Bishop: Asylum seekers’ dignity must be protected and upheld

Rwanda

The UK’s plans to forcibly deport to Rwanda some of those seeking refuge in our country is shamefully illustrative of what Pope Francis has called the ‘loss of that sense of responsibility for our brothers and sisters on which every civil society is based’.

The plan is presented as a humanitarian response to combat people trafficking and smuggling yet the result will compound the suffering of those who are already victims. Crime is defeated by confronting the perpetrators not by punishing victims. This scheme will increase the difficulties of those hoping for a new beginning, and it does nothing to address the problems which cause people to flee their homes.

Migration is a complex issue, but it is not resolved by delegating our roles and responsibilities to other countries. Our starting point should be the innate dignity of every person, created in the image and likeness of God. Our Christian faith demands that we respond generously to asylum seekers whose dignity must be protected and upheld.

Whether or not the flight to Rwanda takes off today we are now in a new situation. With greater force we insist that asylum seekers are not commodities for profit, nor are they problems to be rejected and deported by government. Instead we should be guided by the four verbs provided by Pope Francis in our approach to migrants and refugees, ‘Welcome, protect, promote and integrate’.

Bishop Paul McAleenan
Lead Bishop for Migration Issues

Categories: 

More News

Spring Plenary 2022 Resolution – Returning to Mass at Pentecost

May 9, 2022
Returning to Mass at Pentecost An invitation from the Bishops of England and Wales

This is the bread come down from heaven (John...Read more

Feast of Saint Mark, Evangelist

April 20, 2022

Saint Mark’s Story

Most of what we know about Mark comes directly from the New Testament. He is usually identified with the Mark...Read more

Divine Mercy Sunday

April 18, 2022

Celebrating God's Merciful Love

In the Jubilee Year 2000, Pope John Paul II proclaimed that from that year forward the 2nd Sunday of...Read more