Jakarta Declaration addresses irregular movements in Asia-Pacific
JAKARTA, Indonesia, August 21 (UNHCR) –
The UN refugee
agency has hailed a pledge by 13 countries in the Asia-Pacific region to
address the growing challenge of irregular movements that are costing
hundreds of lives at sea every year.
UNHCR and the
International Organization for Migration joined ministers and senior
officials from Afghanistan, Australia, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Myanmar, New Zealand, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, the
Philippines, Sri Lanka and Thailand at the half-day meeting.
The Jakarta
Declaration was endorsed unanimously at the end of the Special Conference
on the Irregular Movement of Persons organized by the Indonesia government
on Tuesday.
"Complex cross-border population movements are
not a new phenomenon in this region,"
said UNHCR's Director of
International Protection, Volker Turk, in his opening statement.
"The
uneven availability of protection, assistance and long-term solutions,
family and community dispersal, labour needs, lack of access to legal
migration opportunities, well-established travel routes, as well as
smuggling networks, are all part of the complex fabric of mobility in the
Asia-Pacific."
He called for a "pact of
solidarity" and regional road map for action – points that were
reflected in the three-page Jakarta Declaration.
"We
recognized the need for common responses involving countries of origin,
transit as well as destination in more focused and action-oriented efforts
in addressing the issue of people smuggling, trafficking in persons and
related transnational crime,"
read the declaration, which stressed the
importance of burden-sharing and collective action in four areas –
prevention, early detection, protection and prosecution.
Prevention involves a range of actions such as mitigating the underlying
factors that make people more vulnerable to irregular migration, by
fostering political and socio-economic conditions and promoting better
livelihood sustainability.
Opportunities for legal channels of migration
should be encouraged.
Capacity should be built to promote timely search and
rescue operations to reduce loss of life at sea.
Early
detection can be done by strengthening information sharing and developing
an early alert system among relevant officials.
The protection
element focuses on establishing mechanisms to identify, protect and assist
victims of trafficking, while ensuring that they are not punished for
smuggling or trafficking offences.
Another priority is to enhance
communication and coordination to support search and rescue at sea,
disembarkation, reception, processing and outcomes.
People who are found
not to be in need of protection should be encouraged to return home
voluntarily.
Prosecution involves urging countries to accede to
and implement the UN Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime and
its protocols on smuggling and trafficking, and for national legislation to
criminalize the latter acts.
Mutual legal assistance should be provided in
investigations, prosecutions and judicial proceedings.
Turk
welcomed the declaration for its holistic approach to the problem of
irregular movements.
It prioritizes the protection of victims, going beyond
the usual focus on border management and law enforcement.
"Crafting effective responses requires a solid understanding of the
broader migration context, including the reasons for movement.
Information
campaigns, restrictive border practices and punitive measures have proved
not to be adequate to prevent or dissuade movements in these circumstances.
They do not work on their own,"
said the UNHCR official.
"Worse,
in the absence of a refugee protection and migration framework, deterrence
measures can raise the stakes and therefore render the market for smugglers
and traffickers more risky, but also more profitable."
Noting that unresolved refugee situations often result in irregular
movements further afield, he appealed to host countries to stabilize the
population where they are by improving their conditions of stay while
working out solutions.
"Temporary stay or other
arrangements that provide legal access to the labour market are one
potential avenue to achieve this objective,"
said Turk.
"Putting
in place similar reception and stay arrangements across countries will
contribute to minimize onward movements while also ensuring that
beneficiaries are able to contribute in full to their host communities
during their stay."
He cited this as an example of
"in-country opportunities" in refugee-receiving countries, while
stressing the need for refugee-producing countries to address the root
causes of displacement.
He also urged third countries to expand
resettlement opportunities in a renewed push for solutions.
It
was proposed that a Group of Eminent Persons from the region could be set
up to move these ideas and initiatives forward.
By Vivian Tan
in Jakarta
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