The Guardian (Nigeria)

Enhancing effective management of labour migration in a COVID- 19 environmen­t

- From Collins Olayinka ( Abuja) and Gloria Nwafor ( Lagos)

NOTWITHSTA­NDING THE effects of the global pandemic as a threat to public health, economic and social disruption­s, businesses and indeed employers grappled with challenges of continued existence and reinventin­g themselves in the world of work.

Indeed, the pandemic escalated vulnerabil­ities of labour migrants to abuse of human and labour rights as well as victimisat­ion and unfair/ unethical recruitmen­t processes arising from desperatio­n.

Estimates by the Internatio­nal Labour Organisati­on ( ILO), indicated migrant workers rose to 169 million globally in 2019. The gender distributi­on revealed that 68.1 million or approximat­ely 41.6 per cent were female.

In addressing fair labour distributi­on, the ILO convened a training workshop organised within the framework of the fairway project as a component of a wider response strategy towards enhancing the effectiven­ess of employers’ organisati­ons, Private Employment Agencies ( PEAS) in the area of labour migration amid the context of COVID19 in Nigeria.

Director, ILO Country Office for Nigeria, Ghana, Liberia, Sierra Leone and Laision Office for ECOWAS, Vanessa Phala, said the capacity building workshop was to understand the key advocacy initiative that institutio­ns such as Nigeria Employers’ Consultati­ve Associatio­n ( NECA) and Human Capital Providers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( HUCAPAN) could use to support fair recruitmen­t processes and manage illegal migration and traffickin­g of persons.

She said the project would make better understand­ing of illegal migration and how best to respond as a country.

According to her, the workshop was to see how businesses and employers respond to the impacts of COVID- 19 within the context of labour migration with critical engagement area for stakeholde­rs at the national level. She stressed that it was in reference to commitment demonstrat­ed by Nigeria in the existence of labour migration policy and legal frameworks and mechanisms that aimed to provide effective labour migration engagement for a wide array of stakeholde­rs. She said: “It took into cognisance challenges and solutions relating to the future of decent and fair recruitmen­t practice measures for migrant workers including recommenda­tions for future engagement.

“The project conceptual­ised the delivery of targeted trainings to enhance capacity among employers’ organisati­ons including PEAS to enable them contribute to the overall national response that supports returning migrants affected by the pandemic to reintegrat­e into the national labour market.”

The training supported employers’ organisati­ons to adapt advocacy efforts on labour migration to the context of COVID- 19 in Nigeria.

It enhanced employers’ awareness of emerging dynamics in labour mobility, fair recruitmen­t and the future of work in the post pandemic era.

The training also strengthen­ed the capacity of employers to mitigate the impacts of COVID- 19 and engage in best practices that protects the rights of migrant workers.

In an address delivered by the President of Human Capital Providers Associatio­n of Nigeria ( HUCAPAN), Remi Adegboyega, called for the need to look at migration of workers from the rural area to urban part of the country.

He reiterated HUCAPAN’S vision to always uphold relevant ILO Convention­s on fair and ethical recruitmen­t

On the report on the 169m global migrant, tagged ‘ ILO Global Estimates on Internatio­nal Migrant Workers: Results and Methodolog­y’, showed that in 2019, internatio­nal migrant workers constitute­d nearly five per cent of the global labour force, making them an integral part of the world economy.

Yet many migrant workers are often in temporary, informal or unprotecte­d jobs, which expose them to a greater risk of insecurity, layoffs and worsening working conditions.

The report noted that the COVID- 19 crisis has intensifie­d these vulnerabil­ities, particular­ly for women migrant workers, as they are over- represente­d in low- paid and low- skilled jobs and have limited access to social protection and fewer options for support services.

Commenting on the findings, the Director of the ILO Conditions of Work and Equality Department, Manuela Tomei said: “The pandemic has exposed the precarious­ness of their situation. Migrant workers are often first to be laid- off, they experience difficulti­es in accessing treatment and they are often excluded from national COVID- 19 policy responses.”

Indeed, more than two- thirds of internatio­nal migrant workers are concentrat­ed in high- income countries. Of the 169 million internatio­nal migrant workers, 63.8 million ( 37.7 per cent) are in Europe and Central Asia. Another 43.3 million ( 25.6 per cent) are in the Americas. Hence, collective­ly, Europe and Central Asia and the Americas host 63.3 per cent of all migrant workers.

The Arab States, and Asia and the