Pope
presses case for adequate, dignified housing in Nairobi
NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — Pope Francis is visiting a slum on
Nairobi's northwestern edge to press his call for adequate and dignified
housing for society's most marginal, especially in burgeoning megacities like
the Kenyan capital.
Francis has frequently insisted on the need for the three
"Ls" — land, labor and lodging — and on Friday he's expected to focus
on housing as a critical issue facing the world amid rapid urbanization that is
helping to upset Earth's delicate ecological balance.
Kangemi is one of 11 slums dotting Nairobi, East Africa's
largest city. The shanty itself has about 50,000 residents living without basic
sanitation. Most of the capital's slums comprise a maze of single-room mud
structures with iron-sheet roofing or cramped, high-rise buildings.
Francis referred to the problem of urban shanties in his speech
to the African U.N. headquarters on Thursday, saying everyone has a basic right
to "dignified living conditions," and that the views of local
residents must be taken into account when urban planners are designing new
construction.
"This will help eliminate the many instances of inequality
and pockets of urban poverty, which are not simply economic but also, and above
all, social and environmental," he said.
The message was keenly felt because the U.N. Habitat program,
which seeks to promote adequate and environmentally sustainable housing, is
based in Nairobi.
Francis raised the issue of environmental deterioration in
cities in his landmark encyclical "Praise Be," saying many megacities
today have simply become health threats, "not only because of pollution
caused by toxic emissions but also as a result of urban chaos, poor
transportation, and visual pollution and noise."
"Many cities are huge, inefficient structures, excessively
wasteful of energy and water. Neighborhoods, even those recently built, are
congested, chaotic and lacking in sufficient green space. We were not meant to
be inundated by cement, asphalt, glass and metal, and deprived of physical
contact with nature," he said.
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