Prelates speak out after deadly protests against Haiti’s president and the drowning deaths of at least 28 people in an illegal crossing to the Bahamas.

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Following deadly protests against Haiti’s president and the drowning deaths of at least 28 people in an illegal crossing to the Bahamas, the country’s Catholic bishops have said all Haitians must come together for a wise solution to the country’s dangers.

“We must wake up to take together the full measure of the danger that threatens us all. This is the moment to join our forces and our intelligence to save our common boat, Haiti, which is our pride,” the Catholic Bishops of the Episcopal Conference of Haiti said Feb. 11.

They cited the Gospel of Matthew passage in which the seaborne disciples cry out to Christ as their boat starts to sink: “Lord, save us; we are perishing!”

“The hour is serious because there is violence against life. We deplore the losses in both human lives and property recorded recently in illegal travel and demonstrations,” they added. “We take this opportunity to present our sympathies to the victims and relatives of the victims.”

Four days of political demonstrations against President Jovenel Moise drew thousands of people, but also led to unrest that contributed to four deaths and dozens of injuries, BBC News reported.

Opponents accuse Moise and other leaders of corruption after a court report alleged that Haitian officials and former ministers misappropriated loans from Venezuela made to Haiti after 2008. The report suggested the president had a role in the irregularities.

The protesters have called on Moise to step down. He has been president since 2017.

Haiti’s Catholic bishops stressed the urgency of the country’s situation.

“The hour is serious; the misery is increasing; the common good is threatened. The country is on the edge of the abyss! This situation cannot be prolonged,” they said. “Let us wake up to listen to God, Master of wisdom and Principle of all life. Let us listen to the people he loves so much.”

Migrants leaving Haiti by boat have sometimes risked their lives to enter other countries.

In early February, a boat of migrants sank 6 miles off the coast of Marsh Harbour in the Abaco Islands in the north of the Bahamas, BBC News reported.

The Royal Bahamas Defense Force rescued 17 people, but the bodies of 28 migrants were recovered, BBC News reported.

About 300 people from Haiti have been caught attempting illegal entry into the Bahamas.

Haiti is the poorest country in the Caribbean. Sixty percent of people there live on less than $2 per day. The deadly boat sinking happened nearest to the island of Fowl Cay, where luxury villas cost as much as $4,300 per night.

People from Haiti who attempt illegal crossings also attempt to reach the Turks and Caicos Islands. Most migrants are intercepted at sea and deported back to Haiti.

The bishops’ Feb. 11 message fell on the feast day of Our Lady of Lourdes and the Catholic Church’s World Day of the Sick.

“We must find a solution of wisdom that takes into account the best interests of the nation and the defense of the common good,” the bishops said. “In this sense, we appeal to the citizen conscience of the various parties for a patriotic decision, even if only at the cost of great sacrifices.”

They asked for prayers for Haiti and for the country to turn toward God.