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Pope Francis: Separating children from parents is immoral


Source: Vatican Media

In a wide-ranging interview with Philip Pullella, head of Reuter's Rome bureau, Pope Francis answered a series questions on various issues including the US policy of separating migrant families at the US/Mexican border, Holy See's talks with China, the position of women within the Church, populism, Chile's clerical sex abuse crisis and reform of the Roman Curia.

The Pope talked at length about immigration during the interview and was asked about the Trump administration's policy of separating migrant families at the US/Mexican border. In his reply, he said he supported recent statements issued by US Catholic Bishops who called the separation of children from their parents contrary to Catholic values and immoral.•

Turning to the migration situation in Europe, the Holy Father said populists were "creating a psychosis" on the issue of immigration, even as ageing societies like Europe faced "a great demographic winter" and needed more immigrants.

"I believe that you cannot reject people who arrive. You have to receive them, help them, look after them, accompany them and then see where to put them, but throughout all of Europe," he said. He praised Italy and Greece for being "courageous and generous" by taking in these migrants.

Pope Francis warned that populism does not resolve issues like migration problems. "What resolves things is acceptance, study, prudence," he said. The Pope also said Europe should stop exploiting Africa and invest in ways that benefit the continent more and this could help solve the problem of migration at its roots.

Asked about relations with China, Pope Francis said he was optimistic about the outcome of normalization talks with the Chinese authorities saying they were "at a good point" but couldn't say when they would conclude. He acknowledged that dialogue "is a risk" but said he preferred that to "the certain defeat" of not holding a dialogue with Beijing.

On the subject of women calling for more top positions in the Roman Curia, Pope Francis said he agreed there were few women in positions of responsibility there. He said he wanted to appoint more women to head Vatican departments because "women are better at resolving conflicts." At the same time, he reiterated that women cannot be ordained to the priesthood. "Pope John Paul II was clear on this point and closed the door and I am not going back on that," he said.

Chile's clerical sex abuse crisis was another topic discussed at length during the interview. Pope Francis has accepted the resignation of three bishops in Chile and said he could accept more resignations in the future.

He spoke of how he returned "a bit worried" after his pastoral visit to Chile in January this year and explained why he decided to send Archbishop Charles Scicluna to the Latin American nation to carry out further investigations into the abuse crisis.

• Although President Trump has now signed an executive order stopping the separation of migrant families, commentators point out that this order does not make any provision for families already separated. The authorities did not have an organised system for recording the locations where children were being sent.

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