The Federation of Asian Bishops’ Conferences has suspended their pan-Asian Catholic radio, Radio Veritas Asia, allegedly following a dispute over its ownership.
The federation’s president Cardinal Charles Bo said on Tuesday all activities of the project based in the Philippine capital Manila would be suspended from March 29. He said “deep concerns” over “some kind of disorder and anomaly” compelled him to take the decision. This comes after the removal of program director Father Bernard Dashi Tang on Monday by RVA’s legal body in the Philippines known as Philippine Radio Educational and Information Center, Inc or PREIC.
A dance troupe kicks off Radio Veritas Asia’s 50th anniversary celebrations at the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Bangladesh (CBCB) center in Dhaka on Nov. 1, 2019 (Photo by Stephan Uttom/ucanews)
Father Tang served as the program director for three years and he has been recently re-appointed by the FABC Office for Social Communication for another three years. However, PREIC chairman and Manila archbishop Cardinal Jose F. Advincula issued a letter to Father Tang on Monday, informing him of his removal from the post.
The crisis comes as the radio station is in the process of decentralization, cost reduction and possible relocation to Thailand amid ongoing financial crunch. RVA first went on air in 1969 and since then has provided services in 22 languages. In 1995, when it marked 50 years, Pope John Paul II called RVA “the missionary of Asia.”
Catholic Church in Bangladesh is in the process of forming a team to tackle increasing abuses women face in their homes, workstations, and other places.
Catholic bishops have verbally agreed to form the team for the purpose, according to the Women Desk’s convenor Rita Roselin Costa. The team is expected to start this year and it will cover all Christian denominations. Costa spoke to UCA News a day after Oxfam Bangladesh released a report that said majority of Bangladeshi women are subjected to abuses in the workplace.
Garment workers are busy at work at a factory in the Bangladeshi capital Dhaka in this file image. About 72 percent of women face various forms of abuse at the workplace, says a report from Oxfam. (Photo: Stephan Uttom/UCA News)
About 72 percent of women workers face mental violence, 74 percent verbal abuse, 31 percent physical violence, and six percent face sexual violence, the report revealed. The study covered 1,507 women from different parts of Bangladesh.
Women activists say in the socially and religiously conservative country a male-dominant family system fuels violence against women at home and other places.
Filipino bishops have clarified their position on a canonically banned fraternity called Freemasons after allegations surfaced that a growing number of its members participate in church activities. The bishops’ Commission on the Doctrine of Faith issued a statement last Friday to reiterate their stance on the Freemasons.
The Philippine hierarchy has always defended the Catholic magisterial position on “the unacceptability of Masonry, given its serious errors” both in its philosophical tenets and practices, the commission said. It came after several Catholics questioned the alleged participation of Masons in diocesan and national synodal consultations last year.
Freemasons are seen during a gathering in the Bicol region of the Philippines on Jan. 16, 2023. (Photo: Roel Deuda)
Church members claimed they assumed the church’s position on Freemasons changed when they found some participated in the synod process.
The bishops’ letter noted “nothing has changed” and referred to a 1983 declaration from the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith that prohibited Catholics from joining the fraternity and said those continuing in it are in “grave sin.”
Church leaders in Indonesia’s Papua province have urged a separatist group to release a New Zealand pilot, held hostage for nearly two months to garner international support for the Papuan independence movement.
In an open letter on Monday, Papua Church Council said the act of hostage-taking “cannot be justified by traditional norms and the Christian faith that we recognize as a guide in today’s life.”
Philip Mark Mehrtens has been held hostage by a Papuan rebel group since Feb. 7 to get international attention for its freedom struggle. (Photo: Youtube)
37 year old Philip Mark Mehrtens, a pilot for Indonesian aviation company Susi Air, has been held hostage by the West Papua Liberation National Army, an armed wing of the Free Papua Movement, since February 7 in Nduga Regency in Papua Highlands. The Church council said the delay in releasing Mehrtens will give the Indonesian government legitimacy to deploy more troops in Papua and to set up more security bases in the region.
Reports say diplomatic efforts of Indonesian government involving New Zealand failed to secure the release of the pilot. Christian-majority Papua has experienced bloody insurgency for independence since Indonesia annexed the region in 1960s. Violence left hundreds for civilians, soldiers and separatists killed, and thousands displaced.
Kon Tum diocese in Vietnam’s Central Highlands strongly condemned government authorities for breaking up a Mass held in a house last week.
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