Tag Archives: migration

Senegal migration conference: Filipinos in search of security

By Merlie “Milet” B. Mendoza, advisor to Caritas Manila

Migration is a key issue in my country. Filipino nurses, caregivers, domestic helpers, entertainers, engineers, teachers and construction workers are present in all corners of the globe. There are several million documented overseas Filipino workers.

Even if the phenomenon has, on the one hand, tremendously improved the economic well-being of many Filipinos as well as the country; on the other hand, it has resulted in a depressing social hazard. Countless mothers have left their children to go work abroad, poor women are taken advantage of and often become victims of exploitation, violence and sexual slavery. Continue reading

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Senegal migration conference: health issues in Jordan

Janete Ferreira from Caritas Ecuador with Suhad Zarafili

By Suhad Zarafili of Caritas Jordan

 

A lot of migrant women come to Caritas Jordan’s health clinic with high blood pressure and diabetes. These are women who don’t drink or smoke because all the money they earn they send home. They often suffer from stress and depression and their anger and frustration they keep inside.

All the migrant women who come to our clinic are suffering. They are sick physically and mentally and most of them are without work permits.

The women often talk about their problems to the nuns at Caritas Jordan. Then the sisters go to their homes to support them and give them advice. Continue reading

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Senegal migration conference: Lebanon’s Good Samaritan

Najla playing the "Passport game" - a sort of warm up before starting this morning. We all got our Universal Passport, had it stamped and were guaranteed the same rights and freedom of movement. Credit. Hough/Caritas

By Najla Chahda, director of Caritas Lebanon Migrant Centre

Yesterday, I arrived at Beirut International Airport to come here to the conference in Senegal and following immigration control, I saw a woman sleeping on the floor with blood coming from her nose. I went to talk to her and found out that she was from Bangladesh and her employer had brought her there.

I got the airport doctor to come and he said she was haemorrhaging in her stomach – that’s why the blood was dripping from her nose. The woman gave me the employer’s number in Arabic but when I called him, he said he’d signed the release papers for her at the airport and she was no longer his responsibility.

This is the type of case that Caritas Lebanon deals with. Migrant women come to Lebanon and the employers pay around $50 for a false medical insurance to cover bureaucratic needs. Some of the migrant women believe they’ve got health coverage but they haven’t. Continue reading

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Letter from Rome November 2010

Caritas Internationalis is 60 in 2011

Lesley-Anne Knight, 
Secretary General of Caritas Internationalis

English |Spanish |French

“One Human Family, Zero Poverty” has been selected as the theme for the Caritas Internationalis General Assembly in 2011. The meeting, which takes place every four years, is an opportunity for leaders of our 165 national Caritas members to come together in Rome to reanimate our mission and agree common strategies that we will take forward over the next four years.

The meeting from 22 – 27 May next year will be particularly special for us all because it coincides with the 60th anniversary of the founding of our confederation. Continue reading

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Global Forum on Migration and Development

Christian Organisations on Migration and Development in view of the Civil Society Days and the Global Forum on Migration and Development, Athens, 2-3 and 4-5 November 2009

Statement in English, French and Spanish

“When an alien lives with you in your land you shall not ill-treat him. The alien living with you must be treated as a native-born. Love him as yourself for you were aliens in the land of Egypt” Leviticus 19, 33-34

Our organisations represent churches from Africa, Europe and the Middle East and globally – Anglican, Independent, Orthodox, Protestant and Roman Catholic – as well as church related organisations. Being part of the global fellowship of churches, we are particularly well acquainted with the links between development and migration. Based on the narrative of the Bible – a narrative of migration – we are deeply committed to human dignity, global solidarity and the promotion of a society welcoming strangers and respecting their rights.
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The strange case of immigrant carers and the elderly in Italy

By Maria Suelzu, Caritas Internationalis Advocacy Officer

On 26 May I went to the presentation of a book titled “Carers and elderly: a welfare service without future” here in Rome organised by the “Fondazione Don Liegro” and the “Provincia di Roma”.

