CONTINUATION
APPENDIX I
INTER-AMERICAN
PROGRAM FOR THE PROMOTION AND PROTECTION
OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS OF MIGRANTS, INCLUDING
MIGRANT WORKERS AND THEIR FAMILIES
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Program Background
The Working Group to Prepare an Inter-American Program for the Promotion
and Protection of the Human Rights of Migrants, Including Migrant
Workers and Their Families was established by the Committee on Juridical
and Political Affairs of the Permanent Council on January 15, 2004, to
prepare a draft Inter-American Program for the Promotion and Protection
of the Human Rights of Migrants, Including Migrant Workers and their
Families.
1. Summits of the Americas
The topic “Promotion and Protection of the Human Rights of Migrants,
Including Migrant Workers and their Families” has been present
throughout the Summits of the Americas process. In the Plan of Action
of the First Summit of the Americas, held in Miami, Florida, in December
1994, the Heads of State and Government, in reaffirming their commitment
to the promotion and protection of human rights pledged, inter alia,
to “[g]uarantee the protection of the human rights of all migrant
workers and their families.”
Then, in the Plan of Action of the Second Summit of the Americas, held
in Santiago, Chile, in April 1998, the Heads of State and Government
expressed their resolve to “protect the rights of migrant workers and
their families” and, in that regard, they established that governments
would:
Comply with the applicable international human rights instruments and,
consistent with the legal framework of each country, guarantee the human
rights of all migrants, including migrant workers and their families.
Seek full compliance with, and protection of, the human rights of all
migrants, including migrant workers, and their families, and adopt
effective measures, including the strengthening of public awareness, to
prevent and eradicate violations of human rights and eliminate all forms
of discrimination against them, particularly racial discrimination,
xenophobia, and related intolerance.
Reaffirm the sovereign right of each State to formulate and apply its
own legal framework and policies for migration, including the granting
of permission to migrants to enter, stay, or exercise economic activity,
in full conformity with applicable international instruments relating to
human rights and in a spirit of cooperation.
Seek
full respect for, and compliance with, the 1963 Vienna Convention on
Consular Relations, especially as it relates to the right of nationals,
regardless of their immigration status, to communicate with a consular
officer of their own State in case of detention.
Protect the rights of all migrant workers and their families, consistent
with each country’s internal legal framework, by taking steps, in case
they do not exist, to:
- provide,
with respect to working conditions, the same legal protection as for
national workers;
-
facilitate, as appropriate, the payment of full wages owed when the
worker has returned to his/her country, and allow them to arrange the
transfer of their personal effects;
- recognize
the rights of citizenship and nationality of the children of all
migrant workers who may be entitled to such rights, and any other
rights they may have in each country;
- encourage
the negotiation of bilateral or multilateral agreements, regarding the
remission of social security benefits accrued by migrant workers;
- protect
all migrant workers and their families, through law enforcement and
information campaigns, from becoming victims of exploitation and abuse
from alien smuggling;
- prevent
abuse and mistreatment of all migrant workers by employers or any
authorities entrusted with the enforcement of migration policies and
border control; and
- encourage
and promote respect for the cultural identity of all migrants.
Support the activities of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
with regard to the protection of the rights of migrant workers and their
families, particularly through the Special Rapporteur for Migrant
Workers.
It should be pointed out that the Heads of State and Government also
referred to the topic in the Declaration of the Second Summit of the
Americas, held in Santiago, Chile, in the following terms: “We will make
a special effort to guarantee the human rights of all migrants,
including migrant workers and their families.”
Likewise, in the Declaration of the Third Summit of the Americas, held
in Quebec City, Canada, they said: “We recognize the cultural and
economic contributions made by migrants to receiving societies as well
as to their communities of origin. We are committed to ensuring
dignified, humane treatment with appropriate legal protections, defense
of human rights, and safe and healthy labor conditions for migrants. We
will strengthen mechanisms for hemispheric cooperation to address the
legitimate needs of migrants and take effective measures against
trafficking in human beings.”
