Pope brings Africa tour to Angola as Trump feud drags on
Pope Leo XIV arrives to lead a Holy Mass at the Yaounde Ville Airport in Yaounde on the sixth day of an 11-day apostolic journey to Africa, on April 18, 2026. (Photo by PATRICK MEINHARDT / AFP)
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Pope Leo XIV on Saturday held a huge public mass in Cameroon
before leaving for Angola on the third leg of a landmark African tour marked by
a war of words with US President Donald Trump over the Middle East conflict.
Leo is set to become the third pontiff to visit the fossil
fuel-rich southern African country, where around 44 percent of the population
identifies as Catholic, after John Paul II in 1992 and Benedict XVI in 2009.
The American pope concluded his three-day visit to Cameroon
with an open-air mass at Yaounde airport before 200,000 people, who once again
cheered him with songs and dances.
In his homily delivered in French, he thanked the people of
Cameroon and urged the crowd to have "the courage to change habits and
structures," in a country ruled with an iron fist by 93-year-old Paul Biya
since 1982.
He then flew at midday to Luanda, the capital of Angola,
where he was scheduled to land at 3:00 pm ( 1400 GMT).
Elected in May 2025, Leo had until now been more discreet
and measured than his Argentine predecessor Francis (2013–2025).
But in recent days, he had adopted a more assertive style
after being sharply criticised by Trump.
Leo is due to meet Angola's President Joao Lourenco and
deliver a speech.
Tens of thousands of worshippers are expected to flock to
catch a glimpse of the head of the world's 1.4 billion Catholics before his
departure on Tuesday.
"It's as if God were very close to us,"
40-year-old human resources manager Helena Maria Miguel said of the pope's
visit.
Leo's increasingly vigorous calls for world peace are likely
to resonate in Angola, which emerged in 2002 from a 27-year civil war that
erupted in the wake of independence from Portugal in 1975.
Throughout his 11-day four-nation Africa visit, the pope has
delivered pointed warnings against corruption, the plunder of the continent's
resources and the dangers of artificial intelligence, as his tussle with Trump
drags on.
After Trump's Catholic Vice President JD Vance urged the
Vatican to "stick to matters of morality", Leo on Thursday said the
world was "being ravaged by a handful of tyrants" and piled on more
criticism of those who use religion to justify war.
During his stop in Cameroon, Leo demanded the country's
leaders tackle corruption and condemned "those who, in the name of profit,
continue to seize the African continent to exploit and plunder it".
Like his calls for peace, Leo's warnings against graft and
exploitation are likely to strike a chord in Angola, where a third of the
population live below the poverty line despite its vast fossil fuel reserves.
The country's economy is heavily dependent on oil, leaving
it exposed to price fluctuations, while rampant corruption has even spread to
the family of former president Jose Eduardo dos Santos.
"There is a lot of suffering, a lot of poverty in
Angola. I hope the pope will see with his own eyes the needs of the youth
here," said Antonio Masaidi, a 33-year-old engineer.
On Sunday, Leo will celebrate a giant open-air mass in
Kilamba on Luanda's outskirts, where facilities including a large food court
are being built to host tens of thousands of worshippers.
In the afternoon, the pope will travel by helicopter to the
village of Muxima, about 130 kilometres (80 miles) southeast of Luanda, home to
a 16th-century church overlooking the Kwanza River that has become one of
southern Africa's most important pilgrimage sites.
A basilica is under construction in Muxima, where slaves
were once baptised before being shipped out of Africa, as part of a
multimillion-dollar government project to turn it into a major tourism
destination.
"It is a historic moment of grace, a moment of profound
emotion, with tears in our eyes and gratitude in our hearts," the rector
of the shrine, Father Mpindi Lubanzadio Alberto, told the Catholic news site
ACI Africa.
On April 20, the pope is due to travel more than 800
kilometres from the capital to visit a retirement home in Saurimo and celebrate
another mass before departing the following morning.
Leo will then fly to Equatorial Guinea, the final stop of a
whirlwind 18,000-kilometre journey that began in Algeria.

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