UN Experts Seek Submissions on the Human Rights of Migrant Children

This is reposted from OHCHR, please find the original post here

 

CMW-CRC Joint General Comment on the Human Rights of Children in the Context of International Migration

 

The Committee on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families (CMW) and the Committee on the Rights of the Child (CRC) have started to elaborate a Joint General Comment (JGC) on the human rights of children in the context of international migration.

 

The joint general comment will seek to provide guidance to States parties to both Conventions on the situation of children in the context of international migration, including:

 

  • Children that migrate with their parents who are migrant workers;
  • Children that are born to parents who are migrant workers in transit and destination countries;
  • Migrant children that return to their country of origin, either voluntarily or by force, alone or with their parents;
  • Children left behind by their parents (or one of them) who have migrated to another country; and
  • Children that migrate unaccompanied and separated from their parents (for reasons such as seeking employment, family reunification or as victims of trafficking, labour exploitation and child labour).

 

Following a call for submissions and the establishment of a zero draft, the Committees have decided to hold consultations to ensure that the perspectives of States, United Nations agencies and entities, civil society organizations and other stakeholders with respect to this issue are raised, discussed and reflected in the draft for further consideration by both Committees.

 

Documentation:  

Expert and Regional Consultations:

 

Geneva Consultation (2 May 2017)

 

Madrid (4 to 5 May 2017)

 

Bangkok (24 to 25 May 2017)

 

Berlin (12 to 13 June 2017)

 

Mexico City (28 to 29 June 2017)

 

If you are interested in contributing to this Joint General Comment on the Human Rights of Children in the Context of International Migration and would like further information, please contact IDC Advocacy Coordinator Ben Lewis at [email protected].


IDC Presents at First Thematic Consultation for the Global Compact on Migration

 

On 8-9 May 2017 in Geneva, Switzerland, the United Nations held the first thematic consultation for the Global Compact on Migration on “Human rights of all migrants, social inclusion, cohesion and all forms of discrimination, including racism, xenophobia and intolerance”.

 

More information and background documents for this event are available here.

 

During the opening panel on “Human rights of all migrants”, IDC Advocacy Coordinator Ben Lewis stressed the importance of States to honor their long-standing commitment to human rights, noting with concern that:

 

“In the current political climate, many States seem more concerned with stopping or limiting irregular migration than protecting the fundamental rights of people on the move.”

 

Among other things, Mr. Lewis highlighted the fundamental right to liberty of all persons, regardless of legal or migration status, and called upon States to end the criminalization of irregular migration, to adopt rights-respecting alternatives to immigration detention, and to refrain from the immigration detention of migrants in situations of particular vulnerability, including children and families.

 

“Migrants in situations of particular vulnerability should never be detained in the context of routine border governance. And regarding children and families in particular, it is now incredibly clear that the detention of children based on their or their parents’ migration status is never in the best interests of the child. . .”

 

You can read the complete remarks of Mr. Lewis online here.

Background documents

UN Member States Adopt Modalities for Global Migration and Refugee Compacts 

In September 2016, the United Nations General Assembly adopted resolution 71/1, the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants, which called for a preparatory process consisting of global, regional, and thematic consultation leading to intergovernmental negotiations in 2018 on two Global Compacts, on refugees and migrants.

 

Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration

 

The preparatory process for the Global Compact on Migration is now underway, with the President of the General Assembly organizing a series of informal thematic discussions between April 2017 and November 2017, as well as four days of informal interactive multi-stakeholder hearings between April 2017 and June 2018, in accordance with the organizational arrangements adopted by the UN General Assembly.

 

An informational note about the preparatory process is available here.

 

A process for non-ECOSOC accredited organizations to apply for special accreditation to the consultative process for the Global Compact on Migration was open from 14 March - 17 April 2017. This process is now closed and a list of approved organisations is available here.

 

The registration process for ECOSOC accredited organisations is ongoing, and is available here.

 

For more information on the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration, please visit the main Global Compact webpage:  https://refugeesmigrants.un.org/migration-compact

 

If you are interested in contributing to this Global Compact process or would like further information, please contact IDC Advocacy Coordinator Ben Lewis at [email protected].

