Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

By Braema Mathiaparanam, Chairperson of Singapore Working Group for an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism ( MARUAH) www.maruah.org/www.hrmech.org 1 7/10/2010/migration.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "By Braema Mathiaparanam, Chairperson of Singapore Working Group for an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism ( MARUAH) www.maruah.org/www.hrmech.org 1 7/10/2010/migration."— Presentation transcript:

1 By Braema Mathiaparanam, Chairperson of Singapore Working Group for an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism ( MARUAH) www.maruah.org/www.hrmech.org 1 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

2 Outline Definition Reasons The Phenomenon Their Contributions The Vulnerability The ASEAN measures Country Measures Recommendations 2 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

3 Definition Refugee - Under the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees from 1951, a refugee is a person who (according to the formal definition in article 1A of this Convention), "owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality, and is unable to or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself to the country of origins.United NationsConvention Relating to the Status of Refugees Displaced person - A displaced person (sometimes abbreviated DP) is a person who has been forced to leave his or her native place, a phenomenon known as forced migration. Hence can be internal or external for reasons sch as economics, political or caused by disastersforced migration Trafficked person – forced labour, duped into a new environment, agencies and recruitment mathods 3 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

4 Reasons For Movement  Conflicts in Southeast Asia war in Viet Nam produced 250,000 South Vietnamese, 1.1 million North Vietnamese and 60,000 American casualties ethnic and separatist movements in East Timor and Aceh have respectively claimed 200,000 and more than 2,000 live Southern Thailand/Souhern Philippines Recogntion of indigenous people 4 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

5 Con’t(1)  ‘Politicide’ in Asia. Politicide describes policies that seek to destroy groups because of their political beliefs rather than religion or ethnicity The Khmer Rouge regime in Cambodia killed about 1.7 million (about one quarter of the Cambodian population) during its brutal rule between 1975 to 1979 Anti-Communist riots that followed the transition from Sukarno to Suharto in the mid-1960s claimed about 400,000 lives 5 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

6 Cont’d(2)  Financial Crisis The Asian financial crisis started in 1997 and acutely affected four South-East Asian countries – Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine for example A study by the International Labour Organization (ILO) showed that between August 1997 and December 1998, unemployment in Indonesia rose from4.3 million to 13.7 million  Disasters 6 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

7 The Phenonmenon – Some Statistics Current global estimates of migrant persons is around 200 million or 3 percent of the world population. One human being in 35 today is an international migrant 22 million migrants from Asia About half are women; more ( 52 per cent ) in developed countries as compared to developing countries Refugees (UNHCR) - 42 milion; Displaced persons (UNHCR) – 43.3 million Trafficking within SEA is estimated to be between 200,000 and 400,000 women and children. (http://www.unhcr.org/4c11f0be9.html) 7 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

8 The Phenonmenon - Feminisation of Migration Indonesia - 70 and 80 per cent of its migrant labour force is female mainly working as domestic workers. Philippines The Philippines estimates that 6.8 million Filipinos in 191 countries. Majority, female Taiwan - Indonesians are almost 40 percent of the migrant workers of which 90 percent are women care givers. Singapore – of the 800,000 semi-skilled workers about 190,000 for domestic workers. One in seven households have a domestic worker Caring industry ‘cos of ageing population and women in the workforce Entertainement Industry Wives 8 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

9 The Contribution (?) Sectors – domestic work; construction; manufacturing; shipbuilding; healthcare; caregiving; service industry in food and beverage, massage parlours, beauty salons;, cleaning services; car washes; garbage disposal, fishermen– WHO IS THE WORKER? Migrant Labour - Remittances eg 1983 remittances received in Philippines was already US$995 million; By 2004 Filipino migrant workers sent US$8 billion dollars home in 2004[1] and Indonesian migrants U.S.$2 billion[2 - WHAT’S THE CONTRIBUTION OF UNDOCUMENTED GROUP eg Rohingas, refugees, desperate, in despair, social visit pass holders Trafficked Persons and Foreign Wives - THE INVISIBLE BENEFIT AND COSTS; some estimates are that USD$60 million in remittances from trafficked persons in the sex industry( difficult to measure) Migrant Workers’ Discourse – Human Rights(Rights/Political, Civil and Economic Rights)/Labour Rights/Women’s Rights/Gender and Migrant Workers What’ the discourse of Refugees, Displaced Persons and Trafficked – IS IT ALL COSTS? 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group 9

10 The Vulnerability Long stay in camps, slums Children’s education Women and children – GBV Substance abuse HIV Skills enhancement Debt burdens ( agents, corruption) Fear Statelessness – NON-PERSONS Progression/Regression – asylum seeker, refugee, smuggle, trafficked Cycle of Poverty 10 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

11 Country-level Measures Enable UNHCR to do assessement processing eg Malaysia Spaces for temporary settlement Acceptance Repatriation eg Thailand wants to send home million undocumented people from Myanmar, about 150,000 live at the borders. Only Cambodia and the Philippines have ratified the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (the 1951 Convention) and its 1967 Protocol 11 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

12 ASEAN ASEAN Charter – Articles 2 (i) and 2(j) – international laws and protection of human rights of people in ASEAN ASEAN Human Rights Body; ASEAN Intergovernment Commission on Human Rights( AICHR) – Articles 4.4; 4.11; 1.6; 2.2 – commitment to human rights principles and international norms ASEAN Ministerial Meeting on Transnational Crime (AMMTC), the ASEAN Chiefs of National Police (ASEANAPOL) and the ASEAN Committee on Women(ACW) ASEAN Commission on Women and Children Social and Cultural Blueprint – Article C2( protection and Promotion of Migrant Workers) 12 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

13 Challenges Definition Cost issue in countries of destination Transborder cooperation in the face of political differences National priorities Clarity at both international and regional levels on a cooperative model Corruption 13 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group

14 Suggestions Recognition for asylum seekers and refugees as part of ASEAN family Capacity-building of officers dealing with migrant issues Skills Bilateral and regional cooperation - creation of transitory settlements; skills enhancement and rehabilitative approaches Call on ASEAN States to grant UNHCR full and unconditional access to asylum seekers, refugees, stateless and displaced persons within their borders for recommendations on statelessness ASEAN States who have not yet ratified and implemented the 1951 Convention and its 1967 Protocol Human rights framework Core labour Standards 14 7/10/2010/migration and Wealth of Nations; Jakarta.bm for working Group


Download ppt "By Braema Mathiaparanam, Chairperson of Singapore Working Group for an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism ( MARUAH) www.maruah.org/www.hrmech.org 1 7/10/2010/migration."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google