Pope Francis starts Asian trip, arrives in Sri Lanka

Pope Francis boards the airplane on the occasion of his trip to Sri Lanka and Philippines, at Rome's Fiumicino International Airport, Monday, Jan. 12, 2015. The Pontiff embarks on his second Asian pilgrimage visiting Sri Lanka and the Philippines exactly 20 years after St. John Paul II's record-making visit to two countries with wildly disparate Catholic populations. Francis will make headlines of his own, drawing millions of faithful in the Philippines and treading unchartered political waters following Sri Lanka's remarkable electoral upset this week. AP/Gregorio Borgia

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (UPDATED 12:02 p.m.)— Pope Francis arrived in Sri Lanka Tuesday at the start of a weeklong Asian tour, aiming to bring a message of interreligious and interethnic harmony to Sri Lanka, which is still recovering from the wounds of a brutal, quarter-century civil war.

Francis descended the jet's stairway in bright sunshine and received a garland from a girl at the bottom, where he was greeted by newly elected President Maithripala Sirisena and Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith. He proceeded to walk along red carpet and waved to onlookers.

His arrival comes on the heels of new international religious tensions over the Paris attacks. Hours before Francis departed, he told Vatican-based diplomats that fundamentalist terrorism was the result of people becoming enslaved by "deviant forms of religion" and using God as an ideological pretext to perpetuate mass killings.

Francis is expected to nevertheless press his call for greater dialogue among people of different faiths during his visit to Sri Lanka, a mostly Buddhist Indian Ocean island nation that has Hindu, Muslim and Catholic minorities and a long history of Christianity because of its 400 years of Portuguese, Dutch and British colonial rule.

Francis arrived just days after the country's longtime president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, was upset in an election he had called. Sirisena had defected from the ruling party in November in a surprise move and won the election by capitalizing on Rajapaksa's unpopularity among ethnic and religious minorities.

Francis has a busy first day, including an airport arrival speech and a meeting with the country's bishops. The main event is an afternoon meeting with representatives of its major religious groups.

There, he's expected to call for greater harmony and dialogue among the country's Buddhists, Hindus, Muslims and Catholics amid a surge in anti-Muslim violence by fundamentalist Buddhists.

He is also expected to call for greater reconciliation between Sri Lanka's Sinhalese majority and Tamil minority during the first papal visit since Sri Lanka's civil war ended in 2009 with the army's brutal crushing of the Tamil Tiger rebels. Sinhalese are mostly Buddhist while Tamils are mostly Hindu. Catholics make up less than 7 percent of the island nation's 20 million people, but the church counts both Sinhalese and Tamils as members and sees itself as a strong source of national unity.

On Wednesday, Francis will canonize Sri Lanka's first saint, the Rev. Joseph Vaz, a 17th century missionary credited with reviving the Catholic faith among both Sinhalese and Tamils amid persecution by Dutch colonial rulers, who were Calvinists.

Later in the day he flies into Tamil territory to pray at a shrine beloved by both Sinhalese and Tamil faithful.

On Thursday he heads to the Philippines, the largest Roman Catholic country in Asia and the third-largest in the world, for the second and final leg of the journey.

There he'll comfort victims of the devastating 2013 Typhoon Haiyan, which left more than 7,300 people dead or missing, displaced some 4 million and turned a huge densely populated region into a wasteland.

Millions of Filipinos are expected to attend his events, possibly surpassing the record 5 million who turned out for the last papal visit, by St. John Paul II in 1995. Francis is expected to raise themes related to the family, poverty and the environment.

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