Look at positive gains of migration, EU nations urged

Dec 21, 2016

Oulanyah says people who come to Africa overcrowd the little economic opportunities available, forcing people to go looking in Europe.

PIC: Deputy Speaker, Jacob Oulanyah says migration is not only based on security but also on economic reasons. (File photo)

African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) countries are urging the European Union to look at migration as  development agenda and not a security matter.
 
Members of Parliament from the ACP said that the migration is a serious issue that needs to be tackled by opening up safe and legal means of entry rather than sending the immigrants back to their countries of origin.
 
They argued that migrants  are dying to escape war and poverty yet the restrictions are informing the political choices being made by various governments across Europe.
 
Speaking in a meeting of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats of Europe, Pacific, Africa and the Caribbean(ALDEPAC), the Deputy Speaker, Jacob Oulanyah said that migration is not only based on security but also on economic reasons.

He said that persons who come to Africa from elsewhere overcrowd the little economic opportunities available forcing people to go looking in Europe.

"When people migrate to Europe, they are called economic migrants and different rules apply. When Europeans come to Africa, they are called expatriates. We need to address this imbalance," he said.
 
Oulanyah added that there is need to address the underlying causes of migration  like poverty, war and lately climate change. He added that the governments also need to control the so called investors who come to Africa but end up doing work that would be done by the locals.
 
Cecilia Ogwal (Dokolo) called on governments to have regulatory policies on foreign investors concerning employment.

"We must recruit locals to work in the investors establishments. These investors must not bring their untrained workers who take away opportunities that would be enjoyed by the locals forcing them to move," she said.
 
Catherine Bearder from the United Kingdom agreed that migration is an economic issue citing the need to have more young skilled people working in Europe.

"Europe desperately needs migrants because we are an against population. We therefore, need young people to provide their skills," she revealed.
 
Bearder called on the European Union to implement the Blue Visa which is a temporary pass for the arriving migration allowing them to gain some skills before they are deported.

"When  these young people arrive on boats, we should give them basic skills like plumbing, electricals before sending them back," she added.
 
Ibrahim Rassin Bundu from Sierra Leone weighed in saying 'migration is as old as many kind' adding that ' Europeans came to Africa and took our raw materials'
Bundu said that the young people migrating to Europe are looking to have some of the benefits accruing from the raw materials taken by the colonialists.

"After graduating from university, these young people would like to go and see how the materials are being used and participate in the development," he said.
 
While opening the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly at the Kenyatta International Convention Centre on Monday, President Uhuru Kenyatta said that, "as long as the economic and political conditions remain dire, we shall continue seeing Africans drown on the Mediterranean Sea".
 
ALDEPAC meets on the sidelines of the ACP-EU Joint Parliamentary Assembly.

The Assembly that has been meeting in Nairobi, Kenya concludes today (Wednesday) with a debate on 'How to support resettlement of migrants in their home country'.
 
The Joint Assembly will also have a final vote on the motion for resolution on constitutional limits on presidential terms.

Other Ugandan legislators at the conference includes Juliet Kinyamatama (Rakai), Wamanga-Wamai (Mbale Municipality) and William Nokorach (PWDs).

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