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In Mexico, Francis condemns drug lords
Pope Francis, in a final prayer, urged Mexicans to make their country a land of opportunity. (Julio Cesar Aguilar Fuentes/AFP/Getty Images)
By Nicole Winfield
Associated Press

ECATEPEC, Mexico — Pope Francis condemned the drug trade’s ‘‘dealers of death’’ and urged Mexicans to shun the devil’s lust for money as he led a huge open-air Mass for more than 300,000 people Sunday in this violence-riddled city.

‘‘Let us get it into our heads: With the devil, there is no dialogue,’’ the pope said at the biggest scheduled event of his five-day visit to Mexico.

Francis brought a message of encouragement on the second full day of his trip to residents of Ecatepec, a poverty-stricken Mexico City suburb of some 1.6 million people where drug violence, kidnappings, and gangland-style killings, particularly of women, are a fact of life.

‘‘He’s coming to Ecatepec because we need him here,’’ said Ignacia Godinez, a 56-year-old homemaker. ‘‘Kidnappings, robberies, and drugs have all increased, and he is bringing comfort. His message will reach those who need it so that people know we, the good people, outnumber the bad.’’

In a clear reference to the drug lords who hold sway in the city’s sprawling expanses of cinderblock slums, Francis focused his homily on the danger posed by the devil.

‘‘Only the power of the word of God can defeat him,’’ the pope said.

In a final prayer, he urged Mexicans to make their country into a land of opportunity ‘‘where there will be no need to emigrate in order to dream, no need to be exploited in order to work, no need to make the despair and poverty of many the opportunism of a few, a land that will not have to mourn men and women, young people and children who are destroyed at the hands of the dealers of death.’’

The faithful lined the pope’s motorcade route to the huge field where the Mass was sais, tossing flower petals as he passed by and cheering with pom-poms in the yellow and white of the Vatican flag.

Vendors sold T-shirts, plates with Francis’ image on them, pins, bandanas, and cardboard-cutout figures of the pope.

An estimated 100,000 people have been killed and 27,000 have disappeared in gangland violence since President Enrique Pena Nieto’s predecessor launched an offensive against drug cartels shortly after taking office in late 2006.