Jesuit Provincials stress tragedy of forced
migration
During their
General Assembly in Malta, from October 18th to 20th,
the Jesuit Provincials of Europe reflected on some
aspects of the tragic situation of refugees, asylum
seekers and forced migrants. The Assembly was also very
aware of the serious burdens faced by a small country
which is disproportionately exposed to the pressures of
such migration.
The Conference of European
Jesuit Provincials brings to the attention of all
European countries the continuing human tragedy of the
forced migrants who make their way from Africa across
the Mediterranean Sea to seek international protection
and the chance to build a future with dignity. The
question of migration is a priority for the Society of
Jesus worldwide. In Europe the Jesuit Refugee Service
has thirteen country offices, as well as a regional
office in Brussels. Many Jesuits work in relation to the
integration of migrants within European societies.
The increasing
inaccessibility of Europe to persons who urgently need
protection obliges thousands of men, women and children
to risk their lives by crossing the sea on small,
fragile boats, often with tragic consequences. Every
year, several hundred persons taking this route towards
Europe in search of asylum reach Malta, or need to be
rescued and brought there. Except for the most desperate
and vulnerable cases, they are then held in prolonged
detention, in conditions that deepen previous suffering.
If they succeed in gaining international protection,
they still face untold difficulties, stemming from
overcrowding, from Malta’s very limited capacity to
receive them, and from the scarcity of employment
opportunities.
We Jesuit provincials
maintain that this humanitarian issue cannot be resolved
in Malta alone, or even by the states on the EU’s
southern borders. It is a matter that requires urgent
action by the entire European Union.
We therefore urge the
states most directly concerned, and also the European
Union, to make asylum in Europe truly accessible, and to
deal more justly and humanely with the forced migrants
who reach our shores. As this tragedy, with its roots in
countries of origin in our neighbouring continent of
Africa, continues to unfold we make three calls to our
governments and to the European Union: to show effective
solidarity with persons urgently seeking protection; to
share with over-burdened border states the
responsibility of meeting our shared human rights
obligations; and to strengthen partnerships with African
states so as to create new opportunities for their
peoples to sustain a life with dignity.
Equally, it is a challenge
to the whole of European society to confront the fear
and xenophobia that sometimes underlies the utter
resistance to the claims of migrants.
The Assembly represents
about 5900 Jesuits, and their colleagues, working in
twenty-three member states of the European Union, as
well as in Russia, Ukraine, Croatia, Switzerland, the
Western Balkans, the Middle East and the Maghreb.
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