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Pope, Patriarch’s Greek island visit to highlight refugee plight

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Pope Francis and Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew fly to Lesbos on Saturday for a visit that will again turn the spotlight on Europe's controversial deal with Turkey to end an unprecedented refugee crisis.

The Greek island, where hundreds of thousands of asylum-seekers and other migrants have arrived in recent months, is on the frontline of a humanitarian crisis that has sparked disagreements between European countries and brought the bloc's system of open borders to the brink of collapse.

Francis, 79, took off from Rome's Fiumicino airport at 7:20am (05h20 GMT) for the island.

The island has also become the focus for criticism of the EU's March deal to ensure so-called economic migrants who travel to the Greek islands on boats operated by people smugglers are quickly sent back to Turkey, which has agreed to take them in return for billions in EU cash.

Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I has urged Europe to stop trying to divide economic migrants from as...
Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I has urged Europe to stop trying to divide economic migrants from asylum seekers
Bulent Kilic, AFP/File

The deal has resulted in new arrivals being detained on Lesbos pending processing to determine which of them have a legitimate claim to refuge from conflicts like the war in Syria or from fear of persecution.

"Perhaps (the Pope) can help open the borders?" Nedal, a 35-year-old Syrian being looked after with his family by Catholic aid group Caritas, told AFP ahead of the visit.

The two religious leaders, accompanied by Archbishop Ieronymos, the head of the Church of Greece, will spend five hours on Lesbos where they will visit the Moria processing centre.

Migrants protest in the Moria detention centre in Mytilene  which has been described as a centre for...
Migrants protest in the Moria detention centre in Mytilene, which has been described as a centre for "arbitrary detention" by rights groups
Aris Messinis, AFP

The facility, currently housing around 3,000 people, has been described as a centre for "arbitrary detention" by rights groups. Amnesty International has urged the pope to use his time on Lesbos to speak out against the EU-Turkey deal concluded last month.

Francis has framed his visit as an awareness-raising exercise trip and his spokesman insisted this week that its purpose was "strictly humanitarian and ecumenical, not political".

The pontiff, however, has demonstrated in the past that he is not one to mince his words and his spokesman reiterated: "If he the pope has something to say he will say it."

- 'Open your doors' -

A girl disembarks from a Greek coastguard boat at the port of Mytilene  on Lesbos island
A girl disembarks from a Greek coastguard boat at the port of Mytilene, on Lesbos island
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

Francis said earlier this week that the goal of his trip was "to show closeness and solidarity with the refugees as well as the citizens of Lesbos and to all the Greek people who have been so generous in their welcome".

The use of the term 'refugee' was not accidental. The former Jesuit priest -- and son of an Italian emigrant to Argentina -- has repeatedly said he does not accept the EU's distinction between those fleeing conflict and those fleeing poverty and starvation created by global economic inequalities.

And that line has been backed by Bartholomew, the Turkey-based leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, who said Europe as a whole must display the same generosity as the people of Lesbos.

"This offends God himself," he said. "The segregation of certain groups of people to the advantage of others does not reflect His desire."

The Vatican's head of migration issues, Cardinal Antonio Maria Veglio, has strongly criticised the EU-Turkey deal which he said treats refugees like "merchandise".

During their visit to Moria, the religious leaders are due to have lunch with a small group of asylum-seekers followed by a larger meeting with around 250 migrants and brief discussions with Greek coastguards and local residents.

On a 2013 visit to Lampedusa, the Italian island which has witnessed several deadly sinkings of migrant boats off its shores, the pope made one of the defining speeches of his papacy, denouncing the "globalisation of indifference" which has allowed thousands to perish at sea.

Over one million people crossed clandestinely from Turkey to Greece in 2015 and some 150,000 have made the trip since the start of this year.

Pope Francis and Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew fly to Lesbos on Saturday for a visit that will again turn the spotlight on Europe’s controversial deal with Turkey to end an unprecedented refugee crisis.

The Greek island, where hundreds of thousands of asylum-seekers and other migrants have arrived in recent months, is on the frontline of a humanitarian crisis that has sparked disagreements between European countries and brought the bloc’s system of open borders to the brink of collapse.

Francis, 79, took off from Rome’s Fiumicino airport at 7:20am (05h20 GMT) for the island.

The island has also become the focus for criticism of the EU’s March deal to ensure so-called economic migrants who travel to the Greek islands on boats operated by people smugglers are quickly sent back to Turkey, which has agreed to take them in return for billions in EU cash.

Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I has urged Europe to stop trying to divide economic migrants from as...

Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I has urged Europe to stop trying to divide economic migrants from asylum seekers
Bulent Kilic, AFP/File

The deal has resulted in new arrivals being detained on Lesbos pending processing to determine which of them have a legitimate claim to refuge from conflicts like the war in Syria or from fear of persecution.

“Perhaps (the Pope) can help open the borders?” Nedal, a 35-year-old Syrian being looked after with his family by Catholic aid group Caritas, told AFP ahead of the visit.

The two religious leaders, accompanied by Archbishop Ieronymos, the head of the Church of Greece, will spend five hours on Lesbos where they will visit the Moria processing centre.

Migrants protest in the Moria detention centre in Mytilene  which has been described as a centre for...

Migrants protest in the Moria detention centre in Mytilene, which has been described as a centre for “arbitrary detention” by rights groups
Aris Messinis, AFP

The facility, currently housing around 3,000 people, has been described as a centre for “arbitrary detention” by rights groups. Amnesty International has urged the pope to use his time on Lesbos to speak out against the EU-Turkey deal concluded last month.

Francis has framed his visit as an awareness-raising exercise trip and his spokesman insisted this week that its purpose was “strictly humanitarian and ecumenical, not political”.

The pontiff, however, has demonstrated in the past that he is not one to mince his words and his spokesman reiterated: “If he the pope has something to say he will say it.”

– ‘Open your doors’ –

A girl disembarks from a Greek coastguard boat at the port of Mytilene  on Lesbos island

A girl disembarks from a Greek coastguard boat at the port of Mytilene, on Lesbos island
Aris Messinis, AFP/File

Francis said earlier this week that the goal of his trip was “to show closeness and solidarity with the refugees as well as the citizens of Lesbos and to all the Greek people who have been so generous in their welcome”.

The use of the term ‘refugee’ was not accidental. The former Jesuit priest — and son of an Italian emigrant to Argentina — has repeatedly said he does not accept the EU’s distinction between those fleeing conflict and those fleeing poverty and starvation created by global economic inequalities.

And that line has been backed by Bartholomew, the Turkey-based leader of the world’s Orthodox Christians, who said Europe as a whole must display the same generosity as the people of Lesbos.

“This offends God himself,” he said. “The segregation of certain groups of people to the advantage of others does not reflect His desire.”

The Vatican’s head of migration issues, Cardinal Antonio Maria Veglio, has strongly criticised the EU-Turkey deal which he said treats refugees like “merchandise”.

During their visit to Moria, the religious leaders are due to have lunch with a small group of asylum-seekers followed by a larger meeting with around 250 migrants and brief discussions with Greek coastguards and local residents.

On a 2013 visit to Lampedusa, the Italian island which has witnessed several deadly sinkings of migrant boats off its shores, the pope made one of the defining speeches of his papacy, denouncing the “globalisation of indifference” which has allowed thousands to perish at sea.

Over one million people crossed clandestinely from Turkey to Greece in 2015 and some 150,000 have made the trip since the start of this year.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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