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Pope Francis to lead mass in ‘crime-ridden’ Mexico

Pope Francis will celebrate an open-air mass in a crime-plagued Mexico City suburb on Sunday after thousands of pilgrims spent the night outdoors, awaiting his message of peace in the cold.

Pope Francis will celebrate an open-air mass in a crime-plagued Mexico City suburb on Sunday after thousands of pilgrims spent the night outdoors, awaiting his message of peace in the cold.

The Catholic faithful wrapped themselves in blankets, using plastic and cardboard to build makeshift tents on a university’s field, where 300,000 were expected for the service. Ecatepec, a concrete maze of 1.6 million people, is in the state of Mexico, a region that has become infamous for a spate of disappearances of women, whose bodies sometimes turn up in abandoned lots or canals.

Some 600 women have been killed between January 2014 and September 2015 in the state, according to the non-governmental National Citizen Observatory of Feminicides. Some pilgrims said that despite the city’s bad reputation, they were not concerned about spending the night outside. Hundreds of police officers stood guard around the field.

“We know that Ecatepec has a lot of problems like the lack of security and kidnappings,” said Rodrigo Perez, a 25-year-old public security student.

But the Pope’s visit, he said, is a chance to “talk about peace and unity.” The Argentine-born pontiff made it clear before his arrival in Mexico that he would speak out about the corruption and crime afflicting parts of the country.

He used his visit to the National Palace and the capital’s cathedral on Saturday to bluntly tell political and religious leaders to do more to bring peace to the country. At the palace, with President Enrique Pena Nieto by his side in a patio packed with lawmakers and government officials, Francis told them they had a duty to give “true justice” and “effective security” to Mexicans.

Later, he told bishops at the cathedral to take on the scourge of drug trafficking with “prophetic courage” and avoid hiding “behind anodyne denunciations.” Many Mexicans, fed up with a decade of drug violence that has left 100,000 dead or missing, had hoped to hear such words from the 79-year-old Pontiff.

Pope Francis has chosen to visit some of Mexico’s most troubled regions during his five-day trip to the world’s second most populous Catholic country. The crimes against women in the state of Mexico, which surrounds the capital, prompted the federal government to declare a “gender violence alert” requiring protective measures in 11 towns, including Ecatepec.

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