In the Plan of Action of the Third Summit of the Americas adopted in
Quebec City, Canada, the Heads of State and Government of the Americas,
reaffirming the commitments made in 1998 at the Santiago Summit
concerning the protection of the human rights of migrants, including
migrant workers and their families, established that their governments
would:
Strengthen cooperation among states to address, with a comprehensive,
objective and long-term focus, the manifestations, origins and effects
of migration in the region;
Promote recognition of the value of close cooperation among countries of
origin, transit and destination in order to ensure protection of the
human rights of migrants;
Establish an inter-American program within the OAS for the promotion and
protection of the human rights of migrants, including migrant workers
and their families, taking into account the activities of the IACHR and
supporting the work of the IACHR Special Rapporteur on Migrant Workers
and the UN Special Rapporteur on Migration;
Commit to undertake the widest possible cooperation and exchange of
information among states concerning illegal trafficking networks,
including developing preventative campaigns on the dangers and risks
faced by migrants, particularly women and children who often can be
victims of such trafficking, with a view to eradicating this crime;
Establish linkages with subregional processes, such as the Regional
Conference on Migration and the South American Conference on Migration,
which are dialogue fora, in order to exchange information on the
migration phenomenon, as well as promote cooperation with specialized
international organizations, such as the International Organization of
Migration (IOM), in order to advance and coordinate implementation
efforts of Summit mandates.
Lastly, in the Declaration of Nuevo León, the Heads of State and
Government, assembled at the Special Summit of the Americas, in
Monterrey, Mexico, in January 2004, said the following:
We underscore the importance of cooperation between countries of origin,
transit, and destination, to ensure the full protection of human rights
of all migrants, including migratory workers and their families, and the
observance of labor laws applicable to them, in accordance with the
commitments agreed to in the Santiago and Quebec City Summits. We
support the adoption of programs for orderly migration as a factor of
economic and social development; and we will cooperate in the fight
against trafficking in persons, which especially affects women and
children.
We recognize that remittances are an important source of capital in many
countries of the Hemisphere. We commit to take concrete actions to
promote the establishment, as soon as possible, of necessary conditions,
in order to achieve the goal of reducing by at least half the regional
average cost of these transfers no later than 2008 and report on
progress achieved at the next Summit of the Americas in Argentina in
2005. We will adopt, as needed or appropriate, measures such as: the
promotion of competition between the providers of these services, the
elimination of regulatory obstacles and other restrictive measures that
affect the cost of these transfers, as well as the use of new
technologies, while maintaining effective financial oversight.
2.
General Assembly of the Organization of American States (OAS)
For its
part, the General Assembly adopted resolutions AG/RES. 1928
(XXXIII-O/03), “The Human Rights of All Migrant Workers and Their
Families”; and AG/RES. 2027 (XXXIV-O/04), also entitled “The Human
Rights of All Migrant Workers and Their Families.” The latter resolution
instructed the Permanent Council to renew the mandate of the Working
Group of the Committee on Juridical and Political Affairs (CAJP) to
prepare an inter-American program so that, as soon as possible, it might
draft the proposed Inter-American Program, starting from the draft
presented by the IACHR and the proposals of member states, specialized
organizations, and other bodies, in accordance with the mandate of the
Third Summit of the Americas.
II. CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
Due to the increased scope and
significance of migration in the last decade, virtually every state has
become a sending, receiving, and transit country of migrants. As a
result, migration has become a priority on the political and diplomatic
agenda of many countries and of the Heads of State and Government at the
Summits of the Americas. Violence and the growing disparity in
standards of living and social and labor benefits among countries in the
region, to cite but two factors, have spurred a sharp upturn in the
number of people migrating. Studies have shown that in the last four
decades the annual migration rate has easily surpassed the population
growth rate in the Americas./
As would be expected, the increase in migratory flows has had social,
political, and economic consequences for countries of origin,
destination, and, to a lesser degree, transit. The countries of our
region have become more and more interested in tackling the matter as
related phenomena have made themselves felt. These include the
influence of migrant workers on local labor markets; the demands
associated with absorbing migrant populations; smuggling of migrants and
trafficking in persons; the repercussions of migration on the
communities of origin, transit, and destination; violations of human
rights; the impact of remittances; crime rates in border areas; and
abuse of migrants. Countries of the region are also interested in
greater cooperation in order to maximize the benefits of migration. The
Program recognizes that orderly migration contributes to economic and
social development. In this regard, the Program promotes an environment
of respect for the human rights of migrants and their families.
The goals of
promoting and protecting the human rights of migrants are compatible
with each OAS member state’s sovereign rights to control its borders and
enforce its laws. The Program therefore acknowledges the right of
member states to regulate the entry and stay of foreigners in their
territories and to determine the status of migrants and the effect of
that status within the domestic political, legal, economic, and
educational systems of receiving countries, as well as access to
government services and benefits, in accordance with the legal framework
of each country.
