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Pope calls Trump’s plans of mass deportations ‘a disgrace’

Francis said Mr Trump’s decision would force poor people ‘who have nothing’ to ‘pay the bill’.

By contributor By Nicole Winfield, AP
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Pope Francis delivers his blessing
The Pope has denounced Donald Trump’s proposal for mass deportations (AP)

The Pope has said Donald Trump’s plans to impose mass deportations of immigrants would be a “disgrace”, as he weighed in on the incoming US President’s pledges nearly a decade after calling him “not Christian” for wanting to build a wall along the US-Mexican border.

History’s first Latin American pope was asked about the Trump administration’s pledges over deportations during an appearance on Sunday night on a popular Italian talk show, Che Tempo Che Fa.

“If true, this will be a disgrace, because it makes the poor wretches who have nothing pay the bill” for the problem, Francis said.

“This won’t do! This is not the way to solve things. That’s not how things are resolved.”

Mr Trump, who is being sworn in on Monday, made mass deportations a signature issue of his campaign and has promised a raft of first-day orders to remake immigration policy.

During Mr Trump’s first campaign for the presidency, in 2016, Francis was asked about the Republican leader’s plans to build a wall along the US-Mexico border.

Speaking after he celebrated Mass along the border, Francis famously said anyone who builds a wall to keep out migrants is “not Christian”.

President-elect Donald Trump watches The Village People perform
Donald Trump will be sworn in on Monday after a colourful rally on Sunday, featuring the Village People (AP)

Many US bishops have firmly opposed Mr Trump’s deportation plan, with the incoming archbishop of Washington DC, Cardinal Robert McElroy, saying such policies were “incompatible with Catholic doctrine”.

It was a reference to the Biblical call to “welcome the stranger”.

Another cardinal close to Francis, Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich, said the reports of mass deportations targeting the Chicago area “are not only profoundly disturbing but also wound us deeply”.

In a statement delivered from the Basilica of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Mexico City on Sunday, Cardinal Cupich said governments have the responsibility to protect borders and communities.

“But we also are committed to defending the rights of all people, and protecting their human dignity,” according to the text of his statement.

Francis, who grew up in Argentina in a family of Italian immigrants, has long prioritised the plight of migrants and called for governments to welcome, protect and integrate them, within their means.

He has said the dignity and rights of migrants should come before any national security concerns.

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