Cape Argus

Pope urges youth to shun corruption

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POPE Francis yesterday urged young people in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to forge a new future without the ethnic rivalry, corruption and distrust that have fuelled so many bloody conflicts in Africa.

Addressing more than 65000 young people in Martyrs Stadium, Francis spoke of forgivenes­s and reconcilia­tion, themes that have dominated his visit to the DRC, where armed conflict has killed and displaced millions of people over the past decades.

But yesterday’s speech, focused on what he called “ingredient­s for the future”, struck a more hopeful tone than his previous ones as he spoke of potential new horizons for the DRC rather than of its bloody past and present. The speech was interrupte­d so often by applause and cheers that at one point an organiser took a microphone and shouted “let the pope speak” before he could continue.

“Beware of the temptation to point a finger at someone, to exclude another person because he or she is different; beware of regionalis­m, tribalism, or anything that makes you feel secure in your own group,” he told them.

“You know what happens: first, you believe in prejudices about others, then you justify hatred, then violence, and in the end, you find yourself in the middle of a war,” he said.

Congo has some of the world’s richest mineral deposits, but its abundant resources have stoked conflict between ethnic groups, militias, government troops and foreign invaders.

Eastern DRC has also been plagued by violence connected to the long and complex fallout from the 1994 genocide in neighbouri­ng Rwanda.

“To create a new future we need to give and receive forgivenes­s. That is what Christians do,” he said.

In urging the young people in the packed stadium to “do the right thing”, Francis also asked them not to repeat the mistakes of previous generation­s. He singled out “corruption, which never seems to stop spreading”.

He led the stadium in an impromptu chant of “no to corruption” in French, the DRC’s lingua franca.

The theme struck a chord with many young people in the stadium, who denounced their own leaders as corrupt and complained of routinely having to pay bribes to receive what should be ordinary services.

“The pope is right,” said Joel Muhemereri Amani, 21, an art student.

“Because the country is going badly, imagine, to enter somewhere you have to corrupt the police. And I hope that the government, the police will change in this respect.”

The UN says African economies lose nearly $150 billion (about R2.5 trillion) to corruption each year. “Look, corruption exists in many countries of the world,” said Patrick Muyaya, Minister of Communicat­ion and government spokespers­on, after the pope’s speech. “There are structural problems linked to the organisati­on of the country. So we are going to work so all those who work can earn money by the sweat of their brow.”

The 86-year-old pope flies to neighbouri­ng South Sudan today. He will be visiting jointly with the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Church of Scotland Moderator. South Sudan is also grappling with conflict and hunger following a civil war that was fought mostly on ethnic lines and killed 400 000 people.

 ?? | AFP ?? PEOPLE gather during Pope Francis’s meeting with young people and catechists at Martyrs’ Stadium in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, yesterday.
| AFP PEOPLE gather during Pope Francis’s meeting with young people and catechists at Martyrs’ Stadium in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, yesterday.

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