The states’
authority to regulate the entry and stay of foreigners in their
territories and to determine the status of migrants must be executed and
be consistent with applicable international human rights and refugee
law. At the same time, the rights of each person are limited by the
rights of others, by the security of all, and by the just demands of the
general welfare of a democratic society.
This Program
seeks to integrate the human rights considerations of migrants and their
families into the work of the organs, agencies, and entities of the
OAS. The Program links the work of these organs, agencies, and entities
and that of member states, multilateral organizations, and civil
society. It also comprises a two-pronged approach: (a) activities to
be carried out by the organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS; and (b)
proposed optional activities to be carried out by member states,
multilateral organizations, and/or civil society organizations.
This Program is structured on
the basis of general and specific objectives. Also identified are
activities for fulfilling those objectives. The Program’s main
implementers are the organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS. Other
potential Program implementers include member states, multilateral
organizations, and civil society, including migrants themselves and
migrant workers and their families. The beneficiaries of the Program
are migrants, including migrant workers and their families, temporary
residents,/
and the states.
The
activities assigned to the organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS
stem from existing programs and activities. Subsequently, others will
be added when those bodies identify them. The activities to be
recommended to multilateral organizations and civil society
organizations derive from their usual fields of work. Finally, the
specific optional activities that are suggested to states emerge from
their proposals.
In the case
of the OAS, activities are assigned in keeping with the primary
responsibility of the system’s different organs, agencies, and
entities. In the case of the states, the Program suggests specific
optional activities for their consideration, and in the case of
multilateral organizations and civil society organizations, the Program
takes into account the activities developed by such organizations in
accordance with their mandates.
The
activities of this Program may be developed over the long term,
gradually and flexibly, in such a manner that they may be reviewed
periodically.
The Program
envisages a series of measures to facilitate its follow-up, in order to
measure progress, facilitate the exchange of best practices, and take
advantage of updates and new developments that may occur at the regional
and international levels, according to the section “Program Follow-Up
Activities.”
The Program
will incorporate a gender perspective as a crosscutting theme.
A specific
voluntary fund will be established to contribute to funding of the
activities assigned to the organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS, in
support of this Program, in addition to the existing resources in the
Regular Fund of the program-budget of the Organization, which will be
administered by the Summits of the Americas Secretariat. The CAJP will
determine the use of such funds. This notwithstanding, the Program
implementers may allocate and obtain funds to carry out the specific
optional activities.
Lastly, for
greater ease in understanding the Program, a document cross-referencing
its objectives and activities has been included as Appendix I, while a
general description of existing international instruments and other
reference documents has been included as Appendix II.
III. DESCRIPTION OF THE PROGRAM IMPLEMENTERS
Program
implementers are listed, without prejudice to the ability to include
others, as relevant, in future revisions.
A.
Organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS
-
Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) and the Special Rapporteurship on
Migrant Workers and Their Families
-
Inter-American
Commission of Women (CIM)
-
Inter-American
Children’s Institute (IIN)
-
Inter-American
Agency for Cooperation and Development (IACD)
-
Office of
Education, Science, and Technology
-
Summits of the
Americas Secretariat
-
Office for the
Promotion of Democracy (OPD)
-
Department of
Legal Affairs and Services
-
Pan American
Health Organization (PAHO)
B.
Implementers other than organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS
1. OAS
member states
Specific optional activities that may be undertaken by states are listed
below under subheading V.B.1. These may be unilateral, or bilateral or
multilateral, and may even use intergovernmental forums on migration,
such as:
-
Regional
Conference on Migration (RCM)
-
South American
Conference on Migration
-
Central-American
Commission of Directors of Migration (OCAM)
-
Southern Common
Market (MERCOSUR), in particular, its Political Consultation and
Coordination Forum
-
Andean Community
-
Caribbean
Community (CARICOM)
-
Ibero-American
Federation of Ombudsmen
2. Multilateral organizations
-
International
Organization for Migration (IOM)
-
Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and the
Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants
-
Office of the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
-
International
Labour Organization (ILO)
3.
Other implementers
This Program recommends activities that may be undertaken by civil
society organizations involved in the field of human rights, migration,
and development, as well as by migrant organizations. It also includes
the activities being carried out by the IIHR in accordance with its
mandate.
IV. PROGRAM
OBJECTIVES
A. General Objectives
-
Promotion and
protection of the human rights of migrants, including migrant
workers and their families, through, inter alia, the
identification and implementation of cooperative actions and the
exchange of best practices.
