Home » Pope Leo XIV Draws 100,000 Worshippers in Equatorial Guinea as Historic African Tour Confronts Human Rights and Inequality

Pope Leo XIV Draws 100,000 Worshippers in Equatorial Guinea as Historic African Tour Confronts Human Rights and Inequality

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Pope Leo XIV celebrated Mass before an estimated crowd of 100,000 people in Equatorial Guinea this week, including the country’s long-serving president Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, as the pontiff continued an 11-day tour across the African continent that has combined spiritual outreach with unusually direct criticism of governance, corruption, and the unequal distribution of oil wealth. The Mass in Equatorial Guinea was one of the most politically charged events of the papal tour, given the country’s record of human rights abuses documented extensively by the United Nations and international human rights organizations.

Pope Leo XIV did not shy away from the tensions. In his remarks to the massive crowd gathered for the religious service, the Pope urged citizens to work together to build a society capable of engendering a new sense of justice, one where there is greater room for freedom and where the dignity of the human person is always safeguarded. For a country where the ruling Obiang family has controlled power for nearly five decades and where oil revenues have generated extraordinary wealth for a small elite while much of the population remains in poverty, those words carried unmistakable weight.

Equatorial Guinea is one of sub-Saharan Africa’s largest oil producers per capita, yet its human development indicators lag far behind what its resource wealth would suggest. The country’s prisons and justice system have been repeatedly singled out by UN human rights bodies and condemned by the United States State Department. The Pope’s decision to include Equatorial Guinea prominently in his Africa tour has itself been interpreted by human rights advocates as a calculated decision to draw international attention to conditions inside the country.

The broader Africa tour reflects the new Pope’s determination to engage with the continent not as a distant beneficiary of Western charity but as a critical part of the global Catholic community and a region whose political and economic challenges demand direct engagement. Africa is home to the fastest-growing Catholic population on Earth, and the Church’s future numerical strength lies heavily on the continent.

Earlier stops on the tour included Equatorial Guinea’s neighbors in Central and West Africa, where the Pope addressed issues including conflict-driven displacement, climate-related food insecurity, and the governance failures that allow corruption to persist despite significant natural resource endowments. In each location, local religious leaders and civil society representatives have praised the Pope’s willingness to speak plainly about political realities rather than confining himself to spiritual messaging.

The tour has also engaged with the controversy surrounding Taiwan’s President Lai Ching-te, who had been scheduled to visit Eswatini, the only African country that maintains diplomatic relations with Taipei, to attend the 40th anniversary of King Mswati III’s accession. China pressured Seychelles, Mauritius, and Madagascar toBilateral Scholars Union Urges FG to Address Stipend Delays and 56% Cuts for Nigerian Students Abroad revoke overflight clearances for Lai’s flight, with Taiwan accusing Beijing of economic coercion and violation of international norms. The incident underscores how Africa has become a central arena for the geopolitical competition between China and the United States and its allies.

South Africa and Lesotho also made news this week with a landmark migration agreement that will allow citizens of both countries to cross the border using only their national identity documents. Basotho who had previously been barred from South Africa for overstaying their permitted periods will receive amnesty under the new arrangement. The two countries are also planning to introduce an electronic travel authorization system, in a move being watched closely by other African nations as a model for simplified regional mobility.

Sudan’s humanitarian crisis continues to cast a long shadow over the continent’s news cycle. The UN’s International Organization for Migration reported that approximately 4 million people displaced by the conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces have begun returning to their areas of origin. However, IOM Deputy Director General Sung Ah Lee warned that these returnees face another struggle for survival in areas that were devastated during the fighting, with Khartoum and Al Jazirah state among the most affected areas.

The Pope’s tour concludes in the coming days, but the conversations it has sparked about governance, resource management, human rights, and the Church’s role in African political life are expected to continue long after he returns to the Vatican.

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