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Bono saw 'pain' on pope's face over abuse scandals

Pope Francis meets U2 singer Bono at the Vatican, where they discussed the abuse scandal rocking the Catholic Church

U2 frontman Bono said he could see the pain on Pope Francis's face on Wednesday when he told him "it looks to some people that the abusers are being more protected than the victims". "Having just come from Ireland we talked about the pope's feelings about what has happened in the Church," Bono said of his half-hour meeting with Francis at the Vatican. "You can see the pain in his face. And I felt he was sincere. He's an extraordinary man for extraordinary times." Francis has been attempting to address the latest wave of devastating claims of sexual abuse by clergy across the world. Past abuse scandals have badly damaged the image of the Catholic Church in Ireland, where Francis travelled for two days in late August and "begged for God's forgiveness". The trip, which was met with some protests by victims, was overshadowed by a former ambassador to the Holy See's claim that Francis personally ignored sexual abuse allegations against a prominent US cardinal. Bono, 58, said he also spoke to the Argentine pontiff about "how we have to rethink the wild beast that is capitalism" which "though it is not immoral, it is amoral". The singer has a long history of promoting charity, and in 2004 co-founded ONE, which describes itself as a campaigning and advocacy organisation trying to end extreme poverty and preventable disease, particularly in Africa.