Resumen Descriptivo : Media coverage of
armed civil conflict rarely highlights the fact that temporary migrant
workers often are among the innocent civilians who suffer, as occurred
during the Libyan civil war. That conflict, which began in February
2011, resulted in the displacement and evacuation of migrants on a size
and scale not seen in recent years -- with hundreds of thousands fleeing
to neighbouring countries. The migration crisis highlighted the
inadequacy of the response of the international community and raised
questions regarding the efficacy of existing coordination mechanisms and
frameworks. It also brought to the forefront the different roles for
state actors and international organizations such as the International
Organization for Migration (IOM).
In Asian Labour Migrants and Humanitarian Crises: Lessons from Libya,
authors Brian Kelly and Anita Jawadurovna Wadud examine the migration
crisis and the international and national humanitarian response to it.
The issue brief, the third in a series launched by the Migration Policy
Institute (MPI) and IOM’s Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific,
discusses lessons learned from the Libyan experience. It also identifies
several policy recommendations, particularly for the Colombo Process
Member States, drawn from those lessons regarding the protection of
foreign workers caught in national conflicts and ways to address similar
humanitarian crises in the future.
The brief also examines the ways in which international labour migrants
in conflict zones are generally more vulnerable than the native
population. These migrants, who play an integral part in sustaining the
economies and societies of many countries today (particularly in the
Middle East), may not speak the local language or share the same culture
and are often at the bottom of the economic pyramid. Their employers
may be a party to the conflict, leaving the workers vulnerable to
targeted attacks from opposing parties. In reality, however, most
migrant workers are just like any other civilians caught in a war zone:
innocent and scared. Their immediate proximity to danger and conflict is
balanced against the negative impact that losing their jobs could have
on their families back home.
The IOM-MPI issue briefs, a monthly joint-publication offering succinct
insights on migration issues affecting the Asia-Pacific region today,
are available at
http://publications.iom.int/bookstore/index.php?main_page=index&cPath=49 and
www.migrationpolicy.org/research/migration_development.php.
Índice
- Executive Summary
- I. Introduction
- II. Background
- III. National and international response to the Libyan crisis
- IV. Conclusions and Recommendations
- Develop standard operating procedures (SOPs) for the protection of migrant workers in complex emergencies.
- Create an emergency trust fund.
- Offer micro-insurance to migrants.
- Train migrants in contingency planning.
- Build embassies’ capacity to protect labour migrants.
- Develop post-return and reintegration plans.
- References
- Endnotes
- About the Authors
- Acknowledgments
Número de páginas : 12
Formato : Copia electrónico
Este producto fue añadido al catálogo el domingo 15 de julio de 2012.