Pope Francis condemns treatment of migrants in Europe
The Pope has denounced "narrow self-interest and
nationalism" over the way European countries treats migrants.
Pope Francis meets a young asylum -seeker at a camp on the
Greek island of Lesbos.
Speaking on the Greek island of Lesbos, Pope Francis called
the neglect of migrants the "shipwreck of civilisation".
The Pope first visited Lesbos in 2016, when it was a major
entry point for people trying to reach Europe.
Since then, new flashpoints have emerged and the Pope
expressed regret that little had changed.
Last month 27 people died when their inflatable dinghy sank
in the Channel between France and the UK. The number of people attempting the
crossing has been growing, with more than 26,000 people arriving in the UK so
far this year, more than double last year's total.
Several people have also died in freezing temperatures
attempting to cross into Poland from Belarus, which denies accusations it has
been orchestrating the crisis at its border to destabilise the EU.
"In Europe there are those who persist in treating the
problem as a matter that does not concern them - this is tragic," Pope
Francis said.
"History teaches us that narrow self-interest and
nationalism lead to disastrous consequences."
The pontiff was speaking at a temporary camp housing about
2,000 asylum-seekers, which replaced the overcrowded Moria camp that was
destroyed in fires last year.
While the coronavirus pandemic had shown that major
challenges had to be confronted together and there were some signs of this
happening on climate change, there was little sign of such an approach to
migration, he said.
"It is easy to influence public opinion by instilling
fear of the other," Pope Francis said.
"The remote causes should be attacked, not the poor
people who pay the consequences and are even used for political
propaganda."
The number of people entering Europe reached a high point in
2015, when more than a million people fleeing the Syrian civil war and other
crises made the journey.
Since then numbers have fallen as nations along migrant
routes closed borders. The EU also agreed a deal to return failed asylum
seekers to Turkey and has provided support for the Libyan coastguard to pick up
people who set off to sea.
But the flow of people has not stopped, with 1650 recorded
by the International Organization for Migration as having gone missing while
attempting to cross the Mediterranean this year.
Francis said he understood that there was a lot of
"fatigue and frustration" over migration that had been exacerbated by
the pandemic, but warned that without change there was a risk that civilisation
itself would find itself "shipwrecked".
"Let us eradicate the prevailing mentality revolving
around our ego and personal and national egoisms which determine every decision
we take," he said.
Greek President Katerina Sakellaropoulou, who was
accompanying Francis, said the migration issue was the responsibility of all
Europe, not just Greece.
More than 8000 people have crossed into Greece by land and
sea this year, down from about 15,000 last year and about 75,000 the previous
year, according to EU figures.
Greece is building closed camps on several islands to house
asylum seekers until their claims are processed. It denies that Greek coast
guards push back migrants at sea, insisting that they are saving lives.
British Home Secretary Priti Patel has cited the Greek
pushbacks as a possible model for the UK to push back migrant boats in the
Channel.
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