-
Integration of
considerations relating to the human rights of migrants and their
families into the work of the organs, agencies, and entities of the
OAS, taking into consideration a gender perspective.
-
Linkage of the
work of the organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS with the
activities of states, multilateral organizations, and civil society,
including the migrants themselves and their families.
B.
Specific Objectives
1. Promotion of the exchange of best practices and cooperation
among sending, transit, and receiving countries in order to fully
respect and protect the human rights of all migrants, including
migrant workers and their families.
2. Effective and efficient migration management, through the
exchange of best practices with a view to achieving organized, fair,
and controlled migration processes, which may constitute a factor in
economic and social development and take family interests into
account, including family reunification.
3. Promotion of international cooperation to deal with the
diverse causes of migration, as well as its effects and impact on the
sending, transit, and receiving societies.
4. Attention to the special needs of vulnerable groups of
migrants, including children, women, indigenous persons, persons of
African descent, and persons with disabilities, among others.
5. Attention to the needs of persons in transit and receiving
countries who may be vulnerable, such as low-income families and
individuals, and persons living in regions, or working in economic
sectors, with high proportions of migrants.
6. Prevention and technical cooperation in the fight against
trafficking in persons, investigation and criminal prosecution of the
persons responsible for this crime, and protection and assistance to
victims of trafficking.
7. Prevention and technical cooperation in the fight against the
smuggling of migrants, and investigation and criminal prosecution of
migrant smugglers.
8. Promotion of orderly migration and support for migrant
programs that permit social inclusion in the receiving countries,
consistent with each state’s domestic legal framework and applicable
international human rights law.
9. Promotion of a more effective exchange of information on
legislation and migration policies.
10. Education and dissemination of information on human rights,
migrants’ rights and responsibilities, and legal channels for
migration and access to social services.
11. Promotion of activities against manifestations or acts of
racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, and related forms of
intolerance against migrants, and recognition of the cultural and
economic contributions made by migrants to receiving societies as well
as to their communities of origin.
12. Strengthening of or participation in, as applicable,
transnational networks and forums for dialogue among migrant
organizations, and support for the work of multilateral entities and
civil society organizations.
13. Inclusion of the human rights of migrants as a crosscutting
issue in all the relevant activities undertaken by the OAS.
14. Promotion of public policies, facilitation of practices, and,
when requested, advice on legislative issues aimed at the inclusion of
migrants in the transit and receiving societies, consistent
with each state’s domestic legal framework and with applicable
international human rights law, with special emphasis on the rights
related to health, education, labor, culture, nondiscrimination, and
against violence, intolerance, racism, and xenophobia.
15. Development and support of programs for the reintegration of
migrants and their families into the countries of origin.
16. Protection of the rights of migrants and their families under
immigration proceedings, consistent with each state’s domestic legal
framework and applicable international human rights law,
including the rights to a fair trial, protection from arbitrary
arrest, due process of law, and equality before the law.
17. Information, notification, communication, and consular
assistance, in accordance with the obligations of the states parties
to the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations of 1963.
18. Facilitation of political participation by migrants and their
families in their countries of origin.
19. Promotion of measures aimed at fulfilling the objectives of
reducing the transfer costs of remittances.
20. Promotion and protection by states of origin of the human
rights of the families of migrant workers who stay in their countries
of origin, paying special attention to children whose parents have
emigrated.
V. SPECIFIC ACTIVITIES
A. Instruct the Secretary General to provide a work plan to
undertake the specific activities listed in this section, including the
specific organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS that will carry them
out, pursuant to Article 113 of the Charter of the Organization of
American States, and instruct the organs, agencies, and entities of the
OAS to undertake the following actions:
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR):
1. Carry out
activities to promote the inter-American human rights system, with
emphasis on the human rights of migrants and their families, including
the use of the Commission’s website for that purpose.
2. Facilitate
the exchange of information and technical assistance on human rights
and migration legislation with state agencies; government officials;
organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS; multilateral organizations;
and civil society organizations.
3. Offer
training on guarantees of due process in migration proceedings and on
the use of the inter-American human rights system, to organizations
that make free legal aid programs available to migrants and their
families.
4. Offer
training to government officials from sending, transit, and receiving
countries on consular protection to migrants in accordance with the
Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, taking into account
information, notification, communication, and consular assistance for
migrants.
