The war in Ukraine is driven by the interests of several “empires” and not only by Russia's interests, Pope Francis said in an interview published on Friday.
Francis said the conflict was fuelled by “imperial interests, not only of the Russian empire, but of empires from elsewhere”.
He expressed a readiness to talk to Russian President Vladimir Putin to call for peace.
The pontiff was speaking to Italian Swiss television RSI in an interview due to be broadcast on Sunday. Extracts were published on Friday by Italian dailies La Repubblica, La Stampa and Corriere della Sera.
Francis, who is 86 and marks the 10th anniversary of his election on March 13, also said he would resign if he got too tired and lost the capacity to govern the Roman Catholic Church.
Last month he had said papal resignations should happen in only exceptional circumstances.
His predecessor Benedict XVI, who died on December 31 aged 95, became the first pontiff to resign in about 600 years when he stepped down in 2013.
Asked what would lead him to make the same decision to quit, Francis said: “A tiredness that doesn't make you see things clearly. A lack of clarity, of knowing how to evaluate situations.”
Francis said he was “a bit ashamed” to use a wheelchair due to a knee ailment.
“I am old. I have less physical resistance. The knee (problem) was a physical humiliation, even if the recovery is going well now,” he said.
Reuters
Pope says Ukraine war fuelled not only by ‘Russian empire’
Image: REUTERS/Guglielmo Mangiapane/File Photo
The war in Ukraine is driven by the interests of several “empires” and not only by Russia's interests, Pope Francis said in an interview published on Friday.
Francis said the conflict was fuelled by “imperial interests, not only of the Russian empire, but of empires from elsewhere”.
He expressed a readiness to talk to Russian President Vladimir Putin to call for peace.
The pontiff was speaking to Italian Swiss television RSI in an interview due to be broadcast on Sunday. Extracts were published on Friday by Italian dailies La Repubblica, La Stampa and Corriere della Sera.
Francis, who is 86 and marks the 10th anniversary of his election on March 13, also said he would resign if he got too tired and lost the capacity to govern the Roman Catholic Church.
Last month he had said papal resignations should happen in only exceptional circumstances.
His predecessor Benedict XVI, who died on December 31 aged 95, became the first pontiff to resign in about 600 years when he stepped down in 2013.
Asked what would lead him to make the same decision to quit, Francis said: “A tiredness that doesn't make you see things clearly. A lack of clarity, of knowing how to evaluate situations.”
Francis said he was “a bit ashamed” to use a wheelchair due to a knee ailment.
“I am old. I have less physical resistance. The knee (problem) was a physical humiliation, even if the recovery is going well now,” he said.
Reuters
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