Pope Francis says Lebanese 'truth can never be hidden' ahead of blast anniversary
marked the second anniversary of the by insisting Wednesday that truth and justice “can never be hidden,” in an apparent reference to the stalled into the disaster.
Francis made the comments at the end of his weekly general audience, the first after his month-long summer break.
Recalling the upcoming anniversary, Francis said he was praying for the families of the victims “of that disastrous event and the dear Lebanese people.”
“I pray that each one may be consoled by faith, and comforted by justice and truth that can never be hidden,” he said.
The at the port was one of the world’s biggest non-nuclear blasts. It killed at least 215 people, injured more than 6,000 and sent pressure waves across the capital. The investigation into the disaster has been blocked for months by Lebanese political powers, who have ensured that no one has to date been held accountable. Many Lebanese blame the government’s longtime corruption and mismanagement for the tragedy.
Francis prayed for Lebanon to be reborn and remain true to its “vocation as a land of peace and pluralism where different religious communities can live in fraternity.”
Francis, 85, had been planning to travel to Lebanon this past spring, but strained knee ligaments forced him to postpone the trip. No new date has been set.