat.”

The Bishop to Tripoli, Giovanni Innocenzo Martinelli, has explicitly voiced his opposition to the military action. “War does not solve anything,” he said in an interview March 21, adding that it “is reawakening sad memories about the Libyans' recent history.

“I keep repeating that we need to cease shooting immediately and begin mediation straight away to resolve the crisis peacefully. Why have diplomatic means not been considered?”

In another interview with the Italian news agency ANSA, Martinelli said he doubted that the military intervention would stop Gadhafi's forces. The bishop, who is reported to know the colonel well, said he hoped Gadhafi would surrender, but that he didn't think he would do so. “On the contrary,” he said, “I think the use of force will accentuate a reaction. In my opinion, the go-ahead has been given to the wrong strategy.”

Italy's bishops, however, have been more supportive of the action. Their official newspaper, Avvenire, said in an editorial that the airstrikes are a “real act of war, but a response to a war that a bloody regime has unleashed on its own people.” Noting that the war was taking place “on Italy's doorstep,” it said that it was being waged for “noble humanitarian” reasons but “is not without risks and shadows.”

Cardinal Angelo Bagnasco, head of the Italian bishops, said: "We hope that everything takes place quickly, fairly, and equitably, and with respect to saving many poor people who right now are facing serious difficulties and misfortunes.” The cardinal said the “Gospel shows the duty to intervene to save those in need. If someone attacks my mother who is in a wheelchair, I have a duty to intervene.” Without peace and justice in the world, he added, “life is wretched.”

The church's official teaching is that the international community has a “moral obligation” to intervene on behalf of those groups “whose very survival is threatened or whose basic human rights are seriously violated.”

But it stresses that military action must always be a last resort. “States cannot remain indifferent,” the church's teaching states. “On the contrary, if all other means should prove ineffective, it is legitimate and even obligatory to take concrete measures to disarm the aggressor.”

It also says any measures must be carried out “in full respect of international law” (the military operation in Libya won the backing of a U.N. resolution last Thursday), and that the International Criminal Court should punish anyone found to be responsible for war crimes.


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