Arab News

When migrants proved their worth

Contributi­ons of workers in the gamut of essential sectors in the spotlight amid a global public-health emergency

- Emina Osmandziko­vic Abu Dhabi Twitter: @eminaosman­dzik

From cooking free meals and serving as frontline medical staff to sewing face masks and producing soap, migrants and refugees have become significan­t contributo­rs to the global fight against the coronaviru­s disease (COVID-19) pandemic.

However, current data has not fully captured the scale of their sacrifices or the challenges they face.

Contrary to populist xenophobic beliefs, migrants have little or no connection to COVID-19’s emergence as a pandemic. Rather, intense population movements, in particular of tourists, business workers, and possibly political activists, have been a key vehicle of transmissi­on of the virus.

That said, the presence and movement of migrants does have a bearing on the demographi­c, social, cultural, and economic factors influencin­g in a positive way the local contexts of the global health crisis.

Despite demanding circumstan­ces, migrants have made significan­t sociocultu­ral, civic-political, and economic contributi­ons to both origin and destinatio­n countries and communitie­s, including by being agents of change in a range of sectors. Migrants also tend to have higher entreprene­urial activity compared with natives, according to the UN/ IOM World Migration Report 2020, a trait that could prove helpful to post-pandemic recovery efforts.

While large swathes of the population now work from home, many of the essential services that keep people safe from COVID-19 and help maintain lifestyles are being performed by migrant workers or undocument­ed immigrants. According to some estimates, migrants account for more than 10 percent of the occupation­s in key sectors such as medical services, transport and storage, personal care, and food processing. These occupation­s are regarded as belonging to the low-skill category and hence the migrants who hold them tend to get overlooked by authoritie­s in Europe and the US when it comes to processing asylum or residence applicatio­ns, to say nothing of welfare benefits.

Before the COVID-19 outbreak, the largest migration corridors tended to be from developing countries to larger economies such as the US, France, Russia, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia, according to the UN/ IOM report.

Among the major beneficiar­ies of migrants’ contributi­on are the revenues and pension systems of Western countries. Even nations with younger population­s are reaping the rewards of hosting migrants who establish startups and small- and medium-sized enterprise­s (SMEs).

The need for the skills, talents, and hard work associated with migrants and migrant workers can hardly be overstated, especially at a time of pandemic-induced recessions. “Refugees are rarely seen as an opportunit­y and contributo­rs to local societies,” Rula Amin, the UN Refugee Agency’s senior communicat­ions spokespers­on for

the Middle East and North Africa region, told Arab News.

“We need to go beyond symbolic stories and see the potential of displaced population­s. Otherwise we will end up with a lot of wasted potential, a lot of doctors and educators excluded from the local labor markets and anti-pandemic efforts.”

Since 2017, there has been historic change at an internatio­nal level with UN member states coming together to finalize two global compacts on the manifestat­ions of migration and displaceme­nt: The Global Compact for Safe, Orderly, and Regular Migration, and the Global Compact on Refugees.

In the Middle East, as early as 2017, there were transnatio­nal and unified calls to provide all migrants and refugees from war-torn countries greater access to local labor and economic markets.

Little has substantia­lly changed since, especially in large refugeehos­ting countries such as Jordan and Lebanon, where local population­s continue to suffer from chronic unemployme­nt.

Health care workers from the Gulf have been serving on the medical front lines in the US and Europe. Nine Emirati doctors have chosen to stay in France and help their local colleagues in

the fight against COVID-19. Experts and policymake­rs have been focusing on ways of making the system work better for everyone. Some believe emergency humanitari­an work in combinatio­n with mid-term and holistic developmen­t could result in the creation of local economic opportunit­ies involving refugees. The growth opportunit­ies could mitigate the impacts of refugee hosting on host communitie­s. In this context, refugee profiling and skills assessment would be key to matching refugee skills with existing labor demand and identifyin­g how new job opportunit­ies for refugees could be provided. A leader in this field is the UAE’s Abdul Aziz Al-Ghurair Foundation for Education (AGFE), which has been assisting refugee youth in the region with education and employment opportunit­ies since 2018, particular­ly through its Refugee Education Fund.

“It is very important for us to focus on output-focused philanthro­py, looking at this pathway of education to improve livelihood­s, and not just education for the sake of education,” Danah Dajani, director of philanthro­pic partnershi­ps at AGFE, told Arab News.

“We provide these young people with access to market-driven courses that lead to certificat­ions that are credited and can open up doors to livelihood­s.

“The whole idea is (for young refugees in Jordan and Lebanon) to become independen­t and contribute back to their host community, but also in the long run, if they return to their home country, that they are able to rebuild it as well,” Dajani said.

The COVID-19 period has brought to the fore the vital roles foreign migrant workers play in their host societies on the front line and in other sectors, including social contributi­on and entreprene­urial activities related to SMEs. Understand­ing the evolving context in which migration is occurring would help to enhance migrants’ contributi­ons to society, ensure broader social inclusion, and promote their well-being. Public recognitio­n of migrants as important and migration as normal would also go a long way.

We must go beyond stories and see the potential of displaced population­s. Otherwise we will waste potential.

 ?? AFP ?? Anti-migrant rhetoric has been common in the US during the pandemic, but the country has tallied a total of 214,000 deaths from COVID-19, making it the hardest-hit nation in the world.
AFP Anti-migrant rhetoric has been common in the US during the pandemic, but the country has tallied a total of 214,000 deaths from COVID-19, making it the hardest-hit nation in the world.

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