Pope Francis
on Sunday called for the worldwide abolition of the #death_penalty, saying the
commandment "You shall not kill" was absolute and equally valid for
the guilty as for the innocent.
Using
some of his strongest words ever against capital punishment, he also called on
Catholic politicians worldwide to make "a courageous and exemplary
gesture" by seeking a moratorium on executions during the Church's current
Holy Year, which ends in November.
"I appeal
to the consciences of those who govern to reach an international consensus to
abolish the death penalty," he told tens of thousands of people in St.
Peter's Square.
"The
commandment "You shall not kill," has absolute value and applies to
both the innocent and the guilty," he told the crowd.
The 1.2 billion-member Catholic Church allowed the
death penalty in extreme cases for centuries, but the position began to change
under the late Pope John Paul, who died in 2005.
The pope added that there was now "a
growing opposition to the death penalty even for the legitimate defense of
society" because modern means existed to "efficiently repress crime
without definitively denying the person who committed it the possibility of
rehabilitating themselves."
Francis made the comments to throw his
weight behind an international conference against the death penalty starting
Monday in Rome and organized by the Sant'Egidio Community, a worldwide Catholic
peace and justice group.
Francis, who has visited a number of jails
since his election as pope nearly three years ago - the latest in Mexico last
week - also called for better prison conditions.
"All Christians and men of good will
are called on to work not only for the abolition of the death penalty, but also
to improve prison conditions so that they respect the human dignity of people
who have been deprived of their freedom," he said.
In the past, the pope also denounced life
imprisonment, calling it "a hidden death penalty" and saying that
more should be done to try to rehabilitate even the most hardened of criminals.
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