Pope Francis, back from flu, calls air strikes on Lebanon ‘terrible escalation’, ‘unacceptable’
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Pope Francis speaking during the weekly general audience at the Vatican on Sept 25, which went ahead two days after he cancelled meetings over flu.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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VATICAN CITY – Pope Francis called Israeli strikes on Lebanon a “terrible escalation” of the Middle East conflict on Sept 25 at the end of his weekly general audience at the Vatican, which went ahead two days after he cancelled meetings over mild flu.
The Pope said the attacks,
Pope Francis did not specifically identify Israel, but said he was “saddened by news from Lebanon in recent days that bombardments have caused much destruction and many victims”.
The 87-year-old pontiff, who has suffered bouts of ill health in recent years, appeared in good form during his audience, although he coughed lightly a few times while speaking.
The Vatican has not provided details about the Pope’s health since announcing on Sept 23 he had cancelled his meetings for that day.
At the audience, the Pope confirmed his plans to continue with the visit, and asked for prayers for its success.
The tour, his 46th foreign visit as Pope, comes less than two weeks after he returned from a demanding 12-day, four-country excursion
The Pope referred to the strikes in Lebanon in off-the-cuff remarks at the end of his hour-long audience.
Pope Francis, who has led the Catholic Church since March 2013, now regularly uses a wheelchair due to knee and back pain. Earlier in 2024, he cancelled several appointments over what the Vatican variously described as a cold, bronchitis and influenza.
On the Sept 2 to Sept 13 trip to Indonesia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and Singapore, Pope Francis maintained a packed schedule, headlining more than 40 events, and travelling some 33,000km.
Pope Francis started the general audience on Sept 25 by taking a tour around the crowd in an open-air “popemobile”, waving to people as a band played orchestral versions of pop songs.
In his main messages to pilgrims, the Pope focused on the dangers of temptation, including online pornography, which Catholic teaching forbids. REUTERS

