ASIA/MYANMAR – Two Catholic priests arrested for providing humanitarian aid to displaced people

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ASIA/MYANMAR – Two Catholic priests arrested for providing humanitarian aid to displaced people

Pekhon (Agenzia Fides) – The Myanmar army has arrested two Catholic priests who were on their way to help internally displaced people in Shan State, in the eastern part of Myanmar. As Agenzia Fides learned from the local Church, Father Jean Paul Lwel, priest of the diocese of Pekhon, and Father Jean Bosco, priest of the Archdiocese of Taunggyi, while traveling with two drivers and a young student, were stopped at a checkpoint and arrested by army soldiers on February 21. The arrested priests belong to the “St. Therese Little Way Missionary Institute”, a local Burmese religious congregation. The small group wanted to bring humanitarian aid to the internally displaced people of the village of Le Htun, which is part of the commune of Moebye, in the diocese of Pekhon. Their intention was also to accompany some priests from Pekhon and transfer them temporarily to Taunggyi, in areas less exposed to fighting, in order to protect them.
As Agenzia Fides reports, the local clergy of Pekhon are in fact subjected to acts of intimidation and violence. In the municipality of Moebye, soldiers broke into the house of the Catholic priest residing in the town and stole the money which belonged to the Church and which was used for pastoral needs and to help refugees. Confirming that the two priests are still under arrest, Fides sources in the diocese of Pekhon indicate that the reason for their arrest remains unknown. The bishops of the dioceses of Pekhon and Taunggyi are trying to get in touch and meet with the regional military leaders in order to obtain an immediate release of the Catholic delegation. The arrest of the priests came as fighting between the army and the People’s Defense Forces (PDF) escalated in Mobye Municipality and other places in Pekhon Diocese, where the military junta has ordered airstrikes, deployed armored vehicles and heavy loads. weapons. Thousands of people, including many Christians, have been displaced by the ongoing fighting. Many Catholics in the Diocese of Pekhon fled their homes and took refuge in the churches and structures of the Archdiocese of Taunggyi.
The Diocese of Pekhon covers the southern part of Shan State and is one of the most affected areas – along with the Diocese of Loikaw in Kayah State – due to the escalation of the conflict between the army and the People’s Defense Forces, joined by the rebels, the Karenni army forces and other ethnic armies, who have been fighting each other for years.
More than 15 villages in the diocese of Pekhon, mostly inhabited by Catholics, were attacked and devastated by the army. At least 70 young Catholics died in clashes with local forces, according to Fides sources. Thousands of faithful Catholics fled their homes in the Diocese of Pekhon and took refuge in the churches of the Archdiocese of Taunggyi. According to information collected by Agenzia Fides, nine Catholic priests from the dioceses of Banmaw, Mandalay and Hakha were arrested in 2021 on suspicion of supporting rebel forces. (JZ-PA) (Agenzia Fides, 25/02/2022)


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