TOWARDS THE HLD 2013 Working Session 5 IOM CSO Annual Consultation 25 th October Our Role/Activities in Preparations for the HLD 2013

Similar documents
Multilateral Framework for Cooperation on Migration and Development.

The HLD. The 2013 United Nations General Assembly High-Level Dialogue on International Migration and Development

Sri Lanka National Consultation on the Global Forum on Migration and Development

Follow-up and review of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: Critical milestones - Role and contribution of civil society

2011 IOM Civil Society Organizations Consultations 60 Years Advancing Migration through Partnership

GFMD 2012 MAURITIUS T H E G F M D

Modalities for the intergovernmental negotiations of the global compact for safe, orderly and regular migration (A/RES/71/280).

Partnership on Migrants Health :

It is a special honor for me and pleasure to respond to your invitation and to address you today, as GFMD Co-Chair on behalf of Germany.

CONTRIBUTION TO THE THIRTEENTH COORDINATION MEETING ON INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION 1. Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur

The Global Compact on Migration at the 10 th GFMD Summit Meeting

Current Priorities in Intergovernmental Dialogues on Labour Migration New York, 3 October IOM The International Organization for Migration

Inter-state Consultation Mechanisms on Migration and the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

Side event on the Global Compact on Migration

Global Migration Group (GMG) Task Force on Migration and Decent Work. Terms of Reference (as at 24 March 2016)

GFMD Dialogue on the Global Compact on Migration

Bern, 19 September 2017

Introduction. Civil Society Stocktaking

The Role of Regional Migration Dialogues and the Global Migration and Development Agenda - Results of an Empirical Study -

UNHCR AND THE 2030 AGENDA - SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT GOALS

The role of inter-state consultation mechanisms on migration in the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

Resolution adopted by the Human Rights Council on 22 June 2017

The Berne Initiative. Managing International Migration through International Cooperation: The International Agenda for Migration Management

Civil Society Programme 2012 Global Forum on Migration and Development. Operationalizing Protection and Human Development in International Migration

Legal Aspects of the Global Compact

CHARTER SWISS CIVIL SOCIETY PLATFORM OF THE ON MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is pleased to join this discussion on international migration and development.

KEYNOTE ADDRESS: GFMD Thematic Workshop Implementation of the Global Compact for Migration at the National Level 21 March 2019, Geneva

GMG Statement at the Third Meeting of the GFMD Friends of the Forum

Introducing the GFMD Mayors Mechanism GFMD Friends of the Forum 21 February 2019

2018 Global Forum on Migration and Development Civil Society Days 4 & 6 December; Common Space 5 December Marrakesh, Morocco.

September 12, Honorable Ms. Louise Arbour Special Representative to the Secretary-General for International Migration United Nations, New York

International Dialogue on Migration (IDM) 2016 Assessing progress in the implementation of the migration-related SDGs

Civil Society Days. Concept Note

OPENING REMARKS. William Lacy Swing, Director General International Organization for Migration

CLOSING REMARKS. William Lacy Swing, Director General International Organization for Migration

Ms. Louise Arbour Special Representative of the Secretary-General for International Migration Opening Remarks at multi-stakeholder hearings

Tools and instruments for data collection and. policy development

Seventh Global Meeting of Chairs and Secretariats of Regional, Inter-regional and Global Consultative Processes on Migration (GRCP 7)

The Programme of Action of the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development: What lessons for the global migration compact?

Re. Resolution A/RES/67/172 on the Protection of migrants

REPORT Second Thematic Workshop Under Ninth GFMD Chairmanship On Migration for Harmonious Societies. 18 May 2016 Geneva

Panel 1: International Cooperation and governance of migration in all its dimensions

Dialogue #2: Partnerships and innovative initiatives for the way forward Intergovernmental Conference, 11 December 2018 Marrakech, Morocco

THEME CONCEPT PAPER. Partnerships for migration and human development: shared prosperity shared responsibility

Proposals for the Negotiation Process on the United Nations Global Compact for Migration