 

 

Global Compact on Refugees

 

The preparatory process for the Global Compact on Refugees will informally begin with the UNHCR Annual Consultations with NGOs, which are dedicated in 2017 to the theme “From global responsibility to local action – implementing the comprehensive refugee response framework”.

 

For more information on the Global Compact on Refugees, please see the Concept Note prepared by UNHCR available here.  UNHCR has also prepared a “Roadmap” for thematic discussions taking place in 2017, which is available here.

 

If you are interested in contributing to this Global Compact process or would like further information, please contact IDC Advocacy Coordinator Ben Lewis at [email protected].


Emerging Developments in Child Detention in Europe

The number of children in migration arriving in the European Union has increased over the last two years, many of these migrant and refugee children are arriving unaccompanied. According to the Commissioner for Migration, Home Affairs and Citizenship Dimitris Avramopoulos “One in three asylum seekers in Europe is a child”. Due to this increase in arrivals, there is a great strain on systems already in place  where resources are already under stress  to ensure the safety of migrants and refugees.

During a recent press release, the European Commission has emphasised the importance of ensuring that children are promptly identified upon arrival in the EU. Trained professionals are to be available to the children, especially during their status determination and will assist with long term access to health care and education opportunities. ‘Child protection is a central priority in the European Agenda on Migration and the Commission will continue to support Member States’ efforts through training, guidance, operational support and funding.’

First Vice-President Frans Timmermans mentioned that “Children should be our top priority as they are the most vulnerable, especially when they have nobody to guide them. That is why today we are setting out a number of concrete actions to better protect, support and take care of the best interests of all children who are arriving in the European Union.”

The European Commission proposed several priority areas for Member states to focus on that have been supported by European Union agencies. These priority areas include; swift identification and protection upon arrival, adequate reception conditions for children, swift determination and effective guardianship, durable solutions and early integration measures, identifying root causes and protecting children along migrant routes outside of the European Union.

The European Commission will closely follow these key actions and report regularly to the Council yet the European Parliament needs action to be taken at EU level as well as  national, regional and local levels.

The Secretary General on Migration and Refugees (SRSG), initiated talks with the Council of Europe (COE) in March 2016 regarding the action plan on refugee and migrant children with a view on adoption in early 2017. Resulting from the talks, four research projects were carried out in 2016, identifying and investigating challenges posed to migrant and refugee children.

On March 22nd of this year, a new report highlighting the key challenges faced by migrant children in Europe was released. Titled ‘Thematic Report on Migrant and Refugee Children‘ was created by the Special Representative of the SRSG, Tomáš Boček.

Based on the research, the key priority areas as recommended by the SRSG are;

  • Better Identification and age assessment practices,
  • Improved Registration and guardianship allowance,
  • Improved reception conditions with the prevention and effective response to missing children,
  • Adequate reception conditions including preventing and responding effectively to disappearances,
  • Increased use of Alternatives to detention for families and suitable alternative care arrangements for unaccompanied and separated children
  • Improved access to information, legal aid including child-friendly services, Increased prevention and response to violence, exploitation and trafficking,
  • Increased access to education with a strong focus on integration, access to health services,
  • Focus on family reunification, Reducing statelessness with a goal of total prevention,
  • Appropriate transition to adulthood as many children who turn 18 are sent to adult facilities with limited assistance, which can often lead to homelessness and creating long term solutions and structure to benefit those seeking asylum or the right to migrate should also be key priority areas.

The International Detention Coalition has welcomed law changes such as the new Zampa law in Italy, which guarantees the rights of unaccompanied children arriving in Italy, giving them the same rights as Italian children. Alternatives to detention are possible and consider the best interests of the child as detention has proven to be harming both physically and mentally to vulnerable people, especially children.


Promoting Alternatives to Detention in Southern Africa

IDC Members at the Alternatives to Detention Implementers Meeting in Lusaka, Zambia, May 2017

Significant steps to further develop alternatives to detention in the Southern Africa were undertaken this month.

 

IDC Staff visited South Africa, Zambia, Malawi and Botswana between April 24th and May 14, discussing alternatives to detention in the region.

