French-Spanish nun killed in Central African Republic: Vatican

AFP  |  Vatican City 

A French-Spanish nun has been brutally murdered in a village in the where she taught to young girls, the Vatican said Wednesday.

Pope paid tribute to the nun on Wednesday, describing the murder of a woman "who gave her life for Jesus in the service of the poor" as "barbaric".

He called for those gathered in for his weekly general audience to pray in silence for her.

"Her attackers broke into her room on the night between Sunday and Monday and took her to the centre she was running for the young girls, where they beheaded her," Vatican said.

"According to a local member of parliament, the murder could be linked to trafficking in human organs," the site adds.

A for the diocese of Burgos in told AFP a in the had described the state of the nun's body.

"They cut her neck to the point of killing her, but they didn't cut off her head completely," he said.

The said the motives for her murder were not known and "no terrorist organisation" has claimed responsibility for it, the added.

The bishop of the diocese of Berberati led the funeral for on Tuesday, he said.

The vice general of the diocese of Berberati, Isaie Koffia, told AFP that the nun was murdered on Sunday afternoon.

"Strangers entered the back gate and dragged her into the bush behind the house to slaughter her. They did not take anything at all, they just came to kill her," he added.

The nun belonged to the small congregation of the "Filles de Jesus", or "Daughters of Jesus", which is based in in southwestern

Spanish took to to express his "condolences and affection for Ines' family" as well as for a Spanish missionary, Fernando Hernandez, who was killed on Saturday in

Hernandez, a 60-year-old member of the Salesian congregation in Bobo-Dioulasso, "was attacked by knives by a former employee who was fired two months ago," according to the website of the Salesian congregation, salesianos.info.

He is the second Salesian to have been murdered in this year. In February Antonio Cesar Fernandez, 72, was the victim of a "jihadist attack", according to the website.

CAR has been struggling to recover from the bloodletting that erupted when former Francois Bozize, a Christian, was overthrown in 2013 by mainly-Muslim Seleka rebels.

Armed groups, typically claiming to defend an ethnic or group, control about 80 per cent of the CAR, often fighting over access to the country's mineral wealth.

Thousands have lost their lives, nearly 650,000 have fled their homes and another 575,000 have left the country, according to UN figures as of December last year.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Wed, May 22 2019. 18:50 IST