Friday, December 1, 2017

Pope Francis uses term Rohingya in Bangladesh meeting - BBC News


30/11/2017
Pope Francis uses term Rohingya in Bangladesh meeting
The Pope's comment to the refugees was made in an improvised remark
Pope Francis has met a group of Muslim Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh and referred to them by name for the first time on his Asian visit.
The Pope told a group of 16 refugees at an interfaith meeting in the capital Dhaka: "The presence of God today is also called Rohingya."
He refrained from using the term on his earlier visit to Myanmar, which does not regard Rohingya as an ethnic group.
Some 620,000 Rohingya refugees have fled Myanmar since August.
The Pope had been criticised by rights groups for not using the term in Myanmar, whose military has been accused of ethnic cleansing by the United Nations. He had used the term before his visit.
Myanmar's government rejects the term Rohingya, labelling the community "Bengalis". It says they migrated illegally from Bangladesh so should not be listed as one of the country's ethnic groups.
What you need to know about Rohingya crisis
Myanmar's persecuted minority in pictures
Pope Francis' comment to refugees in Dhaka was made in an improvised remark and was not in his speech to the interfaith meeting.
"In the name of all of those who have persecuted you, hurt you, I ask forgiveness," Pope Francis told the refugees. "I appeal to your large hearts to give us the forgiveness that we are asking."
Rights groups had urged the Pope to use the term Rohingya to back the community.
However, the Catholic Church in Myanmar had told him the term could cause difficulties for Catholics.
Media captionRohingya girls say they were forced into sex work in Bangladesh
The number of Catholics in Bangladesh is very small. The 350,000-strong community makes up 0.2% of the population.
Why the worry over one word?
How Pope avoided angry reaction in Myanmar
Earlier, the Pope ordained 16 priests at an outdoor Mass in Dhaka's Suhrawardy Udyan park.
He told the crowd: "I know that many of you came from afar, for a trip for more than two days. Thank you for your generosity. This indicates the love you have for the Church."

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