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Migration benefits sender and receiver countries, Annan says, welcoming new panel
Regional-UN, Economics, 11/22/2003

United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan yesterday gave his backing to the establishment of a new global panel that will examine how international migration can be managed better, saying migration brings benefits to sender and receiver countries.

Mr. Annan said he supported the proposed Global Commission on migration, an independent, non-UN body to be launched next month in Geneva. It will be co-chaired by Jan Karlsson of Sweden, a former Migration Minister from that country, and Mamphela Ramphele of South Africa, a managing director of the World Bank.

According to a senior UN official, the idea for the Commission came from a core of 11 countries from the North and South, led by Sweden and Switzerland. The panel is expected to begin work in January and complete its final report by the middle of 2005.

The official said the Commission would have a three-part mandate: to bring the issues surrounding international migration to the top of the global agenda, to analyze shortcomings and gaps in approaches by governments or other bodies to migration, and to make practical recommendations for how to manage migration better.

In his speech today, Mr. Annan said migration could be a solution to economic problems. Migrants provide vital skills to receiver countries with a labour shortage and an often ageing population, and send home vast amount of remittances to their families in home countries.

Last year alone, the Secretary-General said, migrant remittances from the developed world were at least $88 billion, more than the amount sent in official development aid to the same developing nations.

"Emigration also relieves the pressures of overpopulation and unemployment, and in time endows sender countries with an educated diaspora who often bring or send home new skills, products, ideas and knowledge."

Annan added that more needed to be done to create economic opportunities in poor countries so that potential migrants have a greater incentive to stay home, and said tighter border controls in receiver countries have generally not been successful in reducing migration.

"Instead, immigrants are driven to enter the country clandestinely, to overstay their visas, or to resort to the one legal route still open to them, namely the asylum system."

The Secretary-General said these issues highlighted the value of countries harmonizing their policies on migration and maintain networks of cooperation and information-sharing against people traffickers.

He also called for receiver countries to ratify the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families - so far only sender countries have ratified the treaty.

Previous Stories:
  Morocco urges for ratification of international convention on protection of migrant labor rights   (4/12/2001)
  James D. Wolfensohn on the challenges of globalization; the role of the World Bank   (4/3/2001)
  $ 200 billion, Arab loses of brain- drain   (2/27/2001)
  Reversing brain drain is Africa's major challenge   (2/23/2000)

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