 

The delegation included the Director of the IDC, Mr. Grant Mitchell, as well as Ms. Junita Calder, the Africa Regional Coordinator of the IDC and the Africa Program Officer of the IDC, Tiffany Shakespeare. The Coordinator of the Global Campaign to End Child Immigration Detention, Ms. Leeanne Torpey and Ms. Ramya Dilipkumar, Communications Intern for the IDC.

 

In each country, the IDC met with members, supporters, UN agencies and Governments about positive practice in the region and ways that these practices can be expanded.

 

The visit builds on the commitment by fifteen States across Africa to develop and implement alternatives to detention for migrants, including children, at the 2016 Migration for Southern Africa Dialogue (MIDSA). Find out more about this significant achievement in the MIDSA Dialogue here.

 

During the visit, the IDC highlighted the need for alternatives to detention to be considered as immigration law is being updated in South Africa. Read our press release here.

 

The Zambian government has already developed a National Referral Mechanism (NRM) that provides guidelines to identify vulnerable groups like refugees, victims of human trafficking and children, to ensure that they are not detained unnecessarily or for prolonged periods.

 

While learning more about this alternative to detention, the IDC met with partners and members, as well as the Zambian Department of Home Affairs and Immigration, the Department of Correctional Services, the National Human Rights Institute and attended a Mixed Migration Taskforce Meeting. Many government contacts expressed an interest in how case management could be utilised to strengthen alternatives to detention, with the potential for a pilot program to be developed to strengthen existing programming.

 

The IDC also visited several alternatives to detention in Zambia and visited migrants being held in a maximum security prison. The press release about national meetings can be found here.

Technical working group on mixed migration in Zambia

Department of Home Affairs and Immigration with Annie Lane from IOM and Grant Mitchell, IDC Director, Lusaka, Zambia

Department of Correctional Services in Kabwe, Zambia – with Annie Lane from IOM and Grant Mitchell, IDC Director

In Malawi, a government roundtable on alternatives to detention was held with UN partners, civil society organisations and the visiting delegation from the IDC. See the press release on the roundtable here. During the roundtable participants committed to a working group which will explore the development of a pilot alternative to detention program for unaccompanied minors. See the participant statement here.

In Botswana, the delegation met with government representatives and explored further partnerships with civil society.

Find out more about the situation of migrants and refugees in these countries in our recent publication Alternatives to Immigration Detention in Africa.

 

If you would like to find out more about our visit contact Junita Calder via [email protected] .


Grant Mitchell, Director of the International Detention Coalition highlights the opportunity that these commitments provide for the region.

“I am impressed by the considerable work that has already been undertaken by Governments to reflect on their migration policies. During my visit we shared examples of positive practice in other parts of the world to inspire policy makers, especially in countries whose law already enables the use of alternatives. This is a critical time for this work to be undertaken.”

Junita Calder, Africa and Middle East Regional Coordinator, looks forward to the UN Agency staff and their government counterparts fulfilling their MIDSA 2016 commitment to “develop and implement” alternatives to immigration detention.

“This is the time to test what works, by supporting pilots in the region to ensure that alternatives to immigration detention are implemented in a way that is effective and explores all options in each individual person’s case.”


Input into the Council of Europe Standards for Administrative Detention of Migrants.

 

 

The Council of Europe (CoE) is currently elaborating the first-ever set of minimum standards for the administrative detention of migrants

 

According to the Terms of Reference for the Committee of Experts on Administrative Detention of Migrants (CJ-DAM), the CoE is seeking to codify existing standards regarding the minimum conditions and treatment of migrants within places of immigration detention.  Based upon the model of the European Prison Rules (EPR), these new draft administrative standards are open for your comments and inputs by 30 June 2017.

 

Comments, in English or French, on the draft codifying instrument can be sent to the CoE Secretariat ([email protected]) by 30 June 2017 at the latest.  Those who submit formal comments will also be invited to a hearing with external stakeholders, to be held in Strasbourg from 22-23 June. You may find additional information about the process and upcoming dates online here: http://www.coe.int/en/web/cdcj/activities/administrative-detention-migrants

 

The IDC would like to work with interested Members and partners before 30 June 2017 to provide qualitative inputs to the draft codifying instrument.  If you are interested in contributing to the IDC submission, please contact IDC Advocacy Coordinator Ben Lewis at [email protected].