Concept Paper 20 March 2017

STANDING COMMITTEE ON PROGRAMMES AND FINANCE. Eighteenth Session

UN/POP/MIG-10CM/2012/02 3 February 2012

EU input to the UN Secretary-General's report on the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

Strategic framework for FRA - civil society cooperation

COOPERATION WITH THE UNITED NATIONS SYSTEM

Annual IOM-CSO Consultations

Global Programme Migration and Development (GPMD)

Briefing on the Work Programme of the Population Division: International Migration and Development

WORLD HUMANITARIAN SUMMIT Issue Paper May IOM Engagement in the WHS

REMARKS William Lacy Swing Director General, International Organization for Migration

UN Secretary-General s report on. the Global compact for safe, orderly and regular migration. Inputs of the International Labour Organization

UN Women Chair s Report to the Global Migration Group 1 January 31 December 2016

The Post 2015 Development Agenda: The Role of Statistical Community

Thematic Workshop on Migration for Development: a roadmap to achieving the SDGs April, 2018

Asia-Pacific Regional Preparatory Meeting for the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

GFMD Concept and Work Plan. Enhancing the Human Development of Migrants and their Contribution to the Development of Communities and States

Migration. Protecting human rights in the context of migration. Background

Concept Note Providing Transparency and Accountability for the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration Negotiation Process

========== On behalf of the European Union. 96th session of the IOM Council

BALI DECLARATION ON PEOPLE SMUGGLING, TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS AND RELATED TRANSNATIONAL CRIME

Keynote address January 2018, OECD, Paris

Issue paper for Session 3

Provisional calendar of key dates January-December 2014

Provisional calendar of key dates January December 2018

The IGAD Regional Consultative process (RCP) on migration

COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS

COMESA Presentation to the Global RCPs Meeting, October 2015 Cairo, Egypt

Talking ASEAN on ASEAN Intergovernmental Commission on Human Rights 30 June 2014 AICHR Terms of Reference Review and The Development of Human Rights

8 November 2017 Ju2017/05987/EMA. Ministry of Justice Division for Migration and Asylum Policy

ADVANCING DEVELOPMENT APPROACHES TO MIGRATION AND DISPLACEMENT UNDP POSITION PAPER FOR THE 2016 UN SUMMIT FOR REFUGEES AND MIGRANTS

UN/POP/MIG-12CM/2014/9. 14 February 2014

Original: English 23 October 2006 NINETY-SECOND SESSION INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION 2006

Mainstreaming Migration into Development Planning Assessing the Evidence, Continuing the Dialogue

Extraordinary Meeting of the Arab Regional Consultative Process on Migration and Refugee Affairs (ARCP)

International Council on Social Welfare. Global Programme 2005 to 2008

A Role for the Private Sector in 21 st Century Global Migration Policy

General Assembly. United Nations A/C.2/67/L.15/Rev.1. International migration and development. Distr.: Limited 12 December 2012.

International Organization for Migration (IOM)

Compilation on the methods of work of the United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice **

Cooperation on International Migration

Preparatory (stocktaking) meeting 4-6 December 2017, Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, Mexico. Concept note

Committee on the Rights of the Child. The Rights of All Children in the Context of International Migration OUTLINE FOR PARTICIPANTS

Towards safe, orderly and regular migration in the Asia-Pacific region Challenges and opportunities

According to the information provided by the PGA on 9 May, the fourth thematic session in NY on 24/25 July will be divided into four panels:

Background Paper. Roundtable 2 - Factoring Migration into Development Planning

Eight-Point-Five-Year Action Agenda

CLOSING REMARKS. Laura Thompson, Deputy Director General International Organization for Migration INTERNATIONAL DIALOGUE ON MIGRATION

Tenth GFMD Summit Meeting June 2017 Towards a Global Social Contract on Migration and Development Federal Foreign Office, Berlin

AD HOC COMMITTEE ON POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF THE ECONOMIC COMMISSION FOR LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN AGREEMENTS

OFFICE OF THE UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS

BERLIN GERMANY JUNE

-Concluding Statement- Colombo, Sri Lanka

UNHCR Note 14 th Coordination meeting on International Migration, New York February 2016

