The Borneo Post

No need to mistreat migrants for border control – Red Cross

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NEW YORK: Migrants face increasing barriers to accessing basic services and aid, the world’s largest humanitari­an network warned Tuesday, urging government­s to ease those restrictio­ns as Europe and America battle migration crises.

“There is no need to mistreat people to have proper border control,” said Francesco Rocca, president of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies ( IFRC) in New York.

“Preventing access to adequate food, basic health care, and legal advice about their rights is completely unacceptab­le. Everyone has the right to be treated with dignity and respect,” he added.

An IFRC report, released Tuesday, said migrants around the world face increasing barriers to essential services such as health care, shelter, food and legal help, which are critical to their survival and basic dignity.

Fear of harassment, arrest or deportatio­n are factors that prevent them from accessing desperatel­y needed support, as well as costs, linguistic barriers, and lack of knowledge about their rights.

But preventive health services can make economic sense, the report said, citing studies in Germany and Greece that found that giving migrants prenatal care can generate savings of up to 48 per cent compared to emergency medical costs.

In northern France, nearly two thirds of refugees and migrants treated by one charity had health conditions related specifical­ly to their poor and cramped living conditions, the report also said.

IFRC said some government­s were enacting laws that effectivel­y criminaliz­e humanitari­an assistance. The report did not list the countries doing so.

“This criminalis­ation of compassion is extremely worrying, and could undermine more than a century of humanitari­an standards and norms,” said Rocca.

“The idea that the prospect of basic assistance or search and rescue somehow acts as a pull factor for migration is simply not true. People decide to move

This criminalis­ation of compassion is extremely worrying, and could undermine more than a century of humanitari­an standards and norms. Francesco Rocca, president of Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC)

for reasons that are much more profound than this.”

IFRC wants domestic laws, policies and practices to comply with internatio­nal law, and for migrants to be assisted and protected.

It wants to ensure that charities can provide services such as first aid and shelter to migrants irrespecti­ve of status and without fear of arrest.

It wants to end rules that require health care providers and aid agencies to report people to the authoritie­s, and for government­s to address factors that prevent migrants from accessing essential health services.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? Taking part a “solidarity” march in support of migrants in Calais. Several hundred people took part in the march, organised by French charity L’Auberge des migrants and supported by numerous NGOs.
— AFP photos Taking part a “solidarity” march in support of migrants in Calais. Several hundred people took part in the march, organised by French charity L’Auberge des migrants and supported by numerous NGOs.
 ??  ?? A female migrant with a child sits waiting in the immigratio­n hall at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport.
A female migrant with a child sits waiting in the immigratio­n hall at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport.
 ??  ?? A migrant waves as he and others leave the immigratio­n hall at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport.
A migrant waves as he and others leave the immigratio­n hall at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport.
 ??  ?? Police officers walk next to migrants in Calais. Several hundred people took part in a “solidarity” march in support of migrants in Calais, organised by French charity L’Auberge des migrants.
Police officers walk next to migrants in Calais. Several hundred people took part in a “solidarity” march in support of migrants in Calais, organised by French charity L’Auberge des migrants.

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