Inter-American Commission of Women (CIM):
5. Conduct
research on female migration and its impact on family structure, the
labor market, and migration control, inter alia.
6. Develop
policies and programs designed to protect migrant women and their
families, in particular women heads of household, and to combat
violence against women.
7. Promote the
implementation of resolutions of the CIM and of the OAS General
Assembly on trafficking in persons.
8. Recommend
ratification by the states of the United Nations Convention against
Transnational Organized Crime and its optional Protocols, and of the
Optional Protocol to the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child on the sale of children, child prostitution and child
pornography.
9. Promote
mechanisms for the safe return and reintegration of trafficking
victims and special procedures to protect juvenile victims of
trafficking.
Inter-American Children’s Institute (IIN):
10. Include in
its activities the special situation of unaccompanied migrant
children.
11. Include in
its activities the protection of juvenile victims of trafficking in
persons.
Inter-American Agency for Cooperation and Development (IACD), when
requested by member states:
12. Promote the
formulation and funding, within existing resources, of projects aimed
at: (a) facilitating appropriate/
access to the job market and improving the working conditions of
migrant workers, with emphasis on aspects of safety and health; (b)
strengthening democratic institutions; (c) providing education for
democracy and human rights, for government officials and the private
sector.
13. Promote and
support the management of bilateral agreements on seasonal or
temporary migrant workers.
14. Develop
joint initiatives with the private sector to foster economic
development and protect the labor rights of migrants and their
families, consistent with each state’s domestic legal framework and
applicable international human rights law.
15. Promote,
through specialized regional forums, discussions on the promotion and
protection of the human rights of migrants and their families, with
the participation of governments, international organizations, private
sector representatives, and community leaders.
Office of
Education, Science, and Technology:
16. Promote
cooperation among educational institutions in different states to
facilitate the incorporation of migrant children into schools and
promote the exchange and training of teachers working in the field of
bilingual and intercultural education.
17. Foster the
modernization of curricular standards to introduce standards on
job-related skills.
18. Include
human rights education for migrants and their families within the
activities of the Inter-American Program on Education for Democratic
Values and Practices. In particular, consider including education for
migrants and their families in the activities of the electronic
observatory, organizing discussion forums on the topic, and gathering
information on public education programs for migrants in sending,
transit, and receiving countries.
19. Consider the
possibility of periodically organizing a hemispheric seminar for
training public officials in immigration policies and human rights, as
well as in the detection of forged documents, with the support and
participation of specialists, international organizations, and civil
society.
Summits
of the Americas Secretariat:
20. Assist the
CAJP and participate in the follow-up and coordination process of this
Program, and submit the results obtained to the Summits process.
21. Administer,
under the supervision of the CAJP, the specific voluntary fund to be
established for the execution of the Program activities assigned to
the organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS.
Office
for the Promotion of Democracy (OPD), when requested by member states:
22. Further
studies on comparative legislation related to the political
participation of migrants in the democratic systems of their countries
of origin and host countries.
23. Generate,
promote, and disseminate information regarding the legal, political,
and practical implications of the political participation of migrants
in their countries of origin for governments, migrant organizations,
and electoral administrations, among others.
24. Offer
technical assistance in institution-building to election authorities
and civil electoral registries, on institutional modernization,
updating of their countries’ electoral rolls, and the issuance of
documents necessary for migrants to participate in the electoral
processes of their countries of origin.
25. Offer
technical assistance to legislatures that so request along with advice
to parliamentary commissions on migration matters, including advice to
states interested in the harmonization of migration legislation.
26. Provide
training to migrants in order to promote their participation in
democratic processes.
27. Promote
democratic culture through formal and nonformal education, stressing
the need for tolerance and solidarity, in accordance with the
characteristics of each country.
28. Facilitate
multiparty and multisectoral discussions within political parties on
the human rights of migrants and their families.
Department of Legal Affairs and Services:
29. Compile and
disseminate on its website current national migration legislation,
policies, and requirements.
All the
organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS mentioned in this Program:
30. Exchange
best practices among the different implementers of this Program.
31. Enter into
cooperation agreements in order to contribute to the implementation of
this Program’s objectives and specific optional activities.
32. Incorporate
into assistance and technical cooperation activities the condition of
migrant and migrant family vulnerability and the elimination of
discrimination without distinction as to race, sex, language, creed,
or any other factor, consistent with each state’s domestic legal
framework and applicable international human rights law.
B.
