The Guardian (USA)

Pope Francis decries ‘fanaticism of indifferen­ce’ over migration

- Angelique Chrisafis in Paris and Lisa O'Carroll in Brussels

Pope Francis has decried what he called the “fanaticism of indifferen­ce” as people risked their lives on dangerous journeys by boat from north Africa to Europe, amid growing political debate over migration.

Opening an overnight visit to Marseille, the pontiff presided over a silent moment of prayer at a memorial dedicated to sailors and people who died at sea, surrounded by faith leaders and migrant rescue organisati­ons from the Mediterran­ean port city.

He said those who risked drowning at sea “must be rescued”, calling it a “duty of humanity, a duty of civilisati­on”. Those who impeded the rescue of people at sea were committing a “gesture of hate”.

He said we must not just think of the people dying at sea as numbers, they are “names and faces”, “lives broken”.

Francis arrived in Marseille on Friday promising a message of tolerance on migration, amid a bitter row over Europe’s approach to asylum seekers.

There has been heated debate in Europe over how to share responsibi­lity for people arriving on boats from north Africa.

Speaking to reporters on the plane to Marseille, Francis was asked about the boats landing on the tiny Italian island of Lampedusa, where thousands of people arrived last week, briefly outnumberi­ng the resident population. “Cruelty, a lack of humanity. A terrible lack of humanity,” Francis said, according to a report by Associated Press.

The EU announced on Friday that it would increase funds to help the Tunisian government crack down on criminal people-smugglers and accelerate delivery of the controvers­ial migration pact that it made with the north African country this summer.

This week it emerged that criminal smuggling activities had quadrupled in Tunisia this year, with more than 120,000 people making to Italy since 1 January.

The European Commission announced it was increasing support from the €105m agreed in July to €127m, and unlocking €60m immediatel­y for Tunisia. The decision to bring forward the discharge of funds comes as questions were beginning to be asked about the increase in migration from Tunisia since the commission’s president, Ursula von der Leyen, signed the deal.

The difficult conditions that cause many people to leave their homes, and the risks they take in doing so, have been a key theme during Francis’s decade as head of the Catholic church.

Speaking at the Vatican on Sunday, he said migration “represents a challenge that is not easy … but which must be faced together”. He emphasised the need for “fraternity, putting human dignity and real people, especially those most in need, in first place”.

The pope’s position on migration stands in contrast to some countries in Europe that are emphasisin­g border fences, repatriati­ons and the possibilit­y of a naval blockade to keep refugees out.

At Marseille airport, the pontiff was wheeled towards the French prime minister, Élisabeth Borne, who was waiting on the airport tarmac to greet him, Agence France-Presse reported. He then stood up to acknowledg­e the welcome of a military band.

Bells rang out from Marseille’s Notre Dame de la Garde basilica as the pope headed there to lead a prayer, before he was due to hold an interfaith prayer at a nearby monument dedicated to those who had died at sea.

The UN’s Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration estimates that more than 28,000 people have died trying to reach Europe across the Mediterran­ean since 2014.

Francis is presiding over the closing session of a gathering of Mediterran­ean Catholic bishops but his visit to Marseille is aimed at sending a message well beyond the Catholic faithful to Europe, north Africa and beyond.

It is the first visit by a pope to France’s second largest city in 500 years. More than 100,000 people are expected to turn out to see the 86-yearold pontiff in his popemobile on Saturday.

The French president, Emmanuel

Macron, will meet the pontiff for oneto-one talks on Saturday before attending a mass with almost 60,000 people.

After 8,500 people landed on Lampedusa in three days, the EU promised more help for Rome. But France, amid wrangling over a draft law on immigratio­n that is due this autumn, said it would not accept anyone from the island.

“We are expecting very strong words” from the pope, said François Thomas, the head of the Marseilleb­ased SOS Mediterran­ée, which operates a migrant rescue boat. “It is our humanity that is sinking if Europe does not do something.”

Meanwhile, some on the French far right took aim at the pope’s welcoming message on immigratio­n. Marion Maréchal, the niece of Marine Le Pen and a candidate for European parliament elections next year for the Reconquête party led by the far-right TV pundit Éric Zemmour, said last week: “I disagree with Pope Francis.

He has the prism of a South American pope who doesn’t actually know the type of immigratio­n we know and who clearly doesn’t fully realise what we’re dealing with.”

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