Pope Francis has expressed
concern about a “very dangerous” alliance between the U.S. and Russia,
saying its leaders are among those that have a “distorted vision of the
world” when it comes to immigration.
The pope, in an interview with an Italian newspaper
on Thursday, lumped the two countries’ relationship in with those of China and North Korea and Russia and Syria as some of the top world leaders met at the G-20 summit in Germany.
“I worry about very dangerous alliances between powers which have a distorted vision of the world: America and Russia, China and North Korea, (Russian President Vladimir) Putin and (Syria’s Bashar al-) Assad over the war in Syria,” the pope told La Repubblica newspaper.
The warning came one day before President Donald Trumpheld his first face-to-face meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Though the meeting was scheduled to last only 30 minutes, it went on for hours with both men singing praises of one another.
The pope has previously expressed concerns over Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea region. He has also criticized Trump over his stance on immigration, at one point saying Trump “is not Christian” because of his determination to build border walls.
In his
interview, he went on to ask that the leaders of Europe, which he
described as the “richest continent in the whole world,” not try to
succumb to an illusion that they can seal their borders.
The G-20, a meeting of 19 countries’ leaders plus the European Union, traditionally aims at addressing global financial and economic issues. The countries involved make up nearly two-thirds of the word’s population and three-quarters of global trade. Other issues this
year included climate policy and women’s economic empowerment.
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