Roman Catholic church leader, Pope Francis has said that he is studying a possible visit to Kyiv, the capital of Ukraine as he blasted Russian President Vladimir Putin for launching a "savage" war.
Speaking on Saturday, April 2 as he arrived in Malta, he delivered his
most pointed and personalized denunciation of Russia's invasion of
Ukraine.
Pope Francis avoided referring to Russia or Mr Putin by name, but described him as as "some potentate" who had unleashed the threat of nuclear war on the world in an "infantile and destructive aggression" under the guise of "anachronist claims of nationalistic interests."
Speaking to Maltese authorities, Pope Francis said: "We had thought that
invasions of other countries, savage street fighting and atomic threats
were grim memories of a distant past."
The pope added that a possible visit to Kyiv was “on the table”, but no dates have been set or a trip confirmed.
The mayor of the Ukrainian capital had invited Francis to come as a messenger of peace along with other religious figures.
Francis also said that the war has pained his heart so much that he sometimes forgets about the pain in his knees.
Saturday's personalization of Putin marked a new level of criticism by the pope, just hours after Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy warned of mines outside the capital, Kyiv.