The Vatican also confirmed today that Francis would meet with Rohingya Muslims during an interreligious meeting in neighboring Dhaka, Bangladesh, on December 1.
Myanmar's Catholic leaders have urged Francis against using the term "Rohingya," calling it "political" and "contested."
Vatican spokesman Greg Burke declined to say if Francis would use "Rohingya" during the visit, which begins Monday with Francis' arrival in Yangon and ends December 2 in Dhaka.
But Francis has used the term "Rohingya" in the past, and Burke used it in a briefing outlining the visit today and said: "It's not a prohibited word."
Francis' visit was in the works before the start of the latest violence, which began with a series of attacks August 25 by Rohingya insurgents against security positions in Rakhine state. Myanmar security forces responded with a scorched-earth campaign against Rohingya villages that the U.N., U.S. and human rights groups have criticized as textbook "ethnic cleansing."
Burke said Myanmar's Catholic cardinal, Charles Bo, had proposed during a weekend audience with Francis that he meet with Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, Myanmar's powerful military chief who is in charge of operations in Rakhine.
Previously, Francis was only expected to meet with Suu Kyi and deliver a speech to Myanmar authorities, civil society and diplomats, at which military leaders would be expected to attend.
Bo, the top-ranked churchman in Myanmar, has defended Suu Kyi against what he termed "unfair" criticism leveled against her internationally and says she represents Myanmar's only hope for moving toward democracy.
He has said she has no constitutional right to speak out against the military and was maneuvering in the best possible way to negotiate improvements not only for Rohingya but Myanmar's other minorities, Catholics included. Catholics represent about 1.27 per cent of the population.
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