In most western European countries, assistance and services for the elderly are in general provided in different forms by the public sector, while in Italy (as well as in Spain to some extent) the most common situation is for the elderly to become employers of their caretakers. More often than not these caretakers are immigrant workers. Thus both employer and employee come from a very fragile social situation, although for very different reasons.
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Migration just a one way street?

By Michelle Hough, communications officer with Caritas Internationalis

When I was 5 years old, my dad went to work in Nigeria for a year. He mended big earth moving machines, and there were very few jobs in this line in England in the late 1970s. He could have either stayed in the UK, where he would have been unemployed and unable to support his family, or go to Africa.

In the 1930s my dad’s parents left an impoverished Ireland to find work in London. Twenty years before that, my maternal great grandfather left Ireland to go and work in the Welsh coal mines.
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Everyday a miracle – the Refugee Centre of Caritas Athens

By Martina Liebsch, CI migration advocacy officer

While in Athens for the preparations of the Global Forum on Migration and Development, I took the opportunity to meet up with my colleague Begoña Kalliga, from the Caritas Athens Refugee Programme.

Begoña is a journalist and works as a volunteer in the Centre which is located in Kapodistriou Street in the centre of Athens. The centre runs a soup kitchen for refugees and migrants and provides material assistance in the form of food bags, clothing and bed linen to cover basic needs, language courses in Greek and English, assistance from a social worker and a vaccination programme for the children. Two hundred and fifty meals are served daily five days a week. The centre is always full. Continue reading

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Migration Forum in Dakar: Fundamental questions, a wonderful courtyard and magic moments!

By Martina Liebsch, Caritas Internationalis advocacy coordinator for migration, trafficking and gender

Part 1

I recently came back from Dakar in Senegal, from the Forum “Migration, Politiques et droits de l’homme” and pictures from the meeting are still in my head.

It was the first meeting that gathered a considerable number of European and African Caritas members around the topic of Migration. At least for me it was an eye-opener in terms of the multiple root causes for migration. Europeans sometimes see the link between poverty and migration as having one cause. This link is not wrong but does not take into account the complexity of the root causes, a mix between traditions to migrate, lack of opportunities, myths, gaps between rural and urban areas etc.

What approach should be taken vis a vis migration? Two positions can be identified: The one promoted by the European Caritas members so far: Migration has to be safe, legal and a choice. Some of our – mainly African – colleagues are of the opinion that everything has to be done to ensure, that young people stay in their countries and contribute to its development. Migration should not be an option.

Another hot topic: The issue of return. Everybody agreed that return should be voluntary and by no means be linked to any conditions. But they recognized two other categories of return: The one which is voluntary, but also forced, as there are no further options to stay and the third one being the one when people are sent back against their will.

There was consensus that to organize a voluntary return resources were needed, which Caritas from mainly the South complained they did not have. Would it compromise the cause of Caritas if funds also devoted to forced return would be used? There was no real consensus on that.

The reports from colleagues from Algeria, Marocco and Mauritania, who have to work often under very restrictive conditions were dramatic. They have to deal with cases of outcasts, nobody really wants to take care of. They are often not allowed to move back to their countries of origin, as their family members would not accept them, but they have no options in the country of transit and destination and are waiting there for a better future.

Part 2

Arriving at night at Dakar airport is a cultural shock for a European who has not been there before. A multitude of people try to offer all sorts of services. This feeling is much stronger after a 12 hour journey. So we, my colleague Pierre and I, were happy to be told, that we would be “parked” at a “auberge” called “Mme. Cissey’s” until other participants arrived.

We were brought to a very nice, clean, courtyard, with a Mango-tree in the middle and a table around it. The perfect place to wait…. and to observe life and people – and also to talk. We were in a place were almost all participants who arrived by plane or left for their countries again had to go through, to store their luggage, to rest a few hours or to stay a night.

