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Migrant boat crossings in focus ahead of pope visit to Spain’s Canaries

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
June 3, 2026
in Europe
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Migrant boat crossings in focus ahead of pope visit to Spain’s Canaries
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Since Pope Leo XIV’s visit to Spain was announced, the pontiff voiced his intent to stop in the Canary Islands to highlight the humanitarian crisis on the deadly Atlantic migration route, as well as meet with migrants, rescue workers, and aid organisations.

Haruna Ndom, 18, set out two years ago on a days-long journey across the Atlantic in a fragile boat with dozens of other migrants.

Now in Spain’s Canary Islands, one of the main entry points into Europe for African migrants, he hopes to build a future that will allow him to support his family in Senegal.

Ndom recalled being afraid during the roughly 1,000-kilometre (600-mile) Atlantic crossing to the archipelago off northwest Africa, one of the world’s deadliest migration routes.

“At least I know how to swim,” he told AFP, an advantage over many of the others aboard the boat.

Like him, tens of thousands of migrants have arrived after navigating the perilous Atlantic route to the Spanish archipelago, which Pope Leo XIV will visit during a June 6-12 trip to Spain.

The US-born pope, who has repeatedly called for compassion for those seeking a better life abroad, will spend the final two days of the trip on the islands of Gran Canaria and Tenerife, where he will meet migrants and organisations working to support them.

Last year, 1,172 migrants died or went missing attempting to reach the Canary Islands, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

Wearing pink trainers, yellow socks and a beige-and-brown uniform, Ndom trained with a team of boys who arrived in the Canaries as unaccompanied minors.

The initiative, run by professional football club UD Las Palmas and the non-profit association #UP2U in Las Palmas, aims to help integrate them into society.

“I like my teammates and I like the way we play as a team,” Ndom told AFP, adding that he is studying to become an electrician so he can help his mother and two brothers in Senegal.

Juan Manuel Rodriguez (C), UD Las Palmas D team's coach

Juan Manuel Rodriguez (C), UD Las Palmas D team’s coach, leads a training session focused on the integration of unaccompanied minors in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria. (Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP)

‘Build different lives’

Another young migrant, 18-year-old Matar Top, who has braided hair, arrived from Senegal three years ago with similar hopes of sending money home.

“My mother died,” he said, adding that his father and two siblings remain in Senegal, while an older brother lives in northern Spain.

He was unable to train that day because he had not had time to collect his kit after finishing work at a papaya plantation.

Several of the 30 members of the integration programme regularly miss training sessions because of work, studies or travel distances that make attendance difficult.

“I try to come every week if I have time,” Top said.

The migrants train on a pitch next to the UD Las Palmas stadium in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, where the pope —  who worked with Venezuelan migrants while serving the Catholic Church in Peru — is scheduled to celebrate mass.

The programme, which has supported around 300 young migrants over the past decade, has helped some participants find stable employment or further training, said coach Juan Manuel Rodríguez.

“We have waiters, mechanics, managers, lawyers — people who have been able to build different lives,” he told AFP.

One participant went on to become a professional footballer: Aboubacar Bassinga, who arrived in the Canaries from Ivory Coast aged 14 and now plays in Spanish second-division side Ceuta.

Arguineguin pier

A Coast Guard vessel sets out to patrol the coast as a worker repairs and prepares what is popularly known as the ‘pier of shame’ at the port of Arguineguín. (Photo by OSCAR DEL POZO / AFP)

‘Dock of shame’

At a banana plantation about 25 kilometres (15 miles) from Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, 17-year-old Adama Conde was taking part in a regional government integration programme for unaccompanied migrant minors with about 3,000 participants.

“I want to have a good future,” Conde said as he worked in plastic boots and gloves among the banana plants.

He left Guinea at a young age and later boarded a boat in Morocco with around 50 people that reached the nearby island of Fuerteventura last year.

“I was really scared,” he said. “Now I am calm and I sleep well.”

Conde rises at 5:30 am to take an hour-long bus ride from the reception centre where he lives to the farm.

The plantation owner, Sergio Ayala, said he values the work ethic of the young migrants arriving in Spain, where immigration has become a politically divisive issue.

Unlike much of Europe, Spain’s leftist government has adopted a relatively welcoming approach to immigration, one that is opposed by the right.

Amparo Urzainqui, a 66-year-old volunteer with the Catholic charity Caritas in Gran Canaria who assists migrants, said “they need to feel welcomed in our communities.”

“You should see the joy they feel when you treat them like just another person,” added Urzainqui, who will take part in an event where the pope will meet migrants at the port of Arguineguín.

The port became known as the “dock of shame” after more than 2,500 migrants slept there in the open or under makeshift shelters during a surge in arrivals in 2020.

The pope is expected to lay a floral tribute at the port in memory of those who died trying to reach the Canary Islands.

Article by Diego Urdaneta

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