Implementers other than OAS organs, entities, and agencies
1. OAS MEMBER STATES
Suggest to
OAS member states for possible implementation the following specific
optional activities, among others:
33. Exchange
information on the migration phenomenon, its characteristics,
dimension, statistics, and implications. Improve statistical
information systems and foster the exchange of information and best
practices through the use of information and communication
technologies.
34. Facilitate
access by migrants to public information, in accordance with domestic
legislation.
35. Empower
migrants to make informed decisions by disseminating information on
the legal avenues for migration and on the dangers associated with the
smuggling of migrants and trafficking in persons.
36. Develop an
institutional capacity to manage and deal with migration by training
officials, reviewing legislation, and setting up organized and fair
migration management systems.
37. Consider the
signing and ratification of, or accession to, all universal and
inter-American human rights instruments, and take specific measures at
the national level to strengthen respect for the human rights and
fundamental freedoms of all persons, including those of women,
children, senior citizens, indigenous peoples, migrants, repatriates,
and persons with disabilities, and anyone belonging to any other
vulnerable group, among others.
38. Consider
signing, ratifying, or acceding to the United Nations Convention
against Transnational Organized Crime and its optional Protocols.
39. Review their
laws to ensure that those laws are consistent with their obligations
to respect the human rights of migrants as set forth in international
instruments on human rights and migration–including instruments
relating to migration for employment and the protection of migrant
workers–to which they are party, recognizing the states’ sovereign
right to regulate the entry and stay of foreign nationals in their
respective territories.
40. Review each
state’s migration practices regarding the entry and stay of foreign
nationals to ensure that they are carried out in a manner consistent
with applicable international human rights and refugee law.
41. Train
government officials working in the migration area in migration
legislation, protection of the human rights of migrants and their
families, conditions of vulnerability of migrants and their families,
identification and protection of refugees and potential asylum
seekers, the modus operandi of networks involved in the smuggling of
migrants and trafficking in persons, and victim identification and
assistance.
42. Make efforts
to harmonize migration requirements between interested states of the
Americas and within subregional groups.
43. Conduct
programs to promote authorized migration and migrant worker
agreements.
44. Promote and
implement voluntary repatriation programs as an alternative to
deportation or expulsion.
45. Conduct
information and assistance programs aimed at migrants and their
families who return to their countries of origin.
46. Foster
policies and actions that ensure the application of standards of due
process in migration proceedings.
47. Promote and
facilitate public policies, legislation, and practices aimed at
protecting the rights of migrants and their families under immigration
proceedings, consistent with each state’s domestic legal framework and
applicable international human rights law, including the rights to a
fair trial, protection from arbitrary arrest, due process of law, and
equality before the law.
48. Issuance of
identity documents to migrants by the states of origin at their
consular representations.
49. Promote
consular protection in accordance with the obligations of the states
parties to the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, taking into
account information, notification, communication, and consular
assistance for migrants; and sign and implement cooperation agreements
between the states on this matter, for instance networks of liaison
officials.
50. Offer broad
public information campaigns and basic and secondary education
programs on nondiscrimination and on understanding the contribution
and worth of migrants and their families to the home and host
societies.
51. Cooperate
and exchange information among states regarding migrant smuggling
networks and develop individual and collective strategies in order to
prevent these acts, investigate, prosecute, and punish smugglers, and,
when appropriate, protect and assist migrants.
52. Cooperate
and exchange information among states regarding networks that traffic
in persons and develop individual and collective strategies in order
to prevent these acts, investigate, prosecute, and punish traffickers,
and protect and assist the victims.
53. Provide
suitable mechanisms for reporting and filing complaints made by
migrants and civil society organizations regarding violence and
alleged violations of human rights, without prejudice to their right
to access to applicable protection mechanisms under the inter-American
and universal systems.
54. With respect
to the sending of remittances, take concrete actions to promote the
establishment, as soon as possible, of necessary conditions to achieve
the goal of reducing by at least half the regional average cost of
these transfers, if possible, no later than 2008. Also, adopt as
needed or appropriate, measures such as the promotion of competition
between the providers of these services and the elimination of
regulatory obstacles and other restrictive measures that affect the
cost of these transfers, as well as the use of new technologies, while
maintaining effective financial oversight.
55. Support
voluntary community or individual initiatives on the use of investment
funds and productive projects to promote the general welfare and
development of the communities of origin.
