international Migrant Day: 272 million migrants worldwide in 2019
7KH QXPEHU RI LQWHUQDWLRQDO PLJUDQWV ZRUOGZLGH LQ VDZ D MXPS RI RI PLO OLRQ VLQFH WKH EHJLQQLQJ RI GHFDGH The United Nations has marked International Migrants Day with an array of events and ceremonies aiming to highlight the contributions made and challenges faced by migrants and refugees. Wednesday’s commemoration - the 19th successive year the UN has celebrated the international day on December 18 - took place as the number of migrants and refugees worldwide continues to rise. The global migrant and refugee population reached an estimated 272 million this year, an increase of 51 million since the beginning of the decade, according to the UN. “Throughout human history, migration has been a courageous expression of the individual’s will to overcome adversity and to live a better life,” UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in a statement. “Today, globalisation, together with advances in communications and transportation, has greatly increased the number of people, who have the desire and the capacity to move to other places,” he added, while also calling for the “equal protection of all their human rights”. The UN Migration Agency (IOM) defines a “migrant as any person who is moving or has moved across an international border or within a State away from his/her habitual place of residence”. Migrants, according to the IOM, are classified as such “regardless of the person’s legal status; whether the movement is voluntary or involuntary; what the causes for the movement are; or what the length of the stay is”.Women make up 48 percent of the total number of migrants and refugees worldwide, according to the UN, while one out of every seven is younger than 20. ‘ They risk a great deal’ To mark Wednesday’s event, the UN rolled out the #WeTogether hashtag on the world body’s social media channels in order to draw attention to testimonials of migrants and refugees in different parts of the world and the daily predicaments they face. Depression, loneliness, unemployment and fear of deportation are just a few of the many challenges such individuals often confront.