Pope to defend migrants at Mediterranean island frontier
A picture shows a poster of Pope Leo XIV on a building in Lampedusa, south of Sicily, on the eve of a visit by the pontiff, on July 3, 2026. (Photo by Tiziana FABI / AFP)
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Pope Leo XIV on Saturday visits Italy's Lampedusa
island, a major port of call for migrants risking the perilous crossing from
Africa, in a stark message to US and EU leaders.
The Catholic Church's first US pope, who has clashed with
the administration of President Donald Trump over its treatment of migrants,
will mark July 4, the United States' 250th anniversary of independence, on a
migration frontline.
Leo's visit also comes just two weeks after the European
Union's approval of new migrant rules allowing much broader detention powers
and the creation of deportation centres outside the bloc.
The Chicago-born pontiff has made the defence of migrants
one of the pillars of his papacy, like his predecessor Francis, praising those
who help the needy and decrying mass deportations in the United States.
The 70-year-old is expected to use the half-day trip to the
Mediterranean island, a frontier between Africa and Europe, to call for safe
and legal pathways for immigration.
Leo's presence "sends a clear message at a time when
the global political debate on migration is often framed around borders and
deterrence rather than protection and shared responsibility", Filippo
Ungaro, spokesman for the UN's refugee agency, UNHCR, told AFP.
Lampedusa sits just 90 miles (145 kilometres) off the coast
of Tunisia, and is famed not just for its white sand beaches, but for showing
compassion to thousands of migrants -- and taking in their dead.
In 2013, more than 360 people died in the island's worst
shipwreck, and dozens more have drowned in the years since.
Leo has previously praised the generosity of the islanders,
a fishing and tourism community of 6,000.
He will begin his visit at the cemetery, where unidentified
migrants are buried in numbered graves.
Leo will visit the "Door of Europe", a monument
dedicated to migrants, and speak briefly with a migrant family.
He will then go to the pier where people rescued at sea by
the coastguard or charity ships are brought to safety.
There, he will bless a plaque dedicated to Pope Francis --
who chose Lampedusa for his very first trip following his election in 2013 --
before celebrating mass in a sports field.
The semi-arid island of 20 square kilometres (eight square
miles) is the second of Europe's migration hotspots to be visited by Leo, who
used a trip to the Canary Islands last month to criticise human traffickers.
He has previously spoken out against measures to clamp down
on illegal migration, and called the US administration's treatment of
immigrants "inhuman".
In a speech on Friday to mark America's 250th birthday, Leo
called for "moderation" in US public discourse and spoke of how
"successive waves of immigrants" had shaped the future of the
country.
The Central Mediterranean crossing from North Africa is the
deadliest migration route in the world, according to the International
Organization for Migration.
Around 1,330 people died or went missing while attempting it
last year, the IOM says.
That shows the "tremendous need to increase search and
rescue efforts", Salvatore Sortino, director of the IOM Coordination
Office for the Mediterranean, told AFP.
The route is patrolled by a handful of rescue ships operated
by charities that have repeatedly accused EU authorities of not doing enough to
help prevent deaths.
More than 14,000 people landed in Italy during the first six
months of the year, most of whom set off from Libya, according to the UNHCR.
The numbers are far from the peaks reached in 2011, when
tens of thousands arrived in just a few months as maritime border controls
disintegrated during the Arab Spring revolts.

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