European Mayors meeting at Vatican issue statement
(Vatican Radio) European Mayors meeting in the Vatican
concluded a two-day meeting on the refugee crisis by issuing a statement on
Saturday evening calling for the creation of a “Network of Mayors” to help deal
with the issues facing the cities on the continent.
“This new network must be centred on human encounter and
based on a progressive vision of interculturality, with the active
participation of civil society – including the third sector – and of the
religious traditions, where the defence and promotion of human dignity,
freedom, justice, integration and peace must prevail over the debates of our
prejudices,” the statement reads.
About 80 mayors met at the Vatican’s Casina Pio IV –
the headquarters of the Pontifical Academies for Science and Social Science –
on Friday and Saturday (9-10 December) at a summit with the theme “Europe:
Refugees Are Our Brothers and Sisters”.
The Full statement can be found below:
Final Statement of the European Mayors' Summit on Europe:
Refugees are our Brothers and Sisters
The European cities we represent are clusters of towns that
existed even before their respective nations, many of them even before
Christianity, such as Athens and Rome. Some of these cities have been able to
create forms of coexistence and acceptance that today are models to imitate:
Athens, for example, is at the origin of modern democracy; Florence is a leader
in the abolition of the death penalty. In general and following the message of
Christ, being European also means recognising each person’s human dignity and
freedom, with peace as the supreme good.
When dealing with our obligations towards refugees, we must
remember the ways in which we organized ourselves in cities first and
subsequently as nations during the course of history. The great cities of
Europe – as well as those of the Americas and Asia – which now face the worst
crisis of displacement since World War II, must continue to collaborate in good
faith, trust, hope, friendship, harmony and justice, to embrace humanity,
integration and solidarity.
This European awareness, present in the representatives of
cities, points to the need of creating a network of Mayors capable of
conceiving welcoming cities as shelters, capable of organizing safe and regular
humanitarian corridors within the European Union, recognized by the
international community, and capable of expressing solidarity. Mayors,
collectively empowered, could better exercise their responsibilities in a more
harmonious way with regional, national and international levels of government.
This new network must be centred on human encounter and
based on a progressive vision of interculturality, with the active
participation of civil society – including the third sector – and of the
religious traditions, where the defence and promotion of human dignity,
freedom, justice, integration and peace must prevail over the debates of our
prejudices. It must look to a common future of building bridges rather than
concentrating on diversity as in the past.
The new network of Mayors should promote solutions for
victims of modern slavery and human trafficking in terms of forced labour and
prostitution, and organ trafficking.
The network should contribute to restoring a sense of
justice and opportunities to the disenfranchised, to unemployed youth and those
who have suffered economically because of the persistent demand for cheap,
subcontracted labour. This implies implementing, on the part of the States, a
broad program of social spending on health, education, training, redundancy pay
and family support, financed through the closing of tax havens. It also
involves granting Greece debt relief, in the hope of ending the protracted
Eurozone crisis.
Humanitarian aid to the dispossessed, animated by the spirit
of charity and the ethics of care, must be informed and aided today by the new
academic and scientific discoveries in the fields of health, including mental
health, trauma, education and well-being.
War and terror, poverty, growing inequality, climate change,
degradation and environmental catastrophes are behind the largest forced
displacement in human history: more than 65 million human beings.
This highlights the absolute need to move from a strategy based
on defence and war to one focused on sustainable and integral development,
especially in the case of the most advanced countries. Walls will never supress
the search for security, dignity, well-being and peace. Cities must build
bridges of love, charity, solidarity, good faith, trust and hope. Bridges to
heal our refugee brothers, our refugee sisters, our refugee children and thus
heal and reinstate our common humanity for the betterment of our fellow human
beings.
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