'Leo will follow Francis.' Amazon Catholics hope the new pope will protect the rain forestNew Foto - 'Leo will follow Francis.' Amazon Catholics hope the new pope will protect the rain forest

SAO PAULO (AP) — The bishop sat quietly near the front row, hands folded, listening as Indigenous leaders and church workers spoke about the threats to Peru's northern forests, a part of the Amazon rain forest. It was 2016, a year afterLaudato Si, Pope Francis' encyclical on the environment. When he was up to speak, the bishop didn't preach though he was in his city of Chiclayo as host of a regional gathering. Instead, he reflected on things he had seen. "It's a very important encyclical," he said. "It also represents something new in terms of this explicit expression of the church's concern for all of creation." That bishop, Robert Prevost, is nowPope Leo XIV. "He was always very welcoming, very close to the people," Laura Vargas, secretary of the Interreligious Council of Peru, who helped organize the event, recalled in a phone interview with The Associated Press. "He had no problem saying yes when we proposed it — he was genuinely interested in social pastoral work." Since then, Prevost deepened his ties with interfaith environmental networks like the Interfaith Rainforest Initiative and Indigenous organizations such as AIDESEP, which place forest protection and rights at the center of Church concern. Such credentials have brought hope to clergymen and faithful in the Amazon region, a vast area with 48 million residents and 6.7 million square kilometers (2.6 million square miles) in South America. They see Chicago-born Prevost, who spent about two decades in Peru's countryside, as a pontiff who protect the region and fight against climate change. NAVIGATING THE AMAZON Many Catholics have said they believe Prevost's experience asbishop of Chiclayo, a city of 630,000 residents in Northern Peru and not too far from the Amazon, was one of the key reasons he was chosen. They also said the pontiff's hands-on experience in an impoverished area far from major cities could also serve him well in dealing with the Amazon and navigating its challenges. The Amazon is a key regulator of the climate, as its dense forests absorb carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that when released into the atmosphere heats the planet. But many parts of the Amazon are under threat from a wide range of illegal activities: farmers clearing trees to raise cows, gold miners dredging rivers and destroying local ecosystems and land-grabbers seizing territories. Wildfires and droughts, exacerbated by climate change, have also hit Amazon communities hard in recent years. Prevost is well acquainted with these issues, having presided over the Pontifical Commission for Latin America, which helped him bond with colleagues of the nine countries touched by the Amazon. Many of them are among the 105 bishops of an organization he openly supports, the Pan-Amazonian Ecclesial Network, a Catholic Church network focused on the Amazon region. "I spoke to him a number times about the Amazon and the environment. He doesn't need to be convinced of its importance," said Cardinal Pedro Barreto, the president of the network, who has known Prevost since he became the bishop of Chiclayo in 2015. Brazilian Friar Paulo Xavier agrees. "Leo will follow Francis; we are going forward with environment protection," Xavier said. "The Holy Spirit has acted on our behalf." Xavier is based in Manaus, a city of 2 million residents in the Amazon which received its first-ever cardinal appointed by Francis in 2022: the now 74-year-old archbishop Leonardo Steiner, an enthusiast of Laudato Si. Steiner, Xavier and the Manaus archdiocese have invested to get the encyclical into the hands of locals, even when that means jumping on small, motorized canoes through the brown waters of the Negro River to reach isolated villages in journeys that can last days on a boat. POPE FOR ACTION In November 2024, the Vatican News reported that Prevost called for more action to tackle climate change and protect the environment during a seminar in Rome. He cited efforts the Vatican has taken such as installing solar panels and electric vehicles. On the social media platform X, Prevost has reposted messages about protecting the environment. One message he reposted on April 1, 2017, expressed concern about emissions of carbon dioxide, a planet-warming gas, during President Donald Trump's his first term. Laura Vicuña, an Indigenous woman of the Kariri people and the vice president of the Ecclesial Conference of the Amazon Region, said in a letter published on social media that she hopes the pope will be an ally in the fight against climate change. The conference was created by Francis in 2020 to promote discussion between clergymen and laypeople. "From our dear Amazon, we plead with you to be our ally in the defense of what is the most sacred for us; life, land and rights," Vicuña wrote. Indigenous peoples like Vicuña's Kariri are often regarded as key protectors of the Amazon, but for many years they have been forced out of their lands by criminals, deforestation and famine, as seen in the Yanomami lands in Northern Brazil in 2023. Spaniard Luis Ventura, the executive-secretary of Brazil's Indigenous Missionary Council, said he prays for the new pope to keep his eyes close to the Amazon, with a special attention to the Indigenous. Founded in 1972, the council had rare occasions to meet with pontiffs until Francis rose in 2013. Its members hope Leo doesn't change that. "Leo XIV will have a big impact on the Amazon," said Ventura. "His life was always with the people in Peru, and that allows us to think the church will be deep into the territory." CLIMATE URGENCY Francis showed great interest in the Amazon during his pontificate. Four years after Laudato Si, he hosted theAmazon Synod, which sought "new Paths for the Church and for an integral ecology." Rose Bertoldo, one of the secretaries of the Manaus archdiocese, said she is hopeful for the region's future under Leo, given it would build on Francis' interest. She added the new pontiff will have a chance to visit Brazil, the nation with the most Catholics in the world, during this year's U.N. climate summit, known as COP30, in the Amazonian city of Belem in November. "We know that the urgencies and the challenges in the Amazon will be bigger because of the global political context of division. We need him at COP," Bertoldo said. Irish priest Peter Hughes, who spent most of his life in Peru, met Prevost shortly after he arrived in the Andean nation in 1985. They quickly became friends, and would see each other when the bishop of Chiclayo was in the capital Lima. "Back then, (Prevost) was worried about extractivism in the Amazon and the effect it had on the poor," said Hughes, referring to the new pontiff. "Now it is a much more complex world, the urgency is evident." ____ Grattan reported from Belfast, Northern Ireland. Associated Press writer Isabella O'Malley contributed from Philadelphia. ___ The Associated Press' climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

