Pope Leo heads to Canary Islands to highlight perilous journeys of migrants
✨ AI Summary
🔊 جاري الاستماع
Pope Leo heads to Canary Islands to highlight perilous journeys of migrants56 minutes agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on GoogleSarah RainsfordSouthern and Eastern Europe correspondent , Canary IslandsBBCBakary Jaiju left behind his wife and child, crossing the Atlantic for the Canary Islands to find "a better life"Bakary Jaiju was 19 when he climbed into a wooden boat in the Gambia and set out for Europe. He would be at sea for seven frightening days as his supplies of food and water gradually ran out. "You can't even sleep in case you fall in," he recalled, now in Tenerife after finally reaching the Canary Islands late last year in search of a "better life"."I decided to go, whether I survive or I die, because I want my family to be in a good condition," said Jaiju, explaining why he left his wife and baby behind and risked the treacherous waters of the Atlantic.In the few months since he reached this southernmost tip of Europe, hundreds of others have died trying.It is their plight, and the dramatic stories of those who do make it, that Pope Leo will highlight during his visit to the Spanish islands which begins on Thursday.The Pope's focus is a clear counterpoint to talk elsewhere of a migration "crisis" and an "ideological invasion".Data from the UNHCR show the number of migrant arrivals by sea to Spain has fallen significantly this year, partly due to increased interceptions off the West African coast funded by the EU.But many are still trying - and dying.Getty ImagesPope Leo XIV is visiting the Canary Islands of Gran Canaria and Tenerife as part of a seven-day tour of SpainSo Pope Leo will stress the need for alternative "safe and legal pathways" to Europe but also appeal for a humane approach and "respectful welcome" for those who pay smugglers and are then packed into the most basic of boats.In Gran Canaria, he will drop flowers into the waves in memory of the migrants who...



