The Jerusalem Post

Pope, on Madagascar visit, condemns clan culture of privilege, corruption

- • By PHILIP PULLELLA and HEREWARD HOLLAND

antananarI­Vo, madagascar (reuters) – pope Francis, on a visit to madagascar, on sunday condemned what he said was its clan culture of privilege and corruption that allows a select few to live in wealth while the vast majority languish in grinding poverty.

he spoke in a homily of a mass on a sprawling field on the outskirts of the capital, antananari­vo, for hundreds of thousands of people, many of whom had spent the night outdoors in unseasonab­ly cool weather. the Vatican said local organizers had estimated the crowd at about a million people.

as he has since the start of his three country swing through sub-saharan africa, Francis spoke out about the gap between the haves and have-nots on the continent. he has already visited mozambique and will move on to mauritius on monday.

Francis decried a clan culture that provided a boost only to those connected to it while leaving many others permanentl­y excluded, or at best marginaliz­ed without opportunit­ies to improve their lives.

“When ‘family’ becomes the decisive criterion for what we consider right and good, we end up justifying and even ‘consecrati­ng’ practices that lead to the culture of privilege and exclusion: favoritism, patronage and – as a consequenc­e – corruption,” the pontiff said in his homily.

madagascar is the world’s fourth largest island and one of its poorest countries.

the un World Food programme estimates that more than 90% of madagascar’s population of 26 million people live on less than $2 a day, with chronic child malnutriti­on widespread.

Corruption is rampant among the country’s political and business class, according to organizati­ons such as transparen­cy Internatio­nal, which ranks madagascar in the lowest quarter of its global Corruption perception­s Index.

“as we look around us, how many men and women, young people and children are suffering and in utter need!” the pope said.

While in antananari­vo, Francis’s motorcade passed by people plying trades like metalworki­ng and carpentry on the sides of dusty roads, followed minutes later by walled-off, european-style villas with gardens and pools.

Francis has often called for greater income equality and a fairer distributi­on of wealth between prosperous and developing countries, and he has defended the right of countries to control their mineral resources.

after the mass, Francis was due to visit akamasoa, a district of the capital known as “the City of Friendship.”

It was founded by Father pedro opeka, a 71-year-old missionary who studied theology under the future pope in their native argentina before dedicating his life to building communitie­s for the families of madagascar.

over the last 50 years, an organizati­on founded by opeka has built homes for 25,000 people, 100 schools, six clinics and two football stadiums. next year, they plan to build a college for paramedics.

 ?? (Baz Ratner/Reuters) ?? POPE FRANCIS attends the Sunday Mass at the diocesan grounds of Soamandrak­izay in Antananari­vo, Madagascar.
(Baz Ratner/Reuters) POPE FRANCIS attends the Sunday Mass at the diocesan grounds of Soamandrak­izay in Antananari­vo, Madagascar.

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