56. Promote
bilateral agreements on the social security benefits of migrants and
their families, so that any social security contributions made by the
state may be claimed in or transferred to the state in which the
migrant worker lives.
57. Promote the
exchange of information and best practices among the different
implementers of this Program.
58. Protect the
physical safety of migrants and take appropriate measures to prevent,
combat, and eradicate violence and other forms of crime against
migrants, such as fraud, extortion, and corruption.
59. Provide
appropriate and effective access by all migrants and their families to
the judicial system so that they may exercise their rights.
60. Provide the
means to preserve the health of every person through sanitary measures
relative to medical care to the extent permitted by public and
community resources, consistent with each state’s constitutional and
domestic legal framework and applicable international human rights
law.
61. Implement
the actions and programs needed to improve effective access by all
migrant children, wherever they may be, to educational systems,
consistent with each state’s constitutional and domestic legal
framework and applicable international human rights law.
62. Implement
the actions and programs needed to improve effective access by all
migrants and their families to education, consistent with each state’s
constitutional and domestic legal framework and applicable
international human rights law.
63. Facilitate
the participation of migrants in the cultural life of the community.
64. Make the
best efforts to secure compliance with labor laws, with a particular
focus on the situation and working conditions of migrant workers, by
building transparency, knowledge, and professionalism, and by sharing
best practices.
65. Protect the
lawful property of all migrants, including cash, real and intellectual
property, bank accounts, and other financial instruments and property,
and combat illicit acts against them.
2.
MULTILATERAL ORGANIZATIONS
Take into account the following activities carried out by multilateral
organizations, in accordance with their mandates and, as funding
permits, with a view to possible cooperation between them and the OAS
member states and/or OAS organs, agencies, and entities:
International
Organization for Migration (IOM):
66. Set up
information, resource, and comprehensive service centers for migrants
to ensure that they receive advice and information on their rights as
well as legal aid, medical care, and assistance in returning to their
countries of origin.
67. Train and
support the work of local nongovernmental organizations so that they
may offer advice and protection to migrants and their families.
68. Conduct
information campaigns for migrants and their families so they may be
aware of their rights and defend them.
69. Conduct
information campaigns designed to empower migrants and their families
so that they may be aware of the obligations deriving from their
presence in transit and destination countries.
70. Promote and
offer public information campaigns for potential migrants on how
networks that traffic in persons operate and the dangers involved in
resorting to them; and offer protection and assistance to the victims,
in conjunction with nongovernmental organizations, multilateral
organizations, and public institutions.
71. Promote and
offer public information campaigns for potential migrants on how
migrant smuggling networks operate and the dangers involved in
resorting to them; and, when a state so requests, offer protection and
assistance to migrants, in conjunction with nongovernmental
organizations, multilateral organizations, and public institutions.
72. Conduct
studies on migration and trafficking in persons that may serve as
working tools for developing policies and raising awareness, with
special emphasis on gender analysis.
73. Establish
centers to provide protection and assistance to victims of trafficking
in persons in transit and receiving countries, so that they may
receive legal advice and medical and psychological care.
74. Support
states in the voluntary return and the reintegration of victims of
trafficking in persons.
75. Offer
training on trafficking in persons to government officials and civil
society organizations.
76. Consider the
possibility of lending support to states in meeting their obligation
to promote the human rights of the families of migrant workers who
remain in the country of origin, paying special attention to the
children whose parents have migrated.
Office of
the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and
Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants:
77. Offer broad
public information campaigns and basic and secondary education
programs on nondiscrimination and on understanding the contribution
and worth of migrants and their families to the home and host
societies.
78. Take part in
specialized workshops, seminars, and conferences to discuss the
relationship between migration and human rights and to protect and
guarantee the human rights of migrants and their families.
United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR):
79. Promote and
offer technical assistance to states so that they may incorporate fair
and efficient asylum processes into legislation on the matter and
implement them in practice, based on international human rights
standards and refugee law, introducing safeguards for the victims of
persecution.
80. Train
government officials working in the field of migration on the
identification and protection of refugees and potential asylum
seekers.
International Labour Organization (ILO):
81. Promote
better understanding and awareness of ILO standards relating to
migration for employment and the protection of migrant workers and
assist interested states in conforming national migrant worker
policies and national law and practice to the principles contained in
these ILO standards.
82. Strengthen
the capacity of authorities, including labor inspection services and
labor tribunals, to secure compliance with labor laws, with a
particular focus on the situation and working conditions of migrant
workers, by building transparency, knowledge and professionalism, and
by sharing best practices.
