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Pope Francis drinks coca leaf tea on South American tour

Pope Francis upon arrival in El Alto, a plateau over La Paz, 4,000 meters above sea-level. Te Pope drank a tea with coca leaves to combat altitude sickness. Photograph: Cris Bouroncle/AFP/Getty Images

Main ingredient in cocaine given to pontiff in a brew of camomile and anise seeds on the plane to Bolivia as a remedy for altitude sickness.

Pope Francis upon arrival in El Alto, a plateau over La Paz, 4,000 meters above sea-level. Te Pope drank a tea with coca leaves to combat altitude sickness. Photograph: Cris Bouroncle/AFP/Getty Images

Pope Francis drank a tea of coca leaves, camomile and anise seeds on the plane to Bolivia from Ecuador to ward off altitude sickness upon arrival at the highest international airport in the world.

Coca is the main ingredient in cocaine but people in the Andean region have chewed coca leaves or drunk coca tea for centuries for its medicinal properties.

The flight attendant said the pope drank a mix called Trimate containing the three ingredients. It was also offered to journalists on the flight.

The pope did not appear to have any difficulties when he walked off the plane and while he was reading his welcoming address. He is visiting three of the poorest countries in Latin America on a trip that will also include Paraguay.

A Bolivian minister said 10 days ago that Francis had told government officials that he would like to chew coca leaves when he visits. A Vatican spokesman said, however, that the Argentine-born pontiff would decide for himself.

At just over 4,000 metres above sea level, La Paz airport is located in the appropriately named El Alto (“the high one”), a satellite city perched on the plateau above La Paz.

Indigenous people, including Bolivia’s first indigenous president, Evo Morales, defend the use of coca and consider it a sacred plant.

For health reasons, the 78-year-old Francis, who lost part of one lung to disease when he was a young man, will be in La Paz – 3,650 meters above sea level – for only about four hours before moving on to Santa Cruz, Bolivia’s largest city, which is at much lower altitude.

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