Europe's migrant crisis dominates Pope Francis' Cyprus-Greece trip
Cyprus has seen such a spike in migrant arrivals this year "a 38 per cent increase in the first 10 months compared to all of last year" that it has formally asked the European Commission to let it stop processing asylum claims altogether.
- Francis is expected to raise the migration question 'and Cyprus' nearly half-century division when he arrives in Nicosia
- The visit will also take him back to Lesbos, where in 2016 he brought a dozen Syrian migrants home with him from a refugee camp
- Francis is also meeting with the Orthodox leaders in both Cyprus and Greece, as well as the small local Catholic communities in each country
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Vatican City: Pope Francis' trip to Cyprus and Greece is drawing new attention to the plight of migrants on Europe's borders and the disconnect between Francis' Gospel-driven call for countries to welcome and integrate them and front-line governments that are increasingly unwilling or unable to let them in.
The eastern Mediterranean island nation of Cyprus has seen such a spike in migrant arrivals this year "a 38 per cent increase in the first 10 months compared to all of last year" that it has formally asked the European Commission to let it stop processing asylum claims altogether.
Francis is expected to raise the migration question 'and Cyprus' nearly half-century division when he arrives in Nicosia on Thursday on the first leg of his five-day trip. The visit will also take him back to Lesbos, where in 2016 he made headlines when he brought a dozen Syrian migrants home with him from a refugee camp on the Greek island.
Francis is arranging a similar transfer this time around: Around 50 migrants in Cyprus have been identified for transfer to Italy, though they won't join him on the plane home but will be resettled in coming weeks, Cypriot officials say. And the Vatican hasn't ruled out that some more migrants from Lesbos might be relocated to Italy as well following Francis' visit.
"It was like a gift," said one of the Syrian migrants who come to Italy after Francis' 2016 visit to Lesbos, Malak Abo. Now, Abo works at a donation centre run by the Catholic Sant'Egidio charity group in Rome that helped facilitate his 2016 transfer.
In divided Nicosia, Francis will immediately come face-to-face with the reality of the island's ethnic cleave, which is also helping to fuel its migration influx. Francis will be staying in the Vatican nunciature, or embassy, which is located in the UN-controlled buffer zone that divides the island between the Greek Cypriot south and the breakaway Turkish Cypriot north.
Cyprus was split in 1974 when Turkey invaded following a coup by supporters of union with Greece. Only Turkey recognizes the Turkish Cypriot declaration of independence in the north. UN-led efforts to resume reunification talks are proceeding at a snail's pace amid a Greek Cypriot rejection of Turkish Cypriot call for a two-state deal.
Around 80 per cent of all migrants in Cyprus first arrive in the north and then cross the porous UN green line to seek asylum in the internationally recognised south, which is a member of the European Union. The Cypriot government claims that Turkey systematically sends asylum-seekers to the breakaway north so that they then pressure the island's southern government.
Among the possible candidates for transfer to Italy after the pope's visit are Grace Enjei and Daniel Ejuba, two Cameroonian asylum-seekers who crossed from the north about six months ago and got stuck in the buffer zone, where they have been living in a blue tent ever since.
"If help can come from anywhere, I will grab it," Enjei said on the eve of Francis' arrival. "And if I'm given the opportunity to like, make a choice, of course, anywhere in Europe will be OK." She and Ejuba paid hundreds of euros to someone in the north who showed them the way to cross through the UN line six months ago.
They would face deportation if they returned to the north, but have been blocked from crossing into the south amid Cyprus' crackdown on migrants, which has recently included a 27.5 million-euro (USD 31.8 million) deal with Israel to install a camera system to monitor the 180-km-long (110-mile-long) buffer zone.
Despite the precarious life they are living in a tent on the UN green line, Grace says remaining in southern Cameroon wasn't an option: Her home was burned down and random shootings and violence made her flee for the bush seeking safety. "I don't regret leaving home. I don't,? she said. ?Even in my present situation, I still don't regret it."
Francis has made the plight of migrants a hallmark of his papacy, making his first trip outside Rome as pope to the island of Lampedusa, the destination of choice for Libyan-based migrant smugglers. He has since prayed at the US-Mexican border, toured a refugee camp in Bethlehem and met with Rohingya refugees who fled Myanmar for Bangladesh.
In a message this week marking the International Organization of Migration's 70th anniversary, Francis insisted that refugees are people deserving of dignity and denounced how their desperation is exploited, a message he has repeated in reference to the standoff at the EU's border with Belarus.
"The debate on migration is not really about migrants,? Francis said. ?Even more regrettable is the fact that migrants are increasingly being used as bargaining chips, as pawns on a chessboard, victims of political rivalries."
Francis is also meeting with the Orthodox leaders in both Cyprus and Greece, as well as the small local Catholic communities in each country. The visit comes amid new pandemic travel bans across much of the world thanks to the omicron variant first detected in South Africa.
The Pope, who turns 85 this month and has only part of one lung, is fully vaccinated but generally eschews face masks. Asked what if any precautions had been taken to protect him and others during the trip, Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said "prudence" as well as prevailing health pass requirements that are in place in most of Europe.
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