07-07-2026
ROME: Pope Leo XIV has urged Europe to do more to protect and integrate migrants during a visit to Italy’s Lampedusa Island, a key arrival point for people crossing the Mediterranean from North Africa.
The pope made the appeal on Saturday during a symbolic trip to the island, which has long been at the centre of Europe’s migration debate.
Speaking during Mass, the pope described migration as a “momentous challenge” for European societies, but said the continent had the capacity to respond with compassion and planning.
“Europe is capable of addressing the crisis in this region in a comprehensive manner,” he said, calling for immediate relief to be matched with a long-term plan to “receive, protect, support and integrate migrants”.
He urged European countries to support development in migrants’ countries of origin, saying people should not be forced to leave because of poverty, insecurity or conflict.
The pope began his visit by praying at a cemetery where a number of migrants who died at sea are buried. He later visited the “Door of Europe” memorial, dedicated to those who risk their lives trying to reach the continent.
He also blessed a plaque renaming a migrant arrival pier after his predecessor Pope Francis, who visited Lampedusa in 2013 on his first trip outside Rome after becoming pontiff. Lampedusa, closer to Tunisia than mainland Italy, has received thousands of people rescued after the dangerous central Mediterranean crossing. Many others have died or disappeared while attempting the journey in overcrowded boats. The pope’s visit came as governments in Europe and the United States have placed growing emphasis on border controls, detention and deportations.
In a separate message to Americans marking the 250th anniversary of US independence, the first US-born pope said defending human life also meant “welcoming, protecting and assisting immigrants”.
More than 14,000 migrants have reached Italy by sea so far this year, according to the United Nations refugee agency, with more than half landing in Lampedusa. The International Organization for Migration (IOM) says more than 1,400 people have died or gone missing in the Mediterranean this year.
The pope said the deaths were the result of “choices made and unmade”, adding that the memory of those lost at sea should weigh on Europe, alongside the needs of those who survive the journey.
Earlier, Pope Leo XIV, the first pope born in the United States, and Zohran Mamdani, the first Muslim mayor of the country’s most populous city, have sent pro-immigrant messages to mark the 250th anniversary of US independence.
Friday’s back-to-back statements came a day before the July 4 Independence Day celebrations, which fall on the anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence in 1776.
While neither Pope Leo nor the mayor of New York mentioned US President Donald Trump, their statements represented a clear rebuke to the president and his hardline immigration policies.
In a video broadcast from the Vatican to the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Pope Leo hailed the immigrants who shaped the US.
He also appealed to the US to recommit to its founding principles and recognize human dignity, regardless of borders.
“In these past 250 years, for so many peoples throughout the world, it was the firm resolve to achieve the noble vision of the nation’s founders that made America a byword for freedom, as the country opened its doors to successive waves of immigrants,” the Chicago-born pope said. (Int’l News Desk)
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