Google – AFP, 3 January 2013
A woman
prays under the Central Cross of a cemetery in the Slovak
village of Bobrovec
on October 30, 2011 (AFP/File, Joe Klamar)
|
BRATISLAVA
— Disillusioned Slovaks are turning to the power of prayer in the hope of
cleaning up politicians widely regarded as corrupt.
More than
400 people have vowed to pray for the politician of their choice for at least
five minutes a day for six months since the Internet initiative was launched on
Tuesday by Slovakia's Christian Youth Communities Association.
"Some
people choose their favourite politician, while others might pray for their
least favourite lawmaker in order to change their behaviour," association
spokeswoman Maria Janusova told AFP.
She
declined to name the politicians who have mustered the most prayers so far.
"As
Christians, we believe that if we unite in prayer, we can make a change,"
Janusova explained.
The group's
website, where people can sign up for the initiative adds: "We believe
that God wants values such as justice, honesty and respect for life to be
recognised in politics."
Slovak
politics were rocked to the core last year when a secret-service file
code-named Gorilla leaked on the Internet revealed alleged links between
oligarchs from a private financial group and nearly all of the country's
political elite.
The leak
has inspired the rise of the Internet-fuelled "anti-Gorilla"
movement, attracting thousands to rallies in Slovakia's capital Bratislava.
But the
protests ended shortly after the March 2012 elections, in which voters ousted
the centre-right government and handed an unprecedented victory to leftist
Robert Fico and his Smer social democratic party, which survived the scandal.
More than a
year after the scandal erupted, police are still investigating and have yet to
press charges.
In the 2011
census, 62 percent of Slovakia's 5.4 million citizens said they were Roman
Catholic, while 5.9 percent declared themselves Protestant.
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