VATICAN CITY — The Vatican’s Secretary of State, Cardinal Pietro Parolin, has issued a powerful and direct condemnation of the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, describing the ongoing conflict as a “carnage” and stating it is “unacceptable and unjustifiable” to label the high civilian death toll as mere “collateral damage.”
In an interview published on [Insert Date of Publication], the Vatican’s top diplomat expressed profound dismay at the daily fatalities among the Palestinian population. “We risk becoming desensitised to this carnage,” Parolin warned, highlighting the number of children killed “whose only fault seems to be having been born there.”
Cardinal Parolin, the second-highest authority in the Holy See, did not mince words when assessing the consequences of the military campaign. He stated that the war “has brought about disastrous and inhuman consequences,” a direct moral challenge to the justification of military actions that result in mass civilian deaths.
He specifically criticized the international community for its inability to act decisively to end the violence.
“It’s not enough to say that what is happening is unacceptable and then continue to allow it to happen,” Parolin asserted. He stressed that the nations with the power to intervene “have so far failed to act to stop the ongoing massacre,” underscoring the perceived political failure to halt the suffering.
The Cardinal’s strong remarks serve as one of the most forceful condemnations from the Vatican since the start of the conflict, reinforcing Pope Francis’s repeated appeals for peace and humanitarian access to Gaza.



