Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UN urges government­s to steer migration away from buckling megacities

- By Michael Taylor

KUALA LUMPUR, (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - G overnments ought to make smaller cities more attractive to their citizens seeking better opportunit­ies, the United Nations said on Friday, as that would reduce demands on overcrowde­d megacities.

More public sector jobs should go to secondary cities, and tax breaks could encourage the private sector to play its part, said Montira Horayangur­a Unakul, programme officer for the United Nations' cultural agency UNESCO.

“Migrants are attracted to beyond just economic aspects of target destinatio­ns - they're looking at quality of life, social well- being, integratio­n into places,” she said.

Job training, affordable housing and schools are important, as is greater investment in public transport, Unakul told the Thomson Reuters Foundation on the sidelines of the World Urban Forum, the world's biggest conference on urban issues.

Helping smaller cities also benefits countries by allowing migrants to stay in touch with family in rural areas, and by spreading economic growth more evenly, Unakul said.

About 4 billion of the world's 7.4 billion people live in urban areas, the World Bank says. By 2045 it expects that to rise to 6 billion.

Regions such as Asia-Pacific are urbanising fast. More than half of its population now lives in urban areas, the U.N. says - that will climb to twothirds by 2050.

But inequality is rampant in numerous Asia-Pacific cities, and many have poor infrastruc­ture.

About 1.5 billion people in AsiaPacifi­c lack basic sanitation services, for instance, while 250 million people live in slums, according to the Asian Developmen­t Bank and the World Bank.

Migrants - particular­ly those who speak a different language or who are from other ethnic groups - can face discrimina­tion causing them to miss out on economic opportunit­ies, said Ashish Kumar, a project officer at UNESCO.

Women migrants often lack access to healthcare services, particular­ly contracept­ion, and steer clear of clinics due to privacy fears, said Kumar, who has researched internal migration in Southeast Asia.

Kumar said internal migrants, when compared to migrants who cross borders, are typically overlooked by politician­s. On top of that, internal migrants are often unpopular.

“When you have infrastruc­ture which is breaking down, your roads are crowded ... the tendency often is to blame migrants to urban centres for many of the problems which are just inherent in being a city,” Kumar told delegates.

“Migrants are attracted to beyond just economic aspects of target destinatio­ns - they're looking at quality of life, social well-being, integratio­n into places,”

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