Madrid and Barcelona city councils launch plan to help refugees

HIC


Barcelona and Madrid mayors Ada
Colau and Manuela Carmena, in a file photo from May. / JULIÁN ROJAS

The new leftist city councils
in Madrid and Barcelona have announced that they will be introducing measures
to assist refugees who have been arriving in Western Europe over the summer in increasing numbers
from conflict-stricken countries such as Syria.

The mayor of Barcelona, Ada Colau, said this week
that her council would be creating a register to which families who want to
help refugees could sign up. They will be able to offer places to stay or make
aid donations.

Madrid Mayor Manuela Carmena has since followed
suit and announced during a radio interview on Wednesday that the capital would
be joining the network of support proposed by her opposite number in Barcelona.

Carmena – who came to power in May with the Ahora Madrid party, a leftist
bloc containing members of emerging political force Podemos, among other groups
– said during her interview that she would be meeting with Colau on Friday. “I
will talk to Colau, I am interested because we are two big, albeit different,
cities, but we are welcoming,” she told the Onda Cero network. “We are creating
a list of housing and places to stay for the possible quotas of refugees that
may be assigned to us.”

Asked who would set that
quota, the mayor responded that it would be subject to the criteria of the
central government. “We are willing to do whatever is necessary to take in
whoever needs help, but we want the government to tell us how many people are
going to arrive in Madrid.”

The mayor of Valencia, Joan Ribó, has also
announced that he intends to sign up to Colau’s proposal to create a “network
of refuge cities,” but said he first wanted to know exactly “what the Valencia
regional government and the central government will do.”

The Spanish prime minister,
Mariano Rajoy, said on Tuesday that he was willing to increase the number of
refugees that Spain had accepted until now. “The [European] Commission had made
a proposal, we negotiated, and in the end, we took the decision to accept 2,739
[refugees],” Rajoy said during an official visit to Germany. “We are willing to
talk about the issue, because this is a position that could be changed, but there
are things we have to talk about first with the European Commission.”

The plan announced by Ada
Colau – a former anti-evictions activist who came to power in the May municipal
elections with citizen platform Barcelona en Comú – aims to channel
citizens’ willingness to offer help to the refugees, according to her team. In
Catalonia, there are currently only 28 places available for asylum seekers,
with a maximum stay of six months. For now, the council has ruled out
installing a large shelter in the municipal area, but is studying a temporary
center in the metropolitan area.

For its part, Madrid Mayor
Manuela Carmena’s team has called on the central government to be “up to the
job in hand,” to take responsibility, and to coordinate the “necessary response
with regional and municipal administrations.”

In Madrid, the Labor
Ministry’s Refugee Attention Centers “are overcrowded and have long waiting
lists,” according to the council, adding that this is prompting asylum seekers
to have to resort to aid for the homeless, much of which is provided by
municipal services.

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