I know “caravanserais” only from books, but I think, Mme Cissey had all the ingredients for such a place. Waiting for our departure or for meeting people or for going to other meetings, many of us spent some time in this place and whenever we sat together we talked, talked, talked: about the Senegalese in Mallorca (and meeting some of their family members), the Spanish return policies or the cultural dimension of migration in some African countries.

It was an oasis of knowledge and of magical moments. One of the participants, a young man told us about his life and his attempts to cross the fence around Ceuta and Melilla. “Although we had trained for this moment, I could not do it, he said, I was too afraid!” he said. It was the difficult situation of his numerous family, caused by the sickness of his father, the heritage discussions after his death, the lack of opportunities and the pressure toraise a young family that made the young men leave his country. Today he tries to help other migrants who were sent back to cope with their lives.

Part 3

My final word goes to the Senegalese women: First of all Anita….she was an street seller around the hotel in Saly. With a charming smile and some stories, she made me spend a relatively large amount of Euro for a tunika. But her smile was irresistible!

There were as well wonderful dynamic female colleagues attending and organising the meeting, to which I pay tribute! I’m excited about the idea of discussing the issue of feminization in the near future. An issue which was not really touched upon in the meeting.

We also met women in a market place in Dakar. They were women from the villages coming to the markets in Dakar to earn their living, because in their villages, the basis for their livelihood does not exist anymore. They come from polygamist families and they are responsible for feeding their children. If the climate does not allow for it, they have to migrate to the city. Caritas Dakar runs a program with micro credit, which encourages women to go back to their villages as the opportunities in the cities are not many and they can be subject to violence and exploitation.

The women we met, were earning their living by processing couscous or washing and ironing clothes. They were proud and even if their means were very limited they showed their hospitality – the senegalese teranga.

Thanks to Caritas Senegal for this wealth of experience!

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Italy’s chance to give back what it received

By Maria Suelzu
Caritas Internationalis Advocacy Officer
Presentation of the Caritas 2008 immigration in Italy report

In the first part of the 20th century, in some parts of Italy a lot of people were desperately poor. People were hungry and even up until the 1950s some poorer Italians lived in improvised shacks on the outskirts of cities like Rome.

As I walked across the Tiber to “Teatro Don Orione” to attend the presentation of the Caritas 2008 immigration report in Italy, I considered how for decades millions of Italians left our country to find hope and a better future elsewhere. They landed on the shores of countries such as the US, Argentina, and many others.

Now we are a wealthier country and people from poorer countries want to come to us – just as we went elsewhere to find prosperity and security. Often they are escaping war, poverty and a bleak future in their home countries.

In Rome, the city where I live, there seems to be a lot of immigrants. They work in bars and restaurants, they clean people’s houses, they help families by looking after their children, their grandparents and the sick.

One of the interesting issues mentioned during the presentation of the immigration report was the fact that immigrants, although often perceived by the local population as competing for social services, only receive 2.4 percent of national social security expenditure.

In fact, they are net contributors to our country’s wealth. In 2006, for example, they paid over 3.1 billion euro in income tax. They also make a substantial contribution to the economies of their countries of origin by sending around 6 billion euro in remittances to their communities and families.

The Italian government has always considered the data on immigrants gathered by Caritas to be the most reliable, and the Italian National Institute for Statistics (ISTAT) collaborates in the preparation of the report, so it presents a fairly accurate picture of the current situation in Italy.

As I left Teatro Don Orione after the presentation of the report, I reflected on how we receive immigrants in Italy. I came to the conclusion that, even though the Italian Government has been in the press a lot recently because of its tightening of immigration laws, there are still lots of Italians who want to learn about and absorb the new cultures brought here by immigrants.

I think it’s now essential that the Italian Government should adapt its rules to this new situation, where Italy has gone from being a country of émigrés to being a country of immigrants.

Read a summary of the report in Italian, English, French, Spanish and some other languages

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