In parallel with the decentralization of the National Court of Asylum Seekers (CNDA) from Montreuil to Bordeaux, Toulouse, Lyon and Nancy, the Catholic Institute of Toulouse (ICT) is launching a diploma entitled “Migrations and exile”.
As indicates it the Dépêche du Midi, “ the Catholic Institute of Toulouse (ICT) is launching, starting in November, a new university diploma called “Migrations and Exile”. The only training available on these subjects in the south of France, this innovative program, combining law and asylum psychology, “responds to a growing need among lawyers and students but also among social workers or managers of associations”, indicates Enguerrand Serrurier, assessing judge at the National Court of Asylum (CNDA) and lecturer at the ICT“.
The ICT website is even clearer as to the degree biaswhich will train people to further encourage immigration-invasion, while the French economy is collapsing and difficulties have been increasing for several years for all French people – the future blow to pensions and the increase taxes planned to fill the fiscal Danaïdes barrel will obviously not help anything and increase social tensions even more:
At the end of this training, learners/students will be able to:
- Develop a welcoming and supportive posture for vulnerable groups
- Understand the causes and grasp the multiple aspects of forced migration
- Master refugee law and the fundamentals of foreigners’ law
- Obtain and compile relevant information to process an asylum application or in connection with immigration disputes
- Analyze and evaluate the means of an asylum request
- Work in a specific administrative and jurisdictional environment
- Know and practice interinstitutional relations in the asylum and foreigners’ residence sector
- Propose solutions based on the cases presented
As the Catholic rightly points out, by setting up “this diploma, the Catholic Institute of Toulouse turns away from its primary mission: to defend Christian values. Charity does not consist of favoring the migratory invasion under the guise of compassion, but of preserving the balance of the nation, of defending the homeland, and of truly helping those most in need, in a fair and orderly manner. The Church has always taught the common good, and this also involves the defense of borders and the preservation of national unity. Pro-migrant training, at a time when France is suffering from such an identity crisis, is a betrayal of the fundamental principles of the Catholic Church“.