Transcription:

NGO Committee on Migration A committee of the Conference of NGOs in Consultative Relationship with the United Nations Address: (c/o) Shiuho Lin 75-55 183rd Street, Flushing, NY 11366, USA Phone: 1-917-887-5259 Email: me2richter@aol.com Website: www.ngo-migration.org/ TOWARDS THE HLD 2013 Working Session 5 IOM CSO Annual Consultation 25 th October 2012 Our Role/Activities in Preparations for the HLD 2013 On behalf of the NGO Committee on Migration, I wish to thank IOM for the invitation to participate in this annual IOM- CSO Consultation, in this Workshop Session on Multilateral Framework for Cooperation on Migration and Development. Our Committee is an umbrella organization of more than 40 NGOs whose mission is to advocate for the protection and promotion of the human rights of migrants and their families worldwide, in accordance with the United Nations Charter. Our Committee was born as an outcome of our participation in the preparations for the first High Level Dialogue on Migration and Development (HLD) in 2006. Since then, we have actively advocated on behalf of migrants human rights, at the local, national, regional, and global level. We have participated in all the Global Forums on Migration and Development (GFMDs), from Belgium to Geneva, and will send several delegates to the Forum in Mauritius this November. There, we also expect to make plans, together with other Civil Society representatives, for CS participation in the HLD 2013.

2 I think it is fair to say that preparations for the HLD by the international community began in earnest with the Informal Thematic Debate held at the UN on 19 th May 2011. We closely cooperated with the office of the President of the UN General Assembly ( UNGA/PGA) in preparations for this event, and were one of three NGOs invited to give an intervention at the meeting. We also collaborated with our NGO networks in a sideevent on Migration, Development, and Human Rights: A Civil Society Perspective and View to 2013. Perhaps this is a good place for me to reiterate that I speak here on behalf of our NGO Committee on Migration. While we NGOs, like Member States, may have different perspectives and views with respect to various M+D issues, we are firmly united in our basic stance on both process and substance: namely, that CS, as a vital stakeholder, must have a place at the table whenever and wherever policies and practices regarding M+D are involved; and secondly, that a human rights perspective must be mainstreamed into all M+D themes, projects, and outcomes. As preparations began, late this Spring, by the UN Secretariat to draft HLD modalities for inclusion in the Report of the UN Secretary General (SG) to the 67 th UNGA, our Committee circulated, at the beginning of June, a short list of recommendations which expressed our hopes and expectations regarding these modalities. We urged that the HLD 2013 must represent a move forward from 2006; the focus must be on outcomes (not just a Chair s Report, as was the case in 2006); and that

3 Civil Society must be represented in all of its diversity, in far greater numbers than in 2006 and participate in the proceedings as partners at the table with the rest of the international community. (To our recommendations we attached our Committee s proposals on Modalities for Effective Civil Society Participation in the UN 2013 High Level Dialogue on Migration and Development (1 st March, 2012). Finally, we noted that several topics have been repeatedly urged by CS for priority consideration, including labor migration, development, protection, and HLD linkages -- to regional processes and outcomes, and to other global commitments and follow up processes, including the World Conference on Women, the World Conference on Racism, Financing for Development, Rio+20, and the MDGs.. Opportunities and Challenges in Preparations for the 2013 HLD While recognizing that the GFMD and the HLD are separate entities, and in agreement that GFMD issues should not be the sole focus of the 2013 HLD, we think that the past GFMDs can serve as an important learning experience about what is needed for successful collaboration of NGOs like ours and other stakeholders, both on matters of process and substance, as we move forward to 2013 and beyond... From Belgium to Mauritius, there have been welcome strides forward in the collaboration between CS and Member States, in plenaries, working sessions, and most importantly, the Common Space instituted by Mexico in 2010. Whereas in 2007, the Civil Society Days (CSDs) and Government Days were

