Pope calls for fasting and prayer for peace in Middle East and Ukraine as he returns to Vatican

Pope calls for fasting and prayer for peace in Middle East and Ukraine as he returns to Vatican
Pope Leo XIV has asked people to fast on Friday to pray for peace and justice in the Middle East and Ukraine. (AP)
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Updated 20 August 2025
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Pope calls for fasting and prayer for peace in Middle East and Ukraine as he returns to Vatican

Pope calls for fasting and prayer for peace in Middle East and Ukraine as he returns to Vatican
  • Pope Leo XIV has asked people to fast on Friday to pray for peace and justice in the Middle East and Ukraine
  • He issued the special appeal as he returned to the Vatican from summer vacation

VATICAN CITY: Pope Leo XIV asked people to fast on Friday to pray for peace and justice in the Middle East and Ukraine, issuing a special appeal as he returned to the Vatican from summer vacation.

At the end of his weekly general audience Wednesday, Leo recalled that Friday is a special feast day dedicated to the Virgin Mary. He urged Catholic faithful to spend the day fasting and “praying that the Lord grants peace and justice, and dries the tears of all those who are suffering as a result of the armed conflicts underway.”

Leo has called for ceasefires in Gaza and Ukraine and for dialogue to achieve peace.

Wednesday marked Leo’s first day back at the Vatican after a period of vacation at the papal summer retreat in Castel Gandolfo, south of Rome.

Going forward, the pope has some important appointments including special audiences for the Vatican’s 2025 Holy Year and the Sept. 7 canonization of the Catholic Church’s first millennial saint Carlo Acutis.

At the end of Wednesday’s audience, Leo received a special gift: A Ping-Pong table decorated with his papal coat of arms. Leo, an avid tennis player, gamely picked up a paddle and bounced a ball on it, but the ball rolled into the net.


Riot at Greek migrant detention center leaves 2 police injured, 30 migrants arrested

Riot at Greek migrant detention center leaves 2 police injured, 30 migrants arrested
Updated 13 November 2025
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Riot at Greek migrant detention center leaves 2 police injured, 30 migrants arrested

Riot at Greek migrant detention center leaves 2 police injured, 30 migrants arrested
  • The facility where the unrest erupted was holding about 750 migrants of various nationalities
  • Arrivals from Libya to Crete have surged in recent months

THESSALONIKI, Greece: A riot broke out late Wednesday at a migrant detention center in northern Greece, leaving two police officers injured and 30 migrants arrested, authorities said.
The facility where the unrest erupted was holding about 750 migrants of various nationalities, police said. Two officers were treated for injuries after being hit by a rock and bitten on the hand.
Greece this summer introduced one of Europe’s toughest migration regimes, allowing detention for up to 24 months and imposing prison terms of two to five years for illegal entry or stay. Under the stricter laws, migrants denied asylum face mandatory jail sentences.
Wednesday’s clashes came a day after three migrants died and 55 were rescued near the southern island of Crete when a boat carrying them from Libya sank. Two of the rescued migrants, both from Sudan, were arrested on smuggling charges.
Arrivals from Libya to Crete have surged in recent months. But Migration Minister Thanos Plevris said earlier Wednesday that overall migrant arrivals had dropped compared with a year earlier.
He defended Greece’s tough migration laws and voiced support for proposals backed by other European Union members to establish dedicated deportation centers.