Pope focuses on the world’s trouble spots in Christmas message

Lamenting “the winds of war” blowing around the world, Pope Francis in his traditional Christmas message has called for a two-state solution to find peace in the Middle East and prayed that confrontation can be overcome on the Korean Peninsula.

The pope took particular aim at areas of global tension where President Donald Trump is playing a critical role.

Mr Trump’s decision to recognise Jerusalem as Israel’s capital has ignited fresh violence in the Middle East, while confrontation with North Korea over its nuclear tests has escalated tensions in Asia.

As Christians celebrate the birth of Jesus on Monday, the pope depicted suffering reflected “in the faces of little children”, citing war and other tensions in the Middle East and Africa.

He asked for peace for Jerusalem and the Holy Land, and prayed “that the will to resume dialogue may prevail between the parties and that a negotiated solution can finally be reached, one that would allow the peaceful coexistence of two states within mutually agreed and internationally recognised borders”.

Francis also prayed for an end to confrontation on the Korean Peninsula and that “mutual trust may increase”.

The Christmas message has become an occasion for popes to survey suffering in the world and press for solutions.

Francis urged that “our hearts not be closed” as the inns of Bethlehem were to Mary and Joseph before Jesus’ birth.

The pontiff lamented that Syria remains “marked by war”, that Iraq has been “wounded and torn” by fighting over the last 15 years and that ongoing conflict in Yemen “has been largely forgotten”.

Recalling his recent trip to Bangladesh and Burma, the pope urged the international community to work “to ensure that the dignity of the minority groups present in the region is adequately protected”.

The pontiff also recalled children who risk their lives at the hands of human traffickers to migrate to safer lands, who suffer because their parents do not have work or who are forced into labour themselves, sometimes fighting as child soldiers.

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