4 virtually sealed off, today the Common Space is becoming institutionalized and this year broken down into smaller groupings, with increased opportunities for informal contacts. Also, individual delegations, like that of the USA, meet with their CS organizations at Forums and also in between. Just last week, during such an NGO consultation in Washington, the head of the US Delegation to this year s Forum declared that the US is fully committed to Civil Society participation in the HLD. Further, a number of States have included CS delegates as part of their own delegations to the GFMDs and are amenable to doing the same at the forthcoming HLD. Lastly, in preparation for 2013, IOM, DESA and other UN entities are providing additional opportunities for input by NGOs. On the other hand, NGOs still have very circumscribed access to States meetings, and very limited opportunity to participate in States programs, whether at the Forums orelsewhere. Many Governments still shy away from the UN as a venue for Forum meetings, precisely because of its human rights framework and the presence of NGOs. NGO advocacy opportunities are also curtailed because CS is still prevented from engaging in many regional processes, including those leading up to the Forums and HLDs. At the same time, in our view, there has been a growing rapprochement on matters of substance, both at the GFMDs and in preparation for the HLD 2013.

5 Roundtable (RT) themes of CS and of Member States now address The human rights of migrants, including undocumented ones; Concerns with family fragmentation, The vulnerability of women migrant workers; and The human dimensions of development, including development in the sending country, that would make migration a choice, not a necessity. However, differences in perspectives between States and CS on other substantive issues remain very challenging to NGOs like ours, including: The continuing emphasis of Governments on the utility of migrants for economic development rather than on Governments responsibilities to fulfill their development obligations; The pushback of a number of states on issues like human rights and irregular migration; and The lack of will by most Governments, especially of the most industrialized societies, to ratify the Migrant Worker Convention. All of these challenging issues constitute top priorities in our Committee s advocacy efforts, as do the until very recently neglected issues of refugees, IDPs, mixed populations especially victims of abuse in crossing borders--, and stranded migrants, in M+D discussions. Towards the HLD 2013 and Beyond Looking towards the HLD 2013, our Committee, in concordance with our CS partners and networks, emphasizes that:

6 migration governance requires structural continuity, transparency, and commitment to actions which include the monitoring of progress with agreed upon time frames. We also consider it essential to incorporate migration explicitly into human rights based post 2015 development policies. There is widespread agreement that these policies be data based, include an emphasis on human development, and an outreach to diasporas as policy contributors. At the same time, we underscore the importance of a continuing focus on migration policy and practices worldwide. In our NGO Committee s response to the Secretary General s report on Migration and Development, and in particular, his options for HLD modalities ( shortly after its release in mid-september in conjunction with the opening of the 67 th Session of the UN General Assembly ) we applauded the focus on identifying concrete measures that enhance the benefits of migration for all. We look forward to a Dialogue geared toward a commitment to reachable outcomes, which reflect good practices by Governments and other stakeholders to protect and promote the human rights of migrants. We also welcome the 4 Roundtables described in the SG Report, namely: Leveraging diaspora contributions for development; Promoting legal and orderly migration, while protecting migrant rights; Mainstreaming migration into the development agenda; and

7 Strengthening partnerships and cooperation on international migration. We share the view of our CS colleagues who are currently organizing the CSD program in Mauritius that concrete outcomes of such Forums and High Level Dialogues depend on the translation of the thematic discussions into concrete, implementable proposals. This calls for operationalizing the themes that is to say, putting forward mechanisms or tools, such as good practices, and formulating some benchmarks or indicators of success that allow for better impact evaluation and monitoring. Our Committee has set up working groups to compile and circulate benchmarks and mechanisms for the upcoming Roundtable themes. We have also proposed, in response to the SG s Report, that in order to further the implementation of specific outcomes of the HLD, a representative working group of all stakeholders who will be participating in it could draw up a list of mechanisms and benchmarks from among the best practices and suggestions in the RT dialogues. These could then be piloted by a number of States, in cooperation with other stakeholders. Conclusion As we prepare for the HLD 2013 and beyond, we look forward to cooperation, collaboration, and partnership with the other stakeholders in a Multilateral Framework for Cooperation in Migration and Development, in order to protect the human rights and further the well being of migrants and their families worldwide. ********************* 25 th October 2012

8