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December 8, 2009.
Churches in Europe are to campaign throughout 2010 for
the right of migrants to obtain long-term resident
permits.
The Year of European Churches Responding to Migration
2010 will see churches come together to advocate the
right to long-term residence status for migrants who
have stayed legally in a country for five years.
The campaign has been welcomed by the World Council of
Churches' Ecumenical Network on Migration (GEM).
"This is a courageous and very much needed initiative by
the churches in Europe, which could be a model for
churches in other regions on the 'receiving end' of
migration flows", said Sydia Nduna, WCC programme
executive for migration and social justice.
"Welcoming the stranger is not optional, but central to
Christian identity."
The year-long campaign is being coordinated by the
Conference of European Churches (CEC) and the Churches'
Commission for Migrants in Europe (CCME).
The initiative will also attempt to raise the profile of
the work being done by churches across Europe to help
migrants, refugees and ethnic minorities.
"Thanks to the presence of the GEM our deliberations
gained a sense of urgency", said Torsten Moritz, from
the CCME.
"Hearing from the Pacific about the effects of climate
change and displacement of people in their region and
about the humanitarian crisis in Colombia underlined
that migration is becoming more globalised, so needs to
be the churches' response." (by Brian Hutt)
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