DILI,
East Timor
Pope Francis arrived to a warm welcome in East Timor on Monday on a three-day stay, the first papal visit since it gained independence from Indonesia in 2002.
Some 97 per cent of the
population identifies as Catholic, making it the country with the highest
percentage of Catholics outside of Vatican City.
Vatican officials say an
open-air celebration of Mass on Tuesday may include more than half the
country’s 1.3 million citizens.
His arrival in Dili from Papua
New Guinea marked the start of the third leg of the 87-year-old pontiff’s
ambitious 12-day visit to four countries across Southeast Asia and Oceania.
Francis was greeted at the
airport by President Jose Ramos-Horta and Prime Minister Xanana Gusmao, both
well-respected independence heroes.
Later on Monday, Pope Francis
is scheduled to address government officials and diplomats following an
official welcome ceremony.
He is expected to encourage
the country’s recovery from a brutal decades-long occupation by Indonesia and
East Timor’s battle for nationhood, while celebrating its development.
The pontiff’s visit coincides
with the 25th anniversary of the UN-backed referendum that led to its
independence.
Since then, the country which
is one of the world’s poorest, has struggled to rebuilding its infrastructure
and economy. A 2014 World Bank report estimated that almost half of Timorese
live in poverty.
Francis’ visit has once again
put the spotlight on the sexual abuse of children within the church. A leading
advocacy group for survivors has called on the Pope to speak out about the
cases during his stay.
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