Pope Francis ends Latin America tour with giant Mass
- Published
Pope Francis has celebrated an open-air Mass for more than a million people in the Peruvian capital, Lima at the end of his South American tour.
Earlier on Sunday, he warned that the region was in a deep crisis because of corruption.
The Pope described politics as "more sick than well".
He also highlighted the fact that three recent Peruvian presidents have been jailed or charged with corruption.
In the final hours of his six-day visit to Chile and Peru, he pointed to the impact of Odebrecht, a Brazilian construction company that has admitted paying billions of dollars in bribes to politicians across the region.
"Politics is in crisis, very much in crisis in Latin America," he said.
Peru's present leader, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, was nearly impeached in December because he did not reveal that a company he used to run did business with Odebrecht.
Earlier in his visit to Peru, Pope Francis became the first pope to visit the Amazon basin in more than 30 years.
Speaking to thousands of members of indigenous communities in the Madre de Dios region, he defended their way of life and spoke out against environmental degradation.
He said big business and "consumerist greed" could not be allowed to destroy a natural habitat vital for the whole world.
The Catholic Church's record on sexual abuse was a strong issue in both countries.
In Chile, Pope Francis infuriated victims families by saying criticism of a bishop he appointed who is accused of protecting a paedophile was "all slander".
- Published21 January 2018
- Published18 January 2018
- Published17 January 2018