 

 


Will More and Longer Detention Solve the ‘Migration Crisis’?

NB. This article was first published on the University of Oxford’s Border Criminologies Blog on the 5th of April 2017.

Guest post by Jerome Phelps, Director of Detention Action, a UK organisation that provides support and advice to migrants in immigration detention and campaigns for change. He designed and manages the Community Support Project, an innovative alternative to detention project for young migrant ex-offenders. He has written or co-written six influential Detention Action reports, including ‘Without Detention’ (2016), which sets out the opportunities for alternatives to detention in the UK. Jerome writes regularly on detention and migration issues, including for the New Internationalist, Huffington Post, Forced Migration Review and openDemocracy. He is the Western Europe contact of the International Detention Coalition.

In March 2017, the European Commission published new recommendations to Member States on returning refused asylum-seekers and irregular migrants. The pressure to make the EU’s returns policy ‘efficient and credible’ has led the Commission to urge states across the region to use the full scope of the enforcement powers available to them under EU law. The fear is that this will be interpreted as encouragement to increase both the numbers of migrants detained, and the periods of times that they are detained for. The recommendations demonstrate the scale of alarm at the EU’s failures to manage effectively irregular migration and return refused migrants. They are framed as primarily a response to one statistic: in 2015, the ‘return rate’ to third countries was a mere 36% – almost three times as many migrants were ordered to leave Europe as actually left.

Announcing the proposals, Commissioner for Migration Dimitris Avramopoulos promised that improved returns rates will ‘be a strong signal against undertaking dangerous irregular journeys to the EU in the first place’. The logic is clear: tough action on returns will not only reduce numbers of irregular migrants in Europe, it will send a message of deterrence to desperate migrants in Libya or Turkey considering getting on a boat. The difficulty for the Commission is that returning migrants is a complicated business, resistant to unilateral resolution by the EU. As the Commission recognises, many countries do not cooperate on readmission of their nationals. Improving their willingness to accept returns is a long-term matter of negotiating readmission agreements and, increasingly, tying aid to such cooperation. This is not a new idea, and the Commission has little new to say on how it will bring recalcitrant governments into line.

In any case, progress in implementation of the Partnership Framework is unlikely to have much traction on the streets of Tripoli and Izmir. In order to deter migration, a stronger message is seen to be required: detention.

The Commission urges States to bring their detention time limits into line with the maximum permitted under the Return Directive, eighteen months. Detention capacity is to be increased, ‘in line with actual needs’. States are vaguely exhorted to ‘use detention as needed and appropriate’. Most significantly, migrants are to be detained ‘where there is a risk of absconding’, or where they ‘show signs that they will not comply’ with return. The ‘appropriate’ use of detention seems to be not simply to enforce return, nor even to punish absconding or non-compliance, but as a preventative measure where migrants might not comply.

This could be seen to open the way to the speculative long-term detention of migrants who have never absconded, and for whom there is no imminent prospect of return. Such an approach would be unlawful under the Returns Directive, which requires that detention be used as a last resort – but the Commission darkly hints at a possible recast of the Returns Directive, if necessary.

In the view of the Council of Europe’s Commissioner for Human Rights, Nils Muiznieks, the recommendations are ‘likely to lead to human rights violations without furthering other goals, such as facilitating the processing of asylum claims or promoting dignified returns.’

The Commission presents no evidence that shorter maximum periods of detention are preventing returns. Indeed, there is no apparent correlation in the statistics between length of detention and numbers of returns. Filling detention centres with long-term unreturnable bed-blockers can actually reduce returns rates, unless Europe is willing to follow Hungary’s (illegal) strategy of detaining all asylum-seekers.

Indeed, the Italian Senate commission for human rights in 2014 found that 45 days were the average necessary to identify a migrant. If consular officials had not documented a migrant by then, further approaches were rarely successful. The result was that ‘the detainee would wait for months for a response that would never come before then being released with an expulsion order, after having been detained for an undefined period, without any justification.’ As a result of the commission’s report, the Italian government reduced the time limit from the 18 months allowed by the Returns Directive to three months, and closed many detention centres. However, in Italy too, the political pressure has since told.  At the end of 2016, the Italian Government announcedan extraordinary plan for control of the territory, involving a quadrupling of the capacity of the detention estate to 1600 places in around 20 detention centres.

