Several churches in the Chilean capital of Santiago were attacked last week, just days before the Pope started his tour of the country.
Two churches were set on fire and a firebomb was thrown at another.
Perpetrators left a note threatening Pope Francis, saying the next bombs would be “in your cassock”. Police defused two other homemade devices.
The attacks came amid increasing tensions ahead of the four-day papal visit. The Pope was expected to face protests from indigenous groups as well as over the issue of clerical sex abuse.
Cardinal Ricardo Ezzati of Santiago, who visited the churches that were targeted, said: “We are deeply hurt by these events that contradict the spirit of peace that inspires the Pope’s visit.”
Chile’s outgoing president Michelle Bachelet said the events were “very strange, because it is not something that can be identified with one specific group”.
The note threatening the Pope was written in Spanish, but with “x”s replacing all letters that signify grammatical gender, a practice typical among activists on the radical left.
The perpetrators said they would attack the Pope’s “disgusting morals” with the “fire of combat”. “Freedom to all the political prisoners of the world! Free Wallmapu [an indigenous territory]! Autonomy and resistance! Pope Francis the next bombs will be in your cassock,” the note said.
At another church, graffiti was left questioning the cost of the trip when “the poor are dying”. Pope Francis was scheduled to visit Chile this week and depart for Peru late Thursday afternoon.
Euthanasia law ‘abused to kill people without consent’
Catholics in Belgium have expressed alarm about the country’s euthanasia law being abused to kill patients without legal safeguards.
Auxiliary Bishop Jean Kockerols of Mechelen-Brussels said “not just the Church’s hierarchy, but doctors and medical professionals as well” were concerned.
Last week the Belgian Church’s Cathobel news agency published an article saying the Federal Euthanasia Control and Evaluation Commission violated its statutes by failing to refer suspected legal abuses for investigation. “It’s shocking that, 15 years since its creation, this commission has not referred a single file to prosecutors or condemned a single doctor,” the report said.
It noted that a commission member had recently resigned when the case of a dementia patient, killed without consent, was not referred to prosecutors.
The commission had failed to refer complaints by the family of a 38-year-old autism sufferer who was killed without required documentation after ending a love affair. Euthanasia and assisted suicide were legalised in Belgium in 2002. Euthanasia deaths are increasing by 27 per cent annually, according to health ministry data.
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