in paraguay. they were thousands of residents there chanting his name reaching out trying to touch him. he had a lot of uplifting words for them. he said he had been looking forward to visiting them personally since the day he left rome. he also said that he was really happy to be there on their land. and those two words he emphasized. they re important because these are squatters. like many shantytowns, these are people who come from the countryside trying to get jobs in the city. they don t own the titles to the land but they re trying to get the titles. for him to call it their land that elifted lots of cheers. he then went on to celebrate a huge mass in a nearby also very muddy field. about a million people were there. lots of argentines. even the argentine president crossed the border to see him. as you mentioned, there has been a lot of controversial language. the pope has not been pulling any punches here. so in that speech yesterday he talked about the need to have economic gro
captured last year. now he s still facing multiple indictments in the united states. so today the attorney general loretta lynch released this statement saying we share the government of mexico s concern regarding the escape of el chapo from a mexican prison in addition to his crimes in mexico he faces multiple drug trafficking and organized crime charges in the united states. last year officials in mexico vowed that he would not escape prison again but now it s an international manhunt for the man they call el chapo. will carr thank you very much. pope francis returns to the vatican after wrapping up a three nation tour of his homeland. his final stop paraguay where he continued to spread words of hope for the world s poor. earlier in the day he traveled to slums and shanty towns. in his words the sick and sinners alike. it is number three for the
up in the poorest neighborhoods, the shantytowns, the favelas across latin america. just a few steps from people s homes. they re really ministering directly to the poor. they go door to door with donations of food and clothes. often the reverends come from those communities. in many cases, from the indigenous communities. they look like the people they re ministering to. so this is a huge challenge that pope francis and the catholic church are up against. what we re seeing that s new here is that the pope himself is a champion of the poor. and he doesn t just talk the talk, he walks the walk. this is a man who has a very austere lifestyle. someone who has really decided not to bring with him all of the papal trappings that we have seen in other leaders of the catholic church. so this is that the catholic church hopes and is praying will sort of begin to reverse this trend, this migration of followers from the catholic church to these other evangelical religions. let s talk specifica
the not as appealing parts of the city. and as shasta darlington explains, some residents of rio s shantytowns are being pressured to leave. reporter: some walls are left standing but the roof is gone. homes demolished to make way for the 2016 olympics. here in the shantytown some 50 families have simply refused to go. we work as doormen and security guards, he says. we spend everything we have on our houses. francisco invites us into his home. he says he built it brick by brick over the last 12 years. now an oasis. amid crumbled buildings and sewage running across the streets. they occupy a tiny corner of what will be the 20126 olympic park. right next door apartment blocks for athletes going up. residents tell us officials
because this deadline was supposed to be the first hurdle this new stepped up international response was supposed to clear and they have failed and fallen at that first hurdle and it s extraordinarily disheartening. the other aspect is guinea to a certain extent follows the outbreak we ve seen of the past and hasn t hit areas with huge population centers and even though it was ground zero for the outbreak we are seeing that stabilize because the epidemic hasn t had the opportunity to spread out in areas with large population numbers. now, liberia and sierra leone, the epidemic has hit at the capital while there is really intensive population numbers and people living side by side, f e freeton and monrovia where you have weak health care infrastructure, weak sanitation, you have shantytowns, very disorganized residential areas and it s just spread like