Pope slams jihadist attacks as 'homicidal madness'
Vatican City: Pope Francis on Monday condemned jihadist attacks around the world as "homicidal madness" and urged all religious authorities to reassert that "one can never kill in God's name".
The leader of the world's 1.2 billion Roman Catholics also called on government leaders to combat poverty that, he said, could allow fundamentalism to flourish.
In a hard-hitting and wide-ranging speech to the Vatican diplomatic corps, the 80-year-old pontiff voiced sorrow that religion was still being used "at times as a pretext for rejection, marginalisation and violence".
He cited the "fundamentalist-inspired terrorism" that claimed victims in Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Belgium, Burkina Faso, Egypt, France, Germany, Iraq, Jordan, Nigeria, Pakistan, Tunisia, Turkey and the United States in 2016.
"These are vile acts that use children to kill, as in Nigeria, or target people at prayer, as in the Coptic Cathedral of Cairo, or travellers or workers, as in Brussels, or passers-by in the streets of cities like Nice and Berlin, or simply people celebrating the arrival of the New Year, as in Istanbul," Francis said.
He said that the society is dealing with a homicidal madness which misuses God's name in order to disseminate death, in a play for domination and power.
"Hence I appeal to all religious authorities to join in reaffirming unequivocally that one can never kill in God's name," said the Pope.