Dead nun’s congregation should get compensation: Court

The Madras High Court has allowed a Women’s Religious Congregation to claim compensation for a nun, who died in a road accident 16 years ago.

The Madurai bench of the court asked Tamil Nadu State Transport Corporation to pay the compensation, dismissing their argument that the congregation was not the legal heir of the nun.

The Motor Accidents Claim Tribunal in 2009 ruled in favour of Auxilum Sisters’ Congregation after a member of the congregation was hit and killed by a bus owned by the corporation in 2002. However, the corporation appealed against the tribunal verdict in the High Court arguing that the nun had no heirs, and no dependents.

Justice A M Basheer Ahamed on June 2 dismissed the appeal saying that the congregation suffered loss due to the death of the voluntary worker in the accident.

The transport corporation contended that the relationship between the deceased nun and her congregation was that of employee and employer and the employer cannot be held to a legal heir to claim compensation.

Sports on Sundays OK, except when used to skip Mass, says Vatican

A new Vatican document cautions against the dangers of highly competitive children’s sports, political and economic pressures on athletes to win “at all costs” and the unsportsman like or violent behaviour of fans.

The document on sports also calls on every group or institution sponsoring sports programs to have expert-guided child protection policies in place and it urged bishops, parishes and lay Catholics to be proactive in helping “humanize” sports.

The 52-page document high-lighted the church’s positive view of the important values inherent to sport and blew the whistle on the growing threats in the sports world, including corruption, over-commercialization, manipulation and abuse.

The document — meant for all Catholics and “people of good-will” — also was an invitation to the church to offer itself as a valuable resource, partner and leader in safeguarding the dignity of the human person and all of creation.

In fact, it made specific reference to the need to protect the environment when it comes to hosting sporting events… ensuring “that they are treated in a morally appropriate way and not as mere objects.”

Priests, parishioners buried in Benue, Catholics protest nationwide

The two Catholic priests and 17 parishioners slain by suspected herdsmen on April 24 in Benue State were buried on May 22 amid nationwide peaceful protest by the Catholic faithful. The two priests, Rev Fathers Joseph Gor and Felix Tyolaha, and 17 members of the congregation while killed during an early morning mass at St Ignatius Catholic Church at Ayar Mbalom in the Gwer East Local Govern-ment Area of Benue State. The 19 were given a mass burial on May 22 at Se Sugh Maria Pilgrimage Centre, Ayati Ikpayongo in Benue State.

In attendance was the Vice-President Yemi Osinbajo, who conveyed President Muhammadu Buhari’s condolence message to the Catholic Church and the people of Benue. Osinbajo, while lamenting the killing, said though nothing could be done to restore the lives of the slain, “we can ensure justice for them by apprehending and punishing the assailants.” The Christian Association of Nigeria called on Buhari to suspend his second term ambition, till he had addressed and stopped the killings by herdsmen.

Catholic faithful across the country embarked on a peaceful protests in compliance with the directive by the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Nigeria.

The Bishop of the Catholic Diocese of Abeo-kuta, Ogun State, Oluka-yode Odetoyinbo, and his counterpart in Jalingo, Taraba State, Dr Charles Hammawa, demanded Buhari’s resignation for failing in his responsibility of protecting lives and property of Nigerians.

Speaking during a requiem mass at St Anne Catholic Church, Ibara, Ogun State, Odetoyinbo noted that after the April 24 attack in Benue, more people had been killed by marauding herdsmen across the country with the government feeling helpless.