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Robert Fico is transferred at the FD Roosevelt University Hospital in Banska Bystrica, Slovakia after he was wounded in a shooting incident in Handlova yesterday (OSV News/Reuters)

Catholic bishops have expressed shock and promised prayers as Slovakia’s Prime Minister Robert Fico fights for his life after being shot multiple times yesterday. Source: OSV News.

Mr Fico was attacked while leaving a government gathering in the central town of Handlova, Slovakia, 200km east of the nation’s capital, Bratislava.

According to media reports, Mr Fico sustained critical injuries to his abdomen, arm and leg. He was airlifted to the hospital and transferred again by air to a second facility.

Police have detained an unnamed 71-year-old suspect, whose motive is not yet known.

“We condemn this act of violence, we pray for the recovery of Prime Minister Robert Fico and we invite everyone to unite in prayer for this purpose,” said Slovakia’s Greek Catholic bishops in a May 15 statement.

“Such (an) injustice and attack on a public official is absolutely unacceptable from a human and Christian point of view and points to our inability to respect different opinions and conduct dialogue in a civilised manner.”

Archbishop Stanislav Zvolenský of the Latin Catholic Archdiocese of Bratislava said in a May 15 statement posted to the archdiocese’s Facebook page that he would pray for Mr Fico’s “salvation (from death) and healing”.

The archbishop announced that on Pentecost on Sunday, he would celebrate Mass during a pilgrimage to the Basilica of Our Lady of Seven Sorrows in the town of Sastin, and would offer the liturgy “for peace in Slovakia, so that we can open ourselves to the action of God’s Holy Spirit and mutual respect through the intercession of our Patroness of the Seven Sorrows”.

Speaking on the sidelines of a May 15 event at the United States Embassy to the Holy See, Vatican Secretary of State Cardinal Pietro Parolin spoke of concern there is “no longer any limit” to the rise in violence.

“Naturally all this increases violence,” he said. “Relations are ever more violent and there are fewer hopes of building serene and peaceful relations.”

FULL STORY

Bishops respond with shock, prayer after Slovak prime minister shot (By Gina Christian, OSV News)