Manzini, 29 September, 2025 / 11:54 pm (ACI Africa).
Delegates to the 14th Plenary Assembly and Golden Jubilee celebrations of the Inter-Regional Meeting of the Bishops of Southern Africa (IMBISA) have been urged to demand government accountability to the plight of the poor in their respective countries.
In his homily during the Sunday, September 28 closing Mass of the six-day activities that started on September 24, Bishop Raymond Tapiwa Mupandasekwa used Jesus' story of the unnamed rich man and Lazarus in the Gospel Reading of the day to urge IMBISA members to commit themselves to building a society where no one lives as a “Lazarus.”
“We have to accept the challenge of making our governments more accountable,” Bishop Tapiwa said, referring to Catholic Bishops in the IMBISA member countries – Angola, Botswana, Eswatini, Lesotho, Mozambique, Namibia, São Tomé and Príncipe, South Africa, and Zimbabwe.
The Local Ordinary of Masvingo Catholic Diocese in Zimbabwe added, “Some of our leaders are blind to the destitution of our people, and to the plight of Lazaruses who lie skin and bones on the streets, unable to access what is even reserved for their households.”
What made the rich man blind to the suffering of Lazarus in Jesus’ story in the Gospel according to Luke was his busyness with fashion, dressing well, and his love for good food and feasting magnificently daily while demonstrating indifference to the situation of Lazarus, he said during the closing Mass of the six-day event held at Mavuso Trade Centre in Eswatini’s only Catholic Diocese of Manzini.






