NAPLES (Reuters) – Pope Francis urged members of organized crime to turn away from violence and exploitation and stop the “tears of the mothers of Naples” after visiting one of the city’s most violent and drug-infested neighbourhoods yesterday.
Francis, on a day-long trip, also spoke out against political corruption in an address to a crowd in the notorious Scampia neighbourhood, a stronghold of clans of the Camorra, the Naples version of the Sicilian mafia.
He was speaking in the shadow of a dilapidated sailboat-shaped housing estate known as Le Vele, so dangerous that even police are sometimes afraid to enter, residents say.
He urged residents of the area, which has often been the battleground of Camorra clans fighting for control of drug trafficking and extortion rackets, not to let criminals rob them of their hope.
At a Mass in the city centre, Francis urged Neapolitans to “react firmly to organizations that exploit and corrupt young people, that exploit the poor and the weak with cynical drug trafficking and other crimes.”
“To the criminals and all their accomplices, I, today, humbly and as a brother, repeat: convert yourselves to love and justice. It is possible to return to honesty. The tears of the mothers of Naples are asking this of you,” he said.
Since his election two years ago, Francis – who renounced the spacious papal apartments used by his predecessors and lives in a small apartment in a Vatican guest house – has made the defence of the poor and weakest members of society a key plank of his papacy.