'Leo will follow Francis.' Amazon Catholics hope the new pope will protect the rain forest

'Leo will follow Francis.' Amazon Catholics hope the new pope will protect the rain forest SAO PAULO (AP) — The bishop sat quietly n...
In coffee-producing Uganda, an emerging 'sisterhood' wants more women involvedNew Foto - In coffee-producing Uganda, an emerging 'sisterhood' wants more women involved

SIRONKO, Uganda (AP) — Meridah Nandudu envisioned a coffee sisterhood inUganda, and the strategy for expanding it was simple: Pay a higher price per kilogram when a female grower took the beans to a collection point. It worked. More and more men who typically made the deliveries allowed their wives to go instead. Nandudu's business group now includes more than 600 women, up from dozens in 2022. That's about 75% of her Bayaaya Specialty Coffee's pool of registered farmers in this mountainous area of eastern Uganda that produces prized arabica beans and sells to exporters. "Women have been so discouraged by coffee in a way that, when you look at (the) coffee value chain, women do the donkey work," Nandudu said. But when the coffee is ready for selling, men step in to claim the proceeds. Her goal is to reverse that trend in a community where coffee production is not possible without women's labor. Uganda is one of Africa's top two coffee producers, and the crop is its leading export. The east African country exported more than 6 million bags of coffee between September 2023 and August 2024, accounting for $1.3 billion in earnings, according to the Uganda Coffee Development Authority. The earnings have been rising as production dwindles in Brazil, the world's top coffee producer, which facesunfavorable drought conditions. In Sironko district, where Nandudu grew up in a remote village near the Kenya border, coffee is the community's lifeblood. As a girl, when she was not at school, she helped her mother and other women look after acres of coffee plants. They usually planted, weeded and toiled with the post-harvest routine that includes pulping, fermenting, washing and drying the coffee. The harvest season was known to coincide with a surge in cases of domestic violence, she said. Couples fought over how much of the earnings that men brought home from sales — and how much they didn't. "When (men) go and sell, they are not accountable. Our mothers cannot ask, 'We don't have food at home. You sold coffee. Can you pay school fees for this child?'" she said. Years later, Nandudu earned her degree in the social sciences from Uganda's top public university in 2015, with her father funding her education from coffee earnings. She had the idea to launch a company that would prioritize the needs of coffee-producing women in the country's conservative society. She thought of her project as a kind of sisterhood and chose "bayaaya" — a translation in the Lumasaba language — for her company's name. It launched in 2018, operating like others that buy coffee directly from farmers and process it for export. But Bayaaya is unique in Mbale, the largest city in eastern Uganda, for focusing on women and for initiatives such as a cooperative saving society that members can contribute to and borrow from. For small-holder Ugandan farmers in remote areas, a small movement in the price of a kilogram of coffee is a major event. The decision to sell to one or another middleman often hinges on small price differences. A decade ago, the price of coffee bought by a middleman from a Ugandan farmer was roughly 8,000 Uganda shillings, or just over $2 at today's exchange rate. Now the price is roughly $5. Nandudu adds an extra 200 shillings to the price of every kilogram she buys from a woman. It's enough of an incentive that more women are joining. Another benefit is a small bonus payment during the off-season from February to August. That motivates many local men "to trust their women to sell coffee," Nandudu said. "When a woman sells coffee, she has a hand in it." Nandudu's group has many collection points across eastern Uganda, and women trek to them at least twice a week. Men are not turned away. Selling as a Bayaaya member has fostered teamwork as her family collectively decides how to spend coffee earnings, said Linet Gimono, who joined the group in 2022. And with assured earnings, she's able to afford the "small things" she often needs as a woman. "I can buy soap (and) I can buy sugar without pulling ropes with my husband over it," she said. Another member, Juliet Kwaga, said her mother never would have thought of collecting coffee earnings because her father was very much in charge. Now, Kwaga's husband, with a bit of encouragement, is comfortable sending her. "At the end of the day I go home with something to feed my family, to support my children," she said. In Sironko district, home to more than 200,000 people, coffee trees dot the hilly terrain. Much of the farming is on plots of one or two acres, although some families have larger tracts. Many farmers don't usually drink coffee, and some have never tasted it. Some women smiled in embarrassment when asked what it tasted like. But things are slowly changing. Routine coffee drinkers are emerging among younger women in the coffee business in urban areas, including at a roasting place in Mbale where most employees are women. Phoebe Nabutale, who helps oversee quality assurance for Darling Coffee, was raised in a family of coffee growers. She bent over the roaster, smelling the beans until she got the aroma she wanted. Many of her girlfriends, she said, regularly ask how they can break into the coffee business, as roasters or otherwise. For Nandudu, who aims to start exporting beans, that's progress. Now there are more women in "coffee as a business," she said. ___ For more on Africa and development:https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

