UCA News
Contribute

Catholic bishop calls on Filipinos in Libya to return home

As fighting around Tripoli intensifies, fears grow at home for migrant workers' safety
Catholic bishop calls on Filipinos in Libya to return home

Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte welcomes home Filipino migrant workers repatriated from the Middle East in 2017. (Photo courtesy of the Presidential Communications Office)

Published: April 12, 2019 03:50 AM GMT
Updated: April 12, 2019 03:59 AM GMT

The head of the Episcopal Commission on Migrants and Itinerant People of the Philippine bishops' conference has appealed to Filipinos in Libya to return home as fears of renewed civil war intensify.

Bishop Ruperto Santos of Balanga said the situation in Libya is "uncertain, volatile and unstable" and the safety Filipino migrants there, "is not secured."

The Philippines' Department of Foreign Affairs has already urged Filipinos in Libya to opt for "voluntary repatriation" to avoid getting caught up in the fighting.

The call was made following an escalation in fighting, including the shelling of residential areas on the outskirts of the capital Tripoli.

Thousands of people have reportedly fled their homes as a result of fighting in which at least 47 people have been killed, according to the World Health Organization.

Philippine authorities said Filipinos in areas near the fighting should move to safer areas or request assistance from the embassy for their repatriation.

Bishop Santos said the country's Catholic bishops "support and encourage" Filipinos to heed the appeal of the Foreign Affairs department.

Elmer Cato, charge d'affaires of the Philippine embassy in Tripoli, said they are urging Filipinos to seriously consider repatriation. 

"But unfortunately ... only 11 Filipinos have requested assistance to be repatriated," he said on April 10. 

"I think most [Filipinos] here in Tripoli are maintaining a wait-and-see attitude," he added.

He said most Filipinos in Libya have been in Tripoli during "some of the worst fighting in its history" and believe the situation will stabilize in the coming days.

Cato said the situation in Tripoli was "business as usual," although he said "heavy fighting" was reported on the outskirts of the city.

The Philippine government this week imposed a total ban on the deployment of Filipino workers to Libya because of fighting between rival militias for control of the North African nation's capital.

There are more than 2,600 Filipinos in Libya, many working as nurses, teachers and in the oil industry.

Fighting for control of the capital has threatened to plunge Libya deeper into chaos and ignite a civil war on the scale of the 2011 NATO-supported uprising.

The Philippines is one of the world's major labor providers, with a tenth of its more than 100 million people working abroad, including many domestic helpers and construction workers.

Help UCA News to be independent
Dear reader,
Lent is the season during which catechumens make their final preparations to be welcomed into the Church.
Each year during Lent, UCA News presents the stories of people who will join the Church in proclaiming that Jesus Christ is their Lord. The stories of how women and men who will be baptized came to believe in Christ are inspirations for all of us as we prepare to celebrate the Church's chief feast.
Help us with your donations to bring such stories of faith that make a difference in the Church and society.
A small contribution of US$5 will support us continue our mission…
William J. Grimm
Publisher
UCA News
Asian Bishops
Latest News
UCA News Catholic Dioceses in Asia
UCA News Catholic Dioceses in Asia
UCA News Catholic Dioceses in Asia