Pope sends condolences to Haiti over assassination of president
The pontiff is currently being treated in hospital and the letter was signed by his deputy.
Pope Francis sent his condolences to Haiti following what he said was the “heinous assassination” of President Jovenal Moise.
Francis, who is recovering at a Rome hospital from intestinal surgery, condemned “all forms of violence as a means of resolving crises and conflicts”, according to a telegram signed by the Vatican secretary of state
The message said Francis was praying for the Haitian people and for Martine Moïse, the wife of the murdered president who also was critically injured in the Wednesday attack at their home.
Authorities said that during the gunbattle, police killed four suspects, detained two others and freed three officers being held hostage.
The country’s prime minister Claude Joseph assumed leadership of Haiti and decreed a two-week state of siege following Mr Moise’s killing, which stunned a nation grappling with some of the Western Hemisphere’s highest poverty, violence and political instability.
In January 2018, Mr Moise met with Francis and Vatican officials for talks on social problems afflicting the Caribbean nation, “especially regarding young people, the poor and the most vulnerable”, the Holy See said at the time.
In 2015, Francis convened a special conference on Haiti to mark the fifth anniversary of the devastating earthquake that killed more than 100,000 people.
Francis has been recovering at a Rome hospital since undergoing intestinal surgery on Sunday.
The telegram was sent in his name and signed by his deputy, Cardinal Pietro Parolin.