83. Promote
actions designed to improve labor conditions, with emphasis on health
and safety conditions at work, in particular in the case of the
sectors that employ a high proportion of migrant workers.
All
multilateral organizations mentioned in this Program:
84. Exchange
best practices among the different implementers of this Program.
85. Enter into
cooperation agreements in order to contribute to the development of
the objectives and specific optional activities of this Program.
3. OTHER IMPLEMENTERS
Take into account the following activities developed by migrants as well
as civil society organizations and the IIHR, in accordance with their
mandate, with a view to possible cooperation among them and the OAS
member states that request it, and/or OAS organs, agencies, and
entities:
Migrants
and civil society organizations:
86. Promote and
offer public information campaigns addressed to migrants on how
migrant smuggling networks operate and the dangers involved in
resorting to these networks.
87. Promote and
offer public information campaigns addressed to potential victims on
how networks that traffic in persons operate and the dangers involved
in resorting to these organizations.
88. Promote and
develop transnational networks of migrant organizations to facilitate
communication and develop activities among migrants and their families
in transit and receiving countries and in communities of origin.
89. Promote the
review and updating of national legislation on migration and labor
rights in accordance with applicable international human rights and
migration instruments.
90. Train
community leaders in the home and host communities on the human rights
of migrants and their families.
91. Offer
assistance to migrants deprived of their freedom and monitor their
detention conditions.
92. Provide
legal aid to migrants and their families subject to migration
proceedings, emphasizing respect for the guarantee of due process of
law.
93. Exchange
best practices among the different implementers of this Program.
Inter-American Institute of Human Rights (IIHR):
94. Conduct
joint cooperation programs to strengthen the work of ombudsmen and
facilitate the exchange of information on human rights and migration
legislation.
95. Offer
training to judges, government officials involved in migration
proceedings, public defenders, and prosecutors, on international legal
instruments and on national legislation in force to safeguard the
human rights of migrants, in particular insofar as judicial guarantees
are concerned.
96. Offer
training to government officials responsible for enforcing labor
legislation on nondiscrimination against migrant workers, taking a
gender approach and safeguarding trade union freedom.
97. Offer broad
public information campaigns and basic and secondary education
programs and campaigns on nondiscrimination and on understanding the
contribution and worth of migrants to the home and host societies.
98. Prepare
training materials and train civil society organizations on how they
can conduct migrant-oriented human rights education campaigns and on
the fight against trafficking in persons and the smuggling of migrants
and their families and on the possibilities of authorized migration.
99. Offer
training on guarantees of due process in migration proceedings and on
the use of the inter-American human rights system for organizations
that provide free legal aid to migrants.
100. Include in
training activities components aimed at empowering migrant women and
women left behind in the migrant’s country of origin.
VI. PROGRAM FOLLOW-UP ACTIVITIES
The organs,
agencies, and entities of the OAS will include actions aimed at
implementing the activities listed in this Program in their annual
reports to the General Assembly of the Organization. Furthermore,
member states of the OAS will be invited to report on the specific
optional activities suggested in this Program.
The
Permanent Council shall consider convening, through the Committee on
Juridical and Political Affairs, an annual meeting, to be attended by
the Program implementers, in order to exchange best practices,
information, and new proposals for inclusion in this initiative. The
Program implementers and the states will have the opportunity at this
meeting to present the contributions mentioned in the preceding
paragraph.
In order to
guarantee appropriate Program follow-up, the Permanent Council through
the CAJP will convene, starting in 2006 and prior to the Summits of the
Americas, a meeting of experts to review the progress of the Program and
submit recommendations to the Summits of the Americas. In its work, the
meeting of experts shall consider the contributions submitted by the
organs, agencies, and entities of the OAS and by the member states, as
well as the conclusions of the annual meetings convened by the CAJP.
VII. HUMAN AND FINANCIAL RESOURCES
In addition
to the existing resources in the Regular Fund of the program-budget of
the Organization, a specific voluntary fund, to be administered by the
Summits of the Americas Secretariat, will be established to contribute
to funding the activities assigned to the organs, agencies, and entities
of the OAS in support of this Program. The CAJP
will determine the use of such funds. This notwithstanding, the Program
implementers may allocate and obtain funds to carry out the specific
optional activities.
The
political organ responsible for Program execution will be the CAJP,
which, for this purpose, will receive support from the unit within the
General Secretariat assigned for this purpose.
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