After allegations claiming that Pope Francis was not critical of Russia for invading Ukraine in late February, the Holy Seat defended the pontiff, stating he has clearly viewed the war as "senseless, repugnant and sacrilegious".
Last week, Ukraine summoned the top papal diplomat to complain about recent comments by Francis. At an audience a day earlier at the Vatican, Francis had referred to a national Russian TV commentator who was killed by a car bomb in Moscow as a "poor girl".
Francis was speaking about the slaying of Darya Dugina, the daughter of right-wing Russian political theorist Alexander Dugin, who fiercely backs the war.
Russia has accused Ukrainian intelligence of the bombing, which Kyiv denies.
In his remarks, Francis also said orphans in Ukraine and Russia were among the "innocents" who have been victimised by the "insanity of war".
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba summoned the Vatican ambassador to Kyiv last week and told reporters that "the Ukrainian heart is torn apart by the pope's words."
In a statement, the Vatican appeared intent Tuesday on doing damage control.
"In recent days, public discussions have arisen about the political significance to attribute" to comments by Francis, the statement said.
"The words of the Holy Father on this dramatic question should be read as a voice raised in defense of human life and of the values linked to that, and not taken as a political position," the Vatican said.
"As for as the war of wide dimensions in Ukraine, begun by the Russian Federation, the interventions of the Holy Father Francis are clear and unequivocal in condemning it as morally unjust, unacceptable, barbaric, senseless, repugnant and sacrilegious."
On the same day that Ukraine slammed the pope's
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