In coffee-producing Uganda, an emerging 'sisterhood' wants more women involved

In coffee-producing Uganda, an emerging 'sisterhood' wants more women involved SIRONKO, Uganda (AP) — Meridah Nandudu envisioned a c...
Trump cannot use new executive order to skirt 'sanctuary' cities ruling, judge saysNew Foto - Trump cannot use new executive order to skirt 'sanctuary' cities ruling, judge says

By Nate Raymond (Reuters) - A federal judge warned on Friday that a new executive order from President Donald Trump that calls for cutting off funding to so-called sanctuary jurisdictions that do not cooperate with his immigration agenda cannot be used to evade a court order barring his administration from doing just that. U.S. District Judge William Orrick in San Francisco issued Friday's order at the urging of 16 cities and counties nationally that had already secured an injunction barring the administration from withholding all federal funding to them. Those cities and counties, led by San Francisco, sued after Trump signed two earlier executive orders in January and February that they said unlawfully threatened to cut off funding to them unless they cooperated with federal immigration law enforcement, including U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The jurisdictions include the cities of Minneapolis; New Haven, Connecticut; Portland, Oregon; St. Paul, Minnesota; Santa Fe, New Mexico; and Seattle, all of which have laws and policies that limit or prevent local law enforcement from assisting federal officers with civil immigration arrests. Four days after Orrick issued the injunction in April, Trump signed a new executive order directing Attorney General Pam Bondi to create a list of sanctuary jurisdictions and for agencies to then identify grants and other funding to them they could cancel or suspend. The 16 local governments argued Trump issued the new executive order in "blatant disregard" for Orrick's court order and urged him to enforce his injunction. Orrick, who during Trump's first term in office blocked enforcement of a similar 2017 executive order targeting sanctuary jurisdictions, said on Friday that the latest order had some material differences from the earlier ones and, in some respects, may even resolve problems he identified in them. He said the administration could potentially identify funds to rescind if there was enough of a connection between the funding stream and the jurisdiction's "sanctuary" policies. But Orrick said if Trump's latest order was used to instead target funds unrelated to sanctuary policies, their suspension would violate the U.S. Constitution just as the earlier executive orders did. He said the context surrounding Trump's new order raises the threat that the government would use it "to unconstitutionally coerce the cities and Counties (and other jurisdictions like them) into changing their policies and practices to conform with the second Trump administration's preferences." San Francisco City Attorney David Chiu in a statement said Friday's order "makes clear that the federal government cannot use Executive Orders or other agency action to withhold federal funding as a coercive threat against sanctuary jurisdictions." The U.S. Department of Justice did not respond to requests for comment. (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)

Trump cannot use new executive order to skirt 'sanctuary' cities ruling, judge says

Trump cannot use new executive order to skirt 'sanctuary' cities ruling, judge says By Nate Raymond (Reuters) - A federal judge war...
Divided Catholic churchgoers look to Pope XIV for his agendaNew Foto - Divided Catholic churchgoers look to Pope XIV for his agenda

