African dilemma in world migration crisis
By Tony Luka Elumelu
By Tony Luka Elumelu
ECOWAS Building |
For Africa and Africans, migration is a way of life and this
is also largely true of people of the other continents. To a large extent, the
great Trans-Saharan Trade, and the attendant migration, was part of attempts at
achieving economic development, boosting cultural exchanges and integration.
Thus, migration can be described as an agent of development, which has impacted
positively on the Gross Development Products of many African countries, and the
economic contributions, in remittances by African Diasporas to their home
countries, which is a boost to the annual budgets.
Furthermore, the transfer of
capacities and technology from the Diasporas has contributed immensely to the
development of the region, even though, the host countries of the African
Diasporas remain the primary beneficiaries.
The unravelling global migration crisis has engendered the
deployment of a range of policies and measures designed by developed countries
(or countries of destination) to check the influx of migrants from the
developing world. African countries and their economies have been hardest hit
by the negative impacts of these anti-migration policies and measures, which go
against grain of sustainable migration management, with calamitous consequences
both on Africa and the world at large.
The world is today grappling with an upsurge in criminal
activities; African states are overwhelmed by the dimension of criminal sects
with global affiliations and financing, and these have left the region with
paucity of funds and lack of capacities to combat emerging crimes or for
economic development. Migration experts are always quick to cite the so-called
push and pull factors of migration and these include social, economic,
political and environmental reasons, to name but a few. But while the developed
nations do everything to prevent non-skilled immigrants, they surreptitiously
encourage the outflow of skilled labour from the already hard pressed
developing counties.
The combined consequences of perennial conflicts in Africa,
poverty, bad governance, unemployment and lack of opportunities or sheer
opportunism have seen thousands of African youths perish on perditious journeys
to Europe through the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean. Even those who had
made it to Europe and other continents, including Africa are constantly being
deported back to their home countries in their hundreds or become targets of
violent xenophobic attacks, accused of “stealing” jobs meant for indigenes.
The solution to the global migration crisis requires a
holistic, strategic all-inclusive approach, predicated on the fact that
restriction of movement will only compound the present quagmire. For their
part, developed countries must take into cognisance the benefits of migration
on the origin and the envisioned impact in the derailment of the world economic
order. For Africa, migration management initiatives must acknowledge the
contributions of the African Diasporas both to their countries of origin and
countries of destination.
The 15-nation Economic Community of West African States
(ECOWAS) has developed and adopted migration policies to encourage mobility of
persons within the ECOWAS space hinged on three cardinal areas of intervention
– rights of entry, residence and establishment in territories of member states.
Beyond these initiatives, the region has experienced a revolution in migration
governance with the adoption and harmonisation of travel documents. Of note is
the recently adopted ECOWAS Biometric Identity Card, which is a landmark achievement
in the region’s integration drive, with the principal objective of demystifying
the passport as a travel document, enhancing the security architecture and
encouraging mass participation in regional development.
By and large, various migration policies and measures as
they stand today, have not achieved the desired deliverables. Developing
countries are yet to mainstream migration as a critical sector in their
national development agenda to address youth unemployment and social problems.
The plethora of immigration services and other institutions charged with the
statutory mandate to enforce migration laws and regulations require the
capacity to properly advise governments on critical areas to bring developing
countries on the same pedestal with the developed nations in reaching
sustainable and mutually beneficial migration management policies that will
benefit all concerned.
To mitigate the anticipated collateral damage from the
global migration crisis on the African economy, African countries should
re-strategise and optimise their endowment with a view to transiting from
providers of raw materials to industrialised nations. The factors pushing
Africans out of their countries on the dangerous search for non-existent
so-called greener pastures abroad must be addressed.
• Elumelu PhD, is Principal Programme Officer at the ECOWAS
Free Movement and Tourism Directorate.
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