Pope Leo has criticized the treatment of prisoners in Equatorial Guinea, ahead of a visit to a jail known for its dire conditions. He addressed the Central African nation on Wednesday at a Mass that drew some 100,000 people, including Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, the country's leader and the world's long-serving president. The Pope said: My thoughts go to the poorest, to families experiencing difficulty and to prisoners who are often forced to live in troubling hygienic and sanitary conditions.
Oil-rich Equatorial Guinea, a country with a poor human rights record and vast income inequalities, is the Pope's final stop on a four-nation tour of Africa. In the evening on Wednesday, his last full day of the tour, Pope Leo is scheduled to visit an infamous prison in the economic capital, Bata. Amnesty International has reported that inmates in Bata prison are 'routinely beaten as punishment', and numerous prisoners 'have neither been seen nor heard from, and their relatives do not know whether they are alive or dead'.
During Wednesday's Mass at the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in the town of Mongomo, Pope Leo urged Equatoguineans 'to serve the common good rather than private interests, bridging the gap between the privileged and the disadvantaged'. He also called for the country's resources to be used to improve the lives of the wider population and not just a privileged few. 'The Creator has endowed you with great natural wealth. I urge you to work together so that it may be a blessing for all,' he said, warning that the future of the country depended on the people's choices.
Obiang's government has faced accusations of corruption, diverting the country's oil revenues for the benefit of the elite, which it denies. Transparency International has listed Equatorial Guinea as one of the world's most corrupt states, while the World Bank reports that more than half of its citizens live in poverty. Political opposition is barely tolerated, with the lack of a free press hampering dissent. 'May there be greater room for freedom and may the dignity of the human person always be safeguarded,' the Pope said pointedly.
President Obiang, aged 83 and in power since 1979, held a private meeting with the Pope on Tuesday. Throughout his tour of Africa—spanning Algeria, Cameroon, and Angola—Pope Leo has spoken frankly about governance issues, criticizing 'tyrants' for their wastefulness, condemning the exploitation of Africa's resources, and promoting the necessity of human dignity.
Oil-rich Equatorial Guinea, a country with a poor human rights record and vast income inequalities, is the Pope's final stop on a four-nation tour of Africa. In the evening on Wednesday, his last full day of the tour, Pope Leo is scheduled to visit an infamous prison in the economic capital, Bata. Amnesty International has reported that inmates in Bata prison are 'routinely beaten as punishment', and numerous prisoners 'have neither been seen nor heard from, and their relatives do not know whether they are alive or dead'.
During Wednesday's Mass at the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in the town of Mongomo, Pope Leo urged Equatoguineans 'to serve the common good rather than private interests, bridging the gap between the privileged and the disadvantaged'. He also called for the country's resources to be used to improve the lives of the wider population and not just a privileged few. 'The Creator has endowed you with great natural wealth. I urge you to work together so that it may be a blessing for all,' he said, warning that the future of the country depended on the people's choices.
Obiang's government has faced accusations of corruption, diverting the country's oil revenues for the benefit of the elite, which it denies. Transparency International has listed Equatorial Guinea as one of the world's most corrupt states, while the World Bank reports that more than half of its citizens live in poverty. Political opposition is barely tolerated, with the lack of a free press hampering dissent. 'May there be greater room for freedom and may the dignity of the human person always be safeguarded,' the Pope said pointedly.
President Obiang, aged 83 and in power since 1979, held a private meeting with the Pope on Tuesday. Throughout his tour of Africa—spanning Algeria, Cameroon, and Angola—Pope Leo has spoken frankly about governance issues, criticizing 'tyrants' for their wastefulness, condemning the exploitation of Africa's resources, and promoting the necessity of human dignity.




















