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Pope scotches resignation talk, plans more foreign trips By Catherine MARCIANO Vatican City (AFP) Sept 1, 2021
Pope Francis has dismissed media reports that he might resign following his surgery earlier this year, saying in an interview broadcast Wednesday that it "didn't even cross my mind". As if to prove his energy and commitment to the job, the 84-year-old announced further foreign trips, to Greece, Cyprus and Malta, and confirmed he hoped to attend the COP26 climate conference in November. "I don't know where they got it from last week that I was going to resign!" he told Spanish radio Cope in a wide-ranging interview, referring to media reports. He said that "it didn't even cross my mind" to follow the path of his predecessor, Benedict XVI, who in 2013 became the first pontiff to resign in 600 years. "Whenever a pope is ill, there is always a breeze or a hurricane of conclave," he added, referring to the meeting of cardinals called to elect a new pope. Francis underwent an operation on July 4 after suffering from a type of diverticulitis, an inflammation of pockets that develop in the lining of the intestine. Asked how he was feeling, the pope said, laughing: "I'm still alive." "Now I can eat everything, which was not possible before with the diverticula," the pontiff said. "I still have the post-operative medications, because the brain has to register that it has 33 centimetres less intestine... But besides that, I have a normal life." - 'No script' - The pope is due to visit Hungary and Slovakia on September 12-15, and the official programme includes a meeting with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Asked what he would like to say to Orban, whose anti-migration views contrast with his own, Francis appeared to avoid the question. "I don't know if I am going to meet him. I know that authorities will come to greet me," he said. He added: "One of my ways is not to go around with a script: when I am in front of a person, I look him in the eyes and let things come out." He gave no dates for his planned visits to Greece, Cyprus and Malta, but said he was preparing for the climate talks in Glasgow. "It all depends on how I feel at the time. But in fact, my speech is already being prepared, and the plan is to be there," said Francis, who has been outspoken on the need to tackle global warming. COP26 is the biggest climate summit since the 2015 Paris negotiation, which the pope said "was the summum (pinnacle) in becoming globally aware". "Then what happened? Fear set in," he said. "And slowly, in the subsequent meetings, they went backwards. I hope that Glasgow will now raise its sights a bit and bring us more in line." - China is not easy - In his interview with radio Cope, the pope also defended the Vatican's controversial agreement with China that allows both parties a say in appointing Catholic bishops. "China is not easy, but I am convinced that we should not give up dialogue," he said. China's roughly 12 million Catholics have for decades been split between a government-run association, whose clergy were chosen by the atheist Communist Party, and an unofficial underground church loyal to the Vatican. The 2018 agreement, which was renewed last year, has sparked strident criticism in the United States, which said it has failed to shield Chinese Catholics from persecution. "You can be deceived in dialogue, you can make mistakes, all that... but it is the way. Closed-mindedness is never the way," the pope said. "What has been achieved so far in China was at least dialogue... some concrete things like the appointment of new bishops, slowly... but these are also steps that can be questionable." He noted the efforts made by Cardinal Agostino Casaroli, the Vatican's top diplomat under Popes Paul VI and John-Paul II, to build bridges with then Soviet states in eastern Europe. "Slowly, slowly, slowly, he was achieving reserves of diplomatic relations which in the end meant appointing new bishops and taking care of God's faithful people," the pope said.
Pope to visit Greece, Cyprus, Malta The 84-year-old has already scheduled a visit to Slovakia September 12-15 after a brief stop in Hungary to celebrate a mass in the capital Budapest. Asked by Spain's Cope radio whether he may also travel to Spain to coincide with the Holy Year in the northwestern city of Santiago de Compostela, the pontiff said he could not rule it out. "But my choice so far of travel to Europe is the small countries. First it was Albania and then all the countries that were small," he said. "Now Slovakia is on the programme, then Cyprus, Greece and Malta. I wanted to take that option: first to the smaller countries... "And if I go to Santiago, I go to Santiago but not to Spain, let's be clear," ruling out an official trip to the country. The pope, who has been outspoken on the need to tackle climate change, also confirmed he hoped to attend the COP26 conference in Scotland in November -- and urged participants to aim high. "It all depends on how I feel at the time. But in fact, my speech is already being prepared, and the plan is to be there," he said. It is the biggest climate summit since the 2015 Paris negotiation, which Francis said "was the summum (pinnacle) in becoming globally aware". "Then what happened? Fear set in," Francis said. - 'No script' - "And slowly, in the subsequent meetings, they went backwards. I hope that Glasgow will now raise its sights a bit and bring us more in line." The official programme for his trip to Hungary includes a meeting with President Janos Ader and Prime Minister Viktor Orban on his arrival. Asked what he would like to say to Orban, whose anti-migration views contrast with his own, Francis appeared to avoid the question. "I don't know if I am going to meet him. I know that authorities will come to greet me... "One of my ways is not to go around with a script: when I am in front of a person, I look him in the eyes and let things come out. "It doesn't even occur to me to think about what I'm going to say if I'm with him, those potential future situations that don't help me."
In 'pain and anger', Pentagon looks to lessons of 20-year war Washington (AFP) Sept 1, 2021 US defense chiefs said they felt pain and anger Wednesday and would humbly study the lessons of the Afghan war after leaving the country under control of the Taliban, whom they fought for 20 years. In their first public appearances since US forces departed from Afghanistan on Monday, Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin and Joint Chiefs Chair General Mark Milley reflected somberly on a conflict that took the lives of 2,461 American troops, including 13 in the final days of the airlift at Kabul airport. ... read more
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