Yahoo – AFP, Jean-Louis De La Vaissiere, 16 Jan 2015
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Pope
Francis waves to the crowd as he arrives for a meeting with families
at a mall
in Manila on January 16, 2015 (AFP Photo/Joseph Agcaoili)
|
Manila
(AFP) - Pope Francis on Friday demanded leaders in the Philippines end
"scandalous social inequalities", hitting out at corruption in a
nation where tens of millions of Catholics endure brutal poverty.
The pontiff
made the comments in his first speech of a five-day visit to the Philippines,
after an electrifying welcome on Thursday enhanced the nation's reputation as
the Catholic Church's vibrant Asian bastion.
Francis, a
revered figure for most Filipinos, took immediate aim at the nation's elite who
have for decades enjoyed the spoils of power while the vast majority lived in
poverty.
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Pope
Francis greets Filipinos on the
streets of Manila during his visit on
January
16, 2015. (AFP Photo/Joseph
Agcaoili )
|
He
challenged "everyone, at all levels of society, to reject every form of
corruption, which diverts resources from the poor".
The
78-year-old pontiff, seen by many around the world as a bold reformer compared
with his predecessor, said the "great biblical tradition" obliged
everyone to hear the voice of the poor.
"It
bids us break the bonds of injustice and oppression which give rise to glaring,
and indeed scandalous, social inequalities," he said.
Graft
fight
Francis had
moments earlier met President Benigno Aquino, who has waged a high-profile
campaign against corruption since coming to power in 2010 that has seen his
predecessor and three senators detained.
Aquino also
orchestrated the impeachment of the Supreme Court's chief justice on corruption
charges, and he has won international plaudits for his efforts.
But critics
of Aquino, the son of democracy heroine Corazon Aquino, have accused him of
focusing his anti-graft campaign only on opponents and not allies.
They also
point out his family has for decades been among the elite.
And,
despite Aquino presiding over some of Asia's strongest economic growth, his
time in office has failed to make a major dent on poverty.
About 25
million Filipinos, or one quarter of the population, live on the equivalent of
60 cents a day or less, according to the latest official poverty surveys.
The poverty
has forced more than 10 million Filipinos to head overseas in search of a
better life.
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Philippine
President Benigno Aquino
welcomes Pope Francis upon his arrival
at the
presidential Malacanang Palace
in Manila on January 16, 2015 (AFP
Photo/Giuseppe Cacace)
|
Francis
said one of the main purposes of his trip was to visit survivors of Super
Typhoon Haiyan, known in the Philippines as Yolanda, which left 7,350 people
dead or missing in 2013.
He will
spend Saturday in areas of the central Philippines that were devastated by the
typhoon, which smashed into coastal communities with the strongest winds ever
recorded on land.
"In a
particular way, this visit is meant to express my closeness to our brothers and
sisters who endured the suffering, loss and devastation caused by Typhoon
Yolanda," he said.
While in
Tacloban, the pope is expected to get some first-hand experience of the
tropical storms and typhoons that claim hundreds of lives each year in the
Philippines.
A tropical
storm in the area will bring "heavy to intense" rain on Saturday,
according to the Philippine weather agency.
Monsignor
Pedro Quitorio, spokesman for the Catholic Bishops Conference of the
Philippines, told AFP the pope intended to press on with the Tacloban trip
regardless of the weather.
Stronghold
The
Philippines has long been the Church's stronghold in the region, with Catholics
accounting for 80 percent of the former Spanish colony's population.
Francis
enjoyed a hero's welcome when he arrived on Thursday night, with hundreds of
thousands of people crowding the streets of Manila to get a first glimpse of
him as he travelled in a motorcade.
Massive
crowds continued to choke his motorcade route on Friday as he travelled around
the city, including near the centuries-old Manila Cathedral where he celebrated
mass with priests and nuns.
"My
sacrifice was worth it. I feel happy. I feel blessed," Nanette Hermano,
56, told AFP as she cried after taking a smartphone picture of the pope outside
the cathedral.
![]() |
A picture
released by the Vatican press office (Osservatore Romano) shows Pope
Francis
meeting children at an event in Manila on January 16, 2015 (AFP Photo)
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"I've
been here since 3:00 am, but I don't feel tired, I don't feel hungry. It's like
a miracle."
Later in
the day Francis will led thousands of people in prayer at Manila's top concert
arena, where music fans have flocked in recent years to see the likes of Bruno
Mars, Lady Gaga and Taylor Swift.
Giant
crowd
Pope-mania
will reach a peak on Sunday, with organisers expecting him to attract as many
as six million people for mass at a Manila park.
If as big
as expected, the crowd will surpass the previous record for a papal gathering
of five million during a mass by John Paul II at the same venue in 1995.
Francis is
on a week-long tour of Asia that began in Sri Lanka.
It is his
second trip to the region in five months, signalling the importance the Vatican
places on Asia's growth potential for the Church.
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Pope Francis waves to Filipino Catholics as his motorcade passes by
in Manila on January 15, 2015 (AFP Photo/Noel Celis)
|
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