POPE Francis prayed for the victims of Tropical Storm “Vinta” at the Vatican on Christmas Eve, and urged the world’s 1.3 billion Catholics not to ignore the plight of migrants driven from their land because of leaders willing to shed “innocent blood.”

HELP IS ON THE WAY Soldiers load relief goods on to a C-130 plane at Villamor Air Base in Pasay City. The plane was headed to Cagayan de Oro City to deliver aid to victims of Tropical Storm ‘Vinta’ in Mindanao. PHOTO BY RUSSELL PALMA

The Argentine Pontiff entrusted the fatalities of the storm that struck Mindanao to God, in his weekly Angelus message from the window of the papal apartment at St. Peter’s Square.

“I also wish to assure my prayers to the population of the island of Mindanao, in the Philippines, hit by a storm that has caused numerous victims and destruction. May the merciful God welcome the souls of the dead and comfort those who suffer from this calamity. We pray for these people,” the Pope said.

The death toll from the storm that unleashed landslides and floods across southern Philippines has climbed to 240 with scores of others still missing, officials said Monday.

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Tropical Storm Vinta on Friday struck Mindanao, which often escapes the 20 or so storms that batter the rest of the archipelago nation each year.

Civil defense officials said some 13,000 Mindanao families – at least 52,000 people – remained in evacuation camps on Christmas Day, many with few if any possessions left.

The tragic Christmas weekend in the Philippines was compounded Monday by the deaths of 20 people killed in a bus collision while travelling to Mass.

Dozens of people were feared killed in a fire Saturday in Davao City.

‘In the footsteps of Joseph and Mary’

Francis weighed in anew on the migrant crisis and drew a parallel between the plight of migrants and the Christmas story.

“So many other footsteps are hidden in the footsteps of Joseph and Mary,” the Pope, himself the grandson of Italian migrants, told worshippers at Christmas Eve Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica.

“We see the tracks of millions of persons who do not choose to go away but, driven from their land, leave behind their dear ones.”

Many engulfed in the ongoing migration crisis were forced to flee from leaders “who, to impose their power and increase their wealth, see no problem in shedding innocent blood,” said the 81-year-old.

The pontiff’s plea for “hope” came as fresh tensions simmered in the West Bank following President Donald Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. Following Trump’s lead, Guatemala’s President Jimmy Morales said Sunday his country would move its embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem

Trump’s announcement on December 6 unleashed demonstrators and clashes, including in Bethlehem in the Israeli-occupied West Bank where Christians marked the birth of Jesus at a midnight mass.

Fewer tourists in Bethlehem

Celebrating midnight Mass in the ancient town, Archbishop Pierbattista Pizzaballa, apostolic administrator of the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, used his homily to lambast the wars that “the Herods of today fight every day to become greater, to occupy more space.”

He urged “Christians of the Holy Land, who are worried, and perhaps afraid by the reduction of our numbers, the inadequacy of our means, the insecurity that characterizes our daily life,” to have courage in the troubled region.

Criticising Trump’s announcement, Pizzaballa insisted “Jerusalem is a city of peace, there is not peace if someone is excluded. Jerusalem should include, not exclude,” stressing the principle that Jerusalem is a city for both peoples and the three Abrahamic faiths.

“Jerusalem is our mother,” he said, and if one of her children “is missing the mother cannot be at peace, so we have to pray for the peace of Jerusalem,” the archbishop said in his homily in the presence of Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas.

Trump’s decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel has sparked almost daily protests in the Palestinian territories and put a damper on Christmas festivities.

Palestinian scouts played drums and bagpipes at celebrations in Bethlehem, but many tourists stayed away.

Hundreds gathered in the cold on Bethlehem’s Manger Square to watch the annual scout parade towards the Church of the Nativity, built over the spot where tradition says Mary gave birth to Jesus.

But the square was noticeably quieter following the violence between Palestinian protesters and the Israeli army in the past weeks.

Twelve Palestinians have been killed since Trump’s declaration, including a 19-year-old who died of his wounds on Sunday nine days after he was shot during a Gaza protest.

In the square, Nahil Banura, a Christian woman from Beit Sahur near Bethlehem, said Trump’s decision had made the run-up to Christmas “miserable.”

“People are only going out to vent,” she said.

‘Sadness and joy’

The Israeli army officer in charge of the Bethlehem area said that while tensions had been high in the area following the Jerusalem announcement, he did not expect trouble at Christmas.

“We’ve reinforced our troops, and are ready for any scenario,” Lt. Col. Benny Meir told AFP.

Israel seized east Jerusalem in the 1967 Middle East war and later annexed it, in moves never recognised by the international community.

Palestinians view east Jerusalem as the capital of their future state, and interpreted Trump’s statement as rejecting their right to a capital in east Jerusalem, although the Americans deny this.

In a statement earlier, Abbas called on “world Christians to listen to the true voices of the indigenous Christians from the Holy Land... that strongly rejected the US recognition of Jerusalem as Israel’s capital.”

Mitri Raheb, pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran Christmas Church in Bethlehem, told Agence France-Presse that Christmas this year is a “mix of sadness and joy” because of the US decision on Jerusalem, which he called “the beating heart of Palestine.”

Christmas in Mosul

Christmas decorations have meanwhile become more visible in Christian areas of Syria’s capital Damascus this year.

In the central Syrian city of Homs, Christians will celebrate Christmas with great fanfare for the first time in years after the end of battles between regime and rebel forces—with processions, shows for children and even decorations among the ruins.

In Iraq too, this year marks a positive turning point for the Christian community in the northern city of Mosul.

Hymns filled a Mosul church on Sunday as worshippers celebrated Christmas for the first time in four years after the city’s recapture from the Islamic State group in July.