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The
large flow of illegal migrants, the sometimes difficult
conditions they face in host countries and the “lucrative
but troubling” human trafficking market have brought
migration policies to the forefront of population discussions,
a United Nations expert said recently.
The numbers of migrants needed by developed receiving countries
and the potential numbers willing to leave poorer sending
countries are out of balance, Mr. Joseph Chamie, the Director
of the Population Division in the United Nations’
Department of Economic and Social Affairs, told a press
briefing at the United Nations Headquarters.
Japan and most of Europe have been facing labour shortages,
population ageing and decline, and fertility rates well
below replacement levels. “These have significant
implications for pension schemes, health care, educational
programmes and housing”, he said.
On the other side of the demographic coin, migrants have
been leaving sending countries because of difficulty finding
employment at home, but “the supply of the potential
migrants who are free to leave their homelands simply exceeds
manifold the demand which is set by the receiving countries”,
he said.
Drawing a contrast, he said population growth in the 15
member countries of the European Union was 300,000 for 2003
but in India, a similar population increase of 294,000 took
just seven days.
In Europe in the past, most migrants moved north from
southern Europe. Today the migrants, especially those entering
illegally, are not only less well-educated and skilled than
the native population, but are often vastly different ethnically,
raising concerns about integration and assimilation, he
said, adding that recent successes of the European right-wing
have been based on opposition to such migration.
The 9/11 attacks on the United States of America, as well
as attacks elsewhere, have caused a tightening of entry
procedures in several countries. Mr. Chamie noted that the
Protocol against the Smuggling of Migrants by Land, Air
and Sea, a supplement to the United Nations Convention against
Transnational Organized Crime, had just entered into force,
giving Governments a legal tool against traffickers.
(Source: United Nations News Service, 28 January)
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