INDIA FAVORABLE TO POPE’S VISIT, BISHOPS SAY

Three Indian cardinals met Prime Minister Narendra Modi to discuss a possible visit to the country by Pope Francis.

Cardinal Baselios Cleemis, president of the Indian bishops’ conference, Cardinal Oswald Gracias of Bombay who head India’s largest archdiocese, and Cardinal George Alencherry, head of the Syro-Malabar Church, met with the Prime Minister Feb. 7 in New Delhi.

“The Prime Minister informed [us] that the government holds a favorable attitude toward the Pope’s visit to India,” the bishop’s press release said without giving any further details of the meeting.

Federal External Affairs Minister Sushma Swaraj had extended an invitation to the Pope to visit India when she visited the Vatican during Saint Mother Teresa of Calcutta’s canonization in September 2016.

Pope Francis had said in October 2016 that he would “almost certainly” visit India in 2017. A source close to the Prime Minister’s office told ucanews.com that the meeting was of a “confidential nature” as it discussed sensitive issues such as government steps to secure freedom for kidnapped Father Thomas Uzhunallil.

APPEALS FOR PEACE AMID DUTERTE’S CALL FOR ‘ALL-OUT WAR’

Church groups in the Philippine expressed hope that peace talks between the government and communist rebels will continue despite President Rodrigo Duterte’s call for an “allout war” against insurgents.

“The president should listen to the people’s call for peace,” said retired Bishop Deogracias Iniguez of Kalookan, one of the leaders of the Citizens Alliance for Just Peace, on Feb. 8.

Archbishop Antonio Ledesma of Cagayan de Oro, convenor of the Philippine Ecumenical Peace Platform also appealed to the government and the rebels to “resume the peace talks.”

President Duterte ordered the termination of formal talks with the rebels, whom he labeled as “terrorists,” after the Communist Party of the Philippines said it would end its unilateral ceasefire effective Feb. 10.

The rebel group cited alleged human rights abuses committed by the Philippine military and the government’s failure to release political prisoners as reasons for lifting the truce.

Formal peace negotiations, which have been suspended for several years, opened in Norway in August last year following Duterte’s election.

The president, however, scrapped the negotiations that aimed to end nearly five decades of conflict after the rebels reportedly made unacceptable demands despite government concessions.

Duterte said he had “walked the extra mile” to bring peace, but his efforts were not reciprocated by the rebels who took advantage of the talks to recruit fighters and extort money from businessmen.

Following the breakdown of the talks, armed clashes between New People’s Army guerrillas and government troops led to the death of at least three soldiers and the arrest of several suspected rebels. ”

Negotiations should not be bogged down by accusations and counter accusations,” said Archbishop Ledesma, who called for threshing out issues “in principled dialogue over the negotiating table.”

FOLLOW TERESA’S EXAMPLE TO DEFEND UNBORN : POPE

A culture that protects life from conception to natural death is the only answer to the idea that some lives are expendable due to inconvenience or population control, Pope Francis said.

Following in the path of St Teresa of Calcutta, Christians are called to stand up and defend the lives of the unborn and the vulnerable, the Pope said on February 5 in his remarks after the recitation of the Angelus prayer. “We are close to and pray together for the children who are in danger with the termination of pregnancy, as well as for people who are at the end of their lives; every life is sacred,” he said.

The Pope commemorated the Day for Life celebration promoted by the Italian bishops’ conference. The theme of the 2017 commemoration was “Women and men for life in the footsteps of St Teresa of Calcutta.”

Citing Mother Teresa’s call to fight for life, the Pope joined the Italian bishops’ appeal for “courageous educational action in favour of human life.”