Pope Francis arrived in Central African Republic on Sunday, after visiting Kenya and Uganda earlier.
Brushing aside security concerns, his main aim is to bring a message of peace and reconciliation to a country where violence between Christians and Muslims has divided the capital city, and forced nearly 1 million people to flee from their homes in the last two years.
Schoolgirls in yellow and white dresses — the colors of the Holy See
flag — joined government and church authorities to welcome Francis at
the heavily secured Bangui airport. The pope's Alitalia charter landed
just beyond the settlement for displaced residents that has cropped up
on the airport's edge, housing some of those displaced by the violence.
As Francis emerged, a huge cheer broke out from the small crowd and the
cheers continued along his motorcade route — some 5 kilometers of it in
his open-sided popemobile — and then at a displacement camp where
children sang him songs of welcome.
"My wish for you, and for all Central Africans, is peace," Francis said
at the Saint Sauveur church camp, where he was mobbed by ululating
well-wishers and toddlers who embraced his white cassock. Francis then
led them in a chant: "We are all brothers. We are all brothers."
"And because we're brothers, we want peace," he said.
The precarious security situation in Bangui, the capital, raised the
possibility in recent weeks that the pope could cancel his visit. Less
than a year ago, mobs beat Muslims to death in the streets, even
decapitating and dismembering some. While sectarian clashes have left at
least 100 people dead over the last two months, in recent days Bangui
has been relatively free of gunfire.
In a speech at the presidential palace to interim President Catherine
Samba-Panza and the diplomatic corps, Francis said he was coming to
their country as a "pilgrim of peace, an apostle of hope."
He urged national and international authorities to work together to
"help the country progress above all in reconciliation, disarmament,
consolidation of peace, in health care and in developing a healthy
culture of administration at all levels."
Many hope that the pope's message of peace and reconciliation can
encourage longer-term stability in this nation of 4.8 million. As part
of his trip, the pope plans to venture into the capital's Muslim
enclave, known as PK5, to meet with community leaders and the uprooted.
Source: ABC News
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