As Pope Leo XIV begins his papacy, some 1.4 billion Catholics worldwide will be looking to him for guidance on important issues like immigration, abortion, capital punishment, and the Church's relationship with the LGBTQ+ community. "He's going to be talking, I think, about these most difficult issues with a voice that is confident but also welcoming," Gary Adler, a sociology professor at Penn State University, told The Associated Press. Many followers have been mining the X account under the former cardinal's previous name, Robert Prevost, to learn more about his potential stance on issues and whether his positions may have changed over the years. RELATED STORY |What can we learn from the new pope's social media posts? In 2015, for example, Prevost's account posted photos of an anti-abortion March For Life rally in Peru, and in a separate, unrelated post, the account published the statement "It's time to end the death penalty." Prevost's account frequently reposted articles and statements made by other religious leaders, expressing strong opinions about other issues, including immigration. In 2018, for example, the account reposted comments that were critical of some of the first Trump Administration's policies. One of those comments, attributed to Cardinal Blase Cupich, said, "There is nothing remotely Christian, American, or morally defensible about a policy that takes children away from parents." RELATED STORY |Pope Leo XIV marks 'new beginning' with American and global outlook When it comes to his relationship with members of the LGBTQ+ community, his statements over time appear to have changed. According to the New York Times, the Pope delivered comments in 2012 that questioned the "homosexual lifestyle" by criticizing "sympathy for beliefs and practices that are at odds with the gospel." However, in 2023, he told the Catholic News Service the Church should be more open. "Given many things that have changed, I would say there's been a development in the sense of the need for the Church to open and to be welcoming," he said.

Divided Catholic churchgoers look to Pope XIV for his agenda

Divided Catholic churchgoers look to Pope XIV for his agenda As Pope Leo XIV begins his papacy, some 1.4 billion Catholics worldwide will be...
Trump admin chartering a plane to bring the first white South Africans to the U.S. as refugeesNew Foto - Trump admin chartering a plane to bring the first white South Africans to the U.S. as refugees

A group of white South Africans will be arriving in Washington, D.C., on Monday by way of a State Department-chartered plane to be resettled in the U.S. as refugees, a source familiar with their arrival told NBC News. Their resettlement comes even though President Donald Trump suspended the State Department's refugee admissions program through anexecutive orderon the first day of his second term. The group's scheduled arrival as the first white South Africans to enter the U.S. as refugees was first reported byThe New York Timeson Friday. Trump signed an order on Jan. 20 that said the U.S. "lacks the ability to absorb large numbers of migrants, and in particular, refugees, into its communities in a manner that does not compromise the availability of resources for Americans, that protects their safety and security, and that ensures the appropriate assimilation of refugees." But aftera public disputewith South African President Cyril Ramaphosa a few weeks later over his signing of a land seizure law, Trump issued a secondexecutive orderboth eliminating aid for South Africa and granting an exception for "Afrikaner refugees escaping government-sponsored race-based discrimination, including racially discriminatory property confiscation."Trump adviser Elon Musk, who was born and raised in South Africa, has described the country as having "racist ownership laws," accusing its government of failing to stop what he has referred to as a "genocide" against white farmers. The South African government expressed its concerns to the Trump administration regarding the refugee status granted to its citizens in a Friday phone call between South African Deputy Minister Alvin Botes and U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau. According to a South Africanreadoutof the call, Botes disputed the Trump administration's position that the white South Africans are refugees, adding that the "allegations of discrimination are unfounded." Under the 1951 Refugee Convention and its1967 Protocol, a refugee is defined as someone with a "well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion." The State Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment regarding how the white South Africans fit into the convention's definition, or why this group was given priority over requests from other groups fleeing persecution in countries like Sudan, the Republic of Congo or Myanmar. Chrispin Phiri, a spokesperson for South Africa's Ministry of International Relations and Cooperation, said in astatementFriday: "It is most regrettable that it appears that the resettlement of South Africans to the United States under the guise of being 'refugees' is entirely politically motivated and designed to question South Africa's constitutional democracy; a country which has in fact suffered true persecution under Apartheid rule and has worked tirelessly to prevent such levels of discrimination from ever occurring again." On Friday, White House deputy chief of staff and homeland security adviser Stephen Miller defended the resettling of the Afrikaners even as refugees from other countries were barred from the U.S. "What's happening in South Africa fits the textbook definition of why the refugee program was created," Miller said. "This is race-based persecution. The refugee program is not intended as a solution for global poverty, and historically, it has been used that way." Shawn VanDiver, the president of AfghanEvac, a San Diego-based coalition that helps Afghansevacuate and resettlein the U.S., said the Trump administration does not get to "cherry-pick which victims deserve safety." "If Stephen Miller suddenly supports refugee resettlement when it suits a political narrative, fine — but let's not pretend Afghan allies don't meet the same legal definition," VanDiver told NBC News. "Race-based persecution is real in many places — but so is religious, political, and gender-based violence. That's exactly what Afghans are fleeing."

Trump admin chartering a plane to bring the first white South Africans to the U.S. as refugees

Trump admin chartering a plane to bring the first white South Africans to the U.S. as refugees A group of white South Africans will be arriv...

 

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