The UK is Europe’s test case for the effectiveness of long-term detention: uniquely in Europe, it has no time limit at all, having opted out of the Returns Directive. The UK achieves relatively high numbers of returns, compared to other European States. However, all the evidence suggests that this is due to having put greater energy into negotiating returns with third countries, rather than its greater use of detention.

As elsewhere, detention is a massively inefficient tool for enforcing returns. According to Home Office statistics, in 2015, less than 40% of migrants leaving detention after more than six months were removed. The great majority were simply released back into the community. Indeed, the Home Office has belatedly recognised that long-term detention is ineffective. In early 2016, following the scathing criticisms of a Parliamentary inquiry and the Home Secretary’s own Shaw Review, the then Minister James Brokenshire announced a programme of reforms which he expected would ‘lead to a reduction in the number of those detained, and the duration of detention before removal, in turn improving the welfare of those detained.’

Progress has been disappointing: two weeks ago the HM Chief Inspector of Prisons called for remedial action after finding 23 people detained for over a yearin Brook House detention centre alone. Last week, MPs from all major parties debated the Government’s failures to fulfil its promises. The SNP’s Anne McLoughlin MP memorably concluded the debate by observing that ‘The most soul-destroying thing about detention is the unlimited nature of it… and the most soul-destroying thing for campaigners is not knowing when the government will do as it promised’.

Nevertheless, there is no shortage of evidence of the likely ineffectiveness of detention in meeting the Commission’s objectives. Few European economies are sufficiently healthy to justify the luxury of pouring public money into so ineffectual an approach.

The political stakes may be simply too high for doing nothing to be an option. However, as the Commission recognises, detention is not the only option. Indeed, EU law requires the use of less coercive measures than detention whenever possible, leaving the Commission in the awkward position of promoting the use of detention whilst reminding States that it should only be used as a last resort. This requirement to consider alternatives to detention first provides the main opportunity to avert the slide towards detention. The opportunity is there, because mass long-term detention will not be effective in increasing returns, in Europe any more than in the UK. The injustice will make migrants resist, not cooperate. Only alternatives that treat migrants as human beings can encourage cooperation with immigration systems.

Detention Action’s recent report Without Detention sets out how community-based alternatives, supporting migrants to live with dignity in the community while they resolve their cases, can meet the needs both of migrants and of States. Sweden has already made a success of this approach, detaining around a tenth as many migrants as the UK, and overwhelmingly relying on voluntary returns. Around Europe, a series of small NGO pilots, including  a Detention Action project that manages the reintegration into the community of young ex-offender migrants who cannot be deported, are demonstrating the scope for Europe to improve its management of migration not by building more detention centres, but by engaging with migrants as human beings.

The political stakes are high. The developments of the last year, including the EU – Turkey deal and the mass holding of migrants in hotspots on the Greek and Italian coasts, demonstrate the limitations of calls for European values. The EU may see its management of the ‘refugee crisis’ as an existential threat. But resort to mass detention will be a sign of helplessness, not strength.


IDC Publishes Comprehensive Report on Immigration Detention and Alternatives in the Americas

“What do we hope for the future?” was the central question for the recent panel discussion that took place in the Latin American Social Sciences Institute (FLACSO) in Quito, Ecuador, on the 20th of April, 2017. This event followed the release of a report by the same name, which presents information on current policy and practice related to immigration detention and alternatives to detention (ATD) in 21 countries in the Americas region.

“We have to go back to basics: detention must be used only as a last resort”, stated Álvaro Botero, representative of the Interamerican Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).

Botero praised the report as the most exhaustive analysis available on immigration detention and ATD in the Americas. Based on information presented before the IACHR at a thematic hearing in October of 2014, the report identifies the main patterns of human rights violations related to the use of immigration detention, and also highlights key policy and practice that represent positive components of alternatives to detention.

“Less talking, more action. It’s not enough to simply adopt instruments [to protect human rights], they must be respected” stated Ernesto Pazmiño Granizo, Public Defender (Ombudsman) of Ecuador.

The Public Defender acknowledged the recent steps taken by the Ecuadorian government to guarantee the right to personal liberty in the migration context. These steps include the closing of Hotel Carrión, which was being used for immigration detention purposes, and the prohibition of detention included in the new Human Mobility Law. However, he also showed concern for the elimination of judicial review of detention decisions, and detention carried out in airports.

Fortunately, States have a gamut of mechanisms and resources available to avoid unnecessary or arbitrary use of immigration detention.

“Measures for avoiding detention have been found in each country included in this study,” highlighted Elba Coria, principal author of the report and current director of the Alaíde Foppa Legal Clinic at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico.

ATD are defined as legislation, policy or practice, formal or informal, that ensures people are not detained for reasons relating to their migration status.The report includes a series of recommendations to States for eliminating the use of immigration detention, and instead adopting alternatives that guarantee the right to personal liberty and freedom of movement.

We thank everyone that participated in the panel, and are grateful to FLACSO Ecuador, and Asylum Access América Latina for co-organising the event, and Carmen Gómez, Research Professor of FLACSO Ecuador for moderating the panel discussion.


New Report: Detention of Stateless People in Europe Can Be Avoided

 

The European Network on Statelessness (ENS) has released a new report: Protecting Stateless Persons from Arbitrary Detention: An Agenda for Change.

 

The report highlights the fact that stateless people are often detained for months and even years, without any real prospect of their cases being resolved. It analyses procedures that can assist to identify those who are left without nationality and strengthen protection of stateless people.

 

It makes five practical recommendations to pave a way forward for states. Their first recommendation is for states to implement a range of alternatives to detention in line with international standards and good practice.

 

ENS is a civil society network, with members across Europe who advocate for all human beings to have a right to a nationality and that those who lack nationality altogether are entitled to adequate protection.

 

The IDC is one of many organisations who have signed a joint call for Europe’s leaders to end immigration detention of people who are stateless.

 

Find out more about the experiences of people who are stateless and detained in this moving multimedia piece by Greg Constantine.


IDC Publishes Comprehensive Report on Immigration Detention and Alternatives in the Americas

“What do we hope for the future?” was the central question for the recent panel discussion that took place in the Latin American Social Sciences Institute (FLACSO) in Quito, Ecuador, on the 20th of April, 2017. This event followed the release of a report by the same name, which presents information on current policy and practice related to immigration detention and alternatives to detention (ATD) in 21 countries in the Americas region.

“We have to go back to basics: detention must be used only as a last resort”, stated Álvaro Botero, representative of the Interamerican Commission on Human Rights (IACHR).

Botero praised the report as the most exhaustive analysis available on immigration detention and ATD in the Americas. Based on information presented before the IACHR at a thematic hearing in October of 2014, the report identifies the main patterns of human rights violations related to the use of immigration detention, and also highlights key policy and practice that represent positive components of alternatives to detention.

“Less talking, more action. It’s not enough to simply adopt instruments [to protect human rights], they must be respected” stated Ernesto Pazmiño Granizo, Public Defender (Ombudsman) of Ecuador.

The Public Defender acknowledged the recent steps taken by the Ecuadorian government to guarantee the right to personal liberty in the migration context. These steps include the closing of Hotel Carrión, which was being used for immigration detention purposes, and the prohibition of detention included in the new Human Mobility Law. However, he also showed concern for the elimination of judicial review of detention decisions, and detention carried out in airports.

 

Fortunately, States have a gamut of mechanisms and resources available to avoid unnecessary or arbitrary use of immigration detention.

“Measures for avoiding detention have been found in each country included in this study,” highlighted Elba Coria, principal author of the report and current director of the Alaíde Foppa Legal Clinic at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico.

 

ATD are defined as legislation, policy or practice, formal or informal, that ensures people are not detained for reasons relating to their migration status.The report includes a series of recommendations to States for eliminating the use of immigration detention, and instead adopting alternatives that guarantee the right to personal liberty and freedom of movement.

 

 

We thank everyone that participated in the panel, and are grateful to FLACSO Ecuador, and Asylum Access América Latina for co-organising the event, and Carmen Gómez, Research Professor of FLACSO Ecuador for moderating the panel discussion.