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Children of Syrian refugees arriving at Rome Fiumicino Airport from Beirut, under the humanitarian corridors initiative of Sant'Egidio, Waldensian Board and Evangelical Churches in Italy. Photo: Mediterraneanhope.com

Children of Syrian refugees arriving at Rome Fiumicino Airport from Beirut, under the humanitarian corridors initiative of Sant'Egidio, Waldensian Board and Evangelical Churches in Italy. Photo: Mediterraneanhope.com

“Open a European humanitarian corridor,” urged Italian Protestant churches and the Community of Sant’Egidio in a letter to Italian prime minister Giuseppe Conte.

The presidents of the Community of Sant’Egidio, Marco Impagliazzo, and of the Federation of Protestant Churches in Italy, Luca Maria Negro declared their immediate availability to work together on such a corridor on the basis of experience gained in Italy over the last three years.

The proposed mechanism is analogous to that adopted for the “humanitarian corridors” which are being implemented on the basis of a memorandum of understanding among the Federation of Protestant Churches in Italy, the Community of Sant’Egidio, the Waldensian Board and the ministries of the Interior and Foreign Affairs, initially entered into in 2015 and renewed in 2017.

Thanks to this agreement, which provides for the grant of “humanitarian visas,” 1,600 asylum seekers, mainly Syrians coming from Lebanon, have arrived in Italy. The ministries have also signed an analogous agreement with the Community of Sant’Egidio and the Italian Bishops’ Conference for a further contingent of 500 refugees from Ethiopia. Humanitarian corridors have also been opened in France, Belgium and Andorra for a total of about 2,500 arrivals to date in Europe.

“Our proposal is born of experience on the ground,” explain Negro and Impagliazzo in the letter, “and its objective is the arrival into Europe of 50,000 refugees over two years, spread amongst those countries willing to give practical form to their international obligations in relation to asylum and human rights. Italy should be leading this programme, opening another corridor from Libya, for at least 2,500 people per year.”

“Faced with the news coming out of Libya, with thousands of refugees exposed not only to extortion, violence and torture but also to the brutality of military clashes, we cannot simply stand by and watch,” said the two religious leaders. “Strengthened by the encouragement received from Pope Francis, most recently last Sunday, from various sister churches in Europe and from the Ecumenical Council of Churches, we are renewing our willingness to work immediately to protect the lives, welfare and human rights of thousands of refugees who are hostage to abuses which are every day more widespread and brutal.”

Mediterranean Hope

Waldensian Church

Federation of Protestant Churches in Italy

WCC work on Migration and social justice