The Diocese of Kafanchan in Nigeria has condemned the desecration of the tabernacle at St. Luke Safio Parish, where consecrated hosts were reportedly scattered and some were stolen on Jan. 25.
In a statement obtained on Jan. 28 by ACI Africa, the sister service of EWTN News in Africa, the chancellor of the Diocese of Kafanchan, Father Jacob Shanet, described the desecration act as “a grievous sacrilege” and directed a week of reparation and prayer across the diocese.
Shanet said the incident was discovered in the early hours of Jan. 25 when a parishioner arrived at the church for Sunday Mass “and found that the tabernacle had been forcibly opened and the Sacred Species within had been scattered and stolen.”
International Day of Peaceful Coexistence highlights Christian values
As the world marked the International Day of Peaceful Coexistence on Jan. 28, voices from faith and civil society in Lebanon emphasized that peace begins with everyday behavior, not slogans.
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Speaking to ACI MENA, Lebanese lawyer Tony Bou Abboud reflected on how Christian spiritual values can nurture dialogue, mutual respect, and social harmony. He noted that peaceful coexistence starts within families and extends to schools, media, and public discourse, warning against hate speech and exclusionary narratives.
He also pointed to forgiveness as a defining Christian witness, recalling historical examples where mercy triumphed over revenge. In a fractured world, he argued, peaceful coexistence must be lived as a way of life rooted in human dignity.
Police in Indonesia assault group of young Catholics
Indonesian police assaulted and detained 11 Catholic youths who were protesting a government-sponsored food estate project that would take over land used by Indigenous groups for farming.
The protestors were criticizing Archbishop Petrus Canisius Mandagi of Merauke, the South Papua province, for supporting the move, according to a report from UCA News.
Protesters were physically assaulted and dragged away from the demonstration, which took place in front of St. Francis Xavier Cathedral Church in Merauke, according to Tony Makin, head of the Merauke Legal Aid Institute.
“After being questioned for hours, the police asked them to sign a letter pledging not to carry out similar protests in the future, but they refused. They were finally released after negotiations,” Makin said.
Armed bandits attack Catholic priest in DR Congo
Armed bandits in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) attacked a parish priest in the Diocese of Mbujimayi, leaving him in critical condition, ACI Africa reported on Monday.
The Jan. 24 attack occurred along the Bena Mbuyi-Kalambayi highway when Father Jean-Richard Ilunga had gone to collect a donation of $2,000 intended for the construction of his church, the Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish. The assailants allegedly robbed the priest of his motorcycle and personal belongings, along with the money for the parish, before tying him up and abandoning him.
Ilunga is currently stable and under close medical supervision.
Catholic compound in Ethiopia ‘trashed and looted’ by warring ethnic tribes
Clashes between the Anyuak and Nuer, warring ethnic tribes in Ethiopia, resulted in the looting and destruction of a Catholic compound in Ethiopia, according to Aid to the Church in Need.
Father David Kulandai Samy of the Itang Catholic Mission described the situation as “painful,” recounting how attackers targeted his parish with pickaxes, heavy metal bars, and gunfire before fleeing with valuables.
“The clash erupted at dawn from 5:30 a.m. The Nuer tribe occupied the presbytery and the church surroundings as their base and attacked the Anyuak on the other side near Baro River,” the priest said, alleging that “some of them who came to loot were our own Catholic faithful, catechists, youth leaders,and choir members belonging to that particular ethnic group.”
Mass kits and other home and electrical goods were among the many items looted from the compound.
Madalaine Elhabbal is a staff reporter for Catholic News Agency based at EWTN’s Washington, D.C., bureau. She has been published by CatholicVote and has also worked as foreign language assistant in France. She is a graduate of Benedictine College.