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55th ICMC Council meeting

ICMC Council: Church leaders reaffirm joint commitment to protecting the dignity of migrants and their families

ICMC Office:

H.E. Emilio Berlie
55th ICMC Council meeting

ROME, 20 November 2010— On the eve of the 60th anniversary of the International Catholic Migration Commission, church leaders hailing from across Africa, Asia, the Americas, Europe the Middle East and Oceania reiterated the urgency of the challenges faced by migrants and their families and recommitted to addressing them on both regional and international levels.

The 55th meeting of the ICMC Council gathered church leaders with an in-depth knowledge of migration from more than 57 countries, as well as representatives of the Vatican Secretariat of State, the Pontifical Council for Migrants and Itinerant People, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the “Ministero del Lavoro e delle Politiche Sociali” in Italy. Distinguished representatives included H.E. John Cardinal Njue, H.E. George Cardinal Pell, H.E. Polycarp Cardinal Pengo and H.E. Odilo Pedro Cardinal Scherrer, and H.B. Patriarch Gregorios III.

Over the course of the three-day meeting, participants provided regional perspectives and input towards forging a joint plan of action between ICMC and the Bishops’ Conferences.

“Our mutual fundament”, noted ICMC President John M. Klink in his opening address, “is based on the recognition that the dignity of the human person is paramount in all migration discussions, and in the shared efforts of all who are engaged in bettering the plight of migrants, refugees and trafficked persons”.

“What is vital is the growing relationship with [ICMC] members—the Episcopal Conferences worldwide—who are all involved in, and confronted with, migration issues on a daily basis”.

Priority issues raised by ICMC members included strengthening joint efforts to address human trafficking, enhancing the regional voice in international advocacy fora, promoting migrant safety and dignity within labour migration, facilitating resettlement and community integration and reducing xenophobia and racism.

Throughout each of these areas, the centrality of the family and the human person was underscored as a fundamental focus, including by H.E. Archbishop Emilio Berlie of Yucatan, Mexico who insisted that harmonious development is “difficult to expect” if the immigrant family is not ensured a “real possibility” of inclusion and participation. At the close of the meeting, H.E. Berlie was elected as the second representative of Bishops' Conferences for Latin America to the ICMC Governing Committee.

Input provided over the course of the meeting will be used to finalize the forthcoming 2011-2015 ICMC Strategic Plan, which includes a focus on increasing regional and international partnerships and engagement, and emphasizes “the need for concerted action in the migration field, for greater collaboration at the inter-governmental level and, above all, for developing a more pro-active attitude towards restoring dignity and inspiring change”.

 

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For more information, please contact Alanna RYAN, Communications Officer: ryan@icmc.net< or +41 (0) 22 919 10 20.