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Pak begin high-level consultation on migration and development
By Ali
Imran
ISLAMABAD--Government of Pakistan has launched a high-level consultation
process on international migration and development with an
Inter-Ministerial Preparatory Conference organized by IOM in
collaboration with the Ministry of Interior.
The conference was designed to inform the government and stakeholders
ahead of the UN General Assembly High-Level Dialogue on International
Migration and Development on 14-15 September in New York.
The Ministers for Interior, Finance, Education, Foreign Affairs,
Labour,Manpower and Overseas Pakistanis; the Governor of the State Bank
of Pakistan; the Chairman of the National Reconstruction Bureau; Federal
and Provincial Secretaries; the Heads of the Federal Investigation
Agency, Bureau of Emigration & Overseas Employment, and Overseas
Pakistanis Foundation; and other stakeholders including representatives
of civil society took part in the dialogue.
The discussions emphasised the need for greater emphasis on a coherent
and integrated national migration management policy to maximise its
potential contribution to development. The conference recommended
improved cooperation between government departments and with countries
hosting Pakistani migrant workers to manage remittances, which currently
amount to some US$5 billion a year. The costs of migration also needed
to be factored into the equation. “For countries of origin, migration
benefits include remittances,
poverty reduction, improved foreign reserves, improved balance of
payments, knowledge and skills transfer and modernization. But an over
dependency on remittances and an outflow of skilled manpower is not
positive and that is why we need comprehensive migration management,"
said IOM Regional Representative Hassan Abdel Moneim Mostafa. Other
issues discussed at the conference included awareness-raising campaigns
to better inform would be migrants, improved data collection on
migration trends and web-based labour migration schemes to match up job
seekers with potential employers. Delegates agreed that Pakistan needed
better and more bilateral arrangements with major destination countries
to better manage labour migration, the flow of remittances
and migrants' rights. Pakistani entrepreneurs abroad should also be
encouraged to invest more in the development of their home country. |