ֱ

Pope Leo receives Palestinian president Abbas at Vatican

Pope Leo receives Palestinian president Abbas at Vatican
Pope Leo XIV during a meeting with Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas in The Vatican. (Vatican Media/AFP)
Short Url
Updated 56 min 56 sec ago

Pope Leo receives Palestinian president Abbas at Vatican

Pope Leo receives Palestinian president Abbas at Vatican
  • Abbas and Leo spoke by telephone in July but Thursday was their first in-person meeting since the American took over as head of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics in May

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo XIV held his first meeting with Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas on Thursday, where the Vatican said they discussed the “urgent need” to help the civilian population in Gaza.

The visit comes almost a month into a fragile ceasefire between Hamas and Israel, following two years of war triggered by the Palestinian group’s October 7, 2023, attack.

Abbas is the longtime head of the Palestinian Authority, which exerts limited control over parts of the West Bank. His Fatah movement is the rival to Hamas, which took control of Gaza in 2007.

Abbas and Leo spoke by telephone in July but Thursday was their first in-person meeting since the American took over as head of the world’s 1.4 billion Catholics in May.

“During the cordial talks, it was recognized that there is an urgent need to provide assistance to the civilian population in Gaza and to end the conflict by pursuing a two-state solution,” the Vatican said in a statement afterwards.

It noted that the meeting came 10 years after the Holy See formally recognized the state of Palestine through an agreement signed in 2015.

Abbas met several times with Leo’s predecessor, Pope Francis, who died in April.

In the final months of his pontificate, Francis hardened his rhetoric against Israel’s assault on Gaza, but his successor has so far adopted a more measured tone.

Leo has expressed his solidarity with Gaza and denounced the forced displacement of Palestinians, but said the Holy See could not describe what was happening as a “genocide.”

On Wednesday afternoon, Abbas laid flowers at Francis’s tomb at the Rome basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore.

“I cannot forget what he did for Palestine and the Palestinian people,” Abbas told reporters.

In 2014, then-Israeli president Shimon Peres and Abbas joined a prayer for peace with Pope Francis at the Vatican, planting an olive tree together.

Abbas will on Friday meet with Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.


Georgia charges top opposition leaders over 'coup plot'

Georgia charges top opposition leaders over 'coup plot'
Updated 15 sec ago

Georgia charges top opposition leaders over 'coup plot'

Georgia charges top opposition leaders over 'coup plot'
  • Ex-president Mikheil Saakashvili, who is serving a 12.5-year sentence for abuse of office, is among them
  • Georgia has been mired in political crisis since last year’s disputed parliamentary elections

TBILISI: Georgia on Thursday charged eight top opposition figures including jailed ex-president Mikheil Saakashvili with plotting to overthrow the government, sabotage and aiding foreign powers, in an intensifying crackdown on opponents.
Those targeted slammed the ruling Georgian Dream party for escalating an intense crackdown on dissent in the Black Sea nation, in what one branded a “war on democracy.”
Georgia has been mired in political crisis since last year’s disputed parliamentary elections, which the opposition says were rigged in favor of Georgian Dream.
Thursday’s proceedings target Saakashvili — who is serving a 12.5-year sentence for abuse of office, a conviction denounced by rights groups as politically motivated — as well as a string of opposition leaders, Prosecutor General Giorgi Gvarakidze told reporters.
The most serious charges — “assisting a foreign state ... in hostile activities” — carries a maximum prison sentence of 15 years.
Many are already behind bars on prosecutions widely seen as political retribution, including opposition leaders Nika Gvaramia, Nika Melia and Elene Khoshtaria.
Gvaramia dismissed the charges as “absurd political theater,” and accused Georgian Dream of “waging war on democracy.”
“The oligarchy must fall,” he wrote on social media.
Another of those charged, Zurab Japaridze, a leader of the Girchi party, said the government “has crossed the final line into authoritarianism.”
Khoshtaria of the Droa party vowed: “No intimidation will stop us from defending Georgia’s European future.”
Prosecutor Gvarakidze alleged the politicians had “engaged in activities directed against Georgia’s constitutional order and national security” by providing information about energy and defense to Western governments that helped them sanction Georgian officials.
He also alleged that several of them had sought to “radicalize street protests” following elections in October last year by calling for the overthrow of the government and the seizure of state buildings.
Saakashvili, a reformist pro-Western ex-president, is accused of urging his supporters via social media “to resist and topple the regime.”
The European Union has heavily criticized Tbilisi’s democratic backsliding in recent years.
Last month, Georgian Dream asked the Constitutional Court to ban the country’s three main opposition forces.
The party, in power since 2012, originally cast itself as liberal and pro-European, but has faced accusations of drifting toward Russia and derailing Georgia’s bid to join the EU.
The party rejects the allegations, saying it is safeguarding stability in the country following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.