A joint communiqué by the ministers of Internal
Administration, Deputy and Parliamentary Affairs, Labour, Solidarity and Social
Security and the Secretary of State for European Affairs highlights that
Portugal is the second member state of the European Union that has received
most unaccompanied children and young people from Greece, under the
European voluntary relocation program of CJENA.
“With this group of young people now hosted by Portugal, the
European Commission reaches the symbolic number of 5,000 relocated to European
countries from refugee camps in Greece, in an effort that began in March 2020,
following an appeal from the Greek government”, reads the statement.
According to the Executive, Portugal has played a decisive role
since the beginning of this process in the commitments assumed by the European
Commission, hosting a total of 286 children and young people not accompanied by
this program until today.
The Government underlines that it is “an effort that the
country will continue with, awaiting the arrival of new groups of children and
young people, aiming at the national commitment to welcome up to 500 young
people from these camps”.
This work has been coordinated, in the field, by the High
Commissioner for Migration, the Foreigners and Borders Service and the Social
Security Institute, together with Santa Casa da Misericórdia in Lisbon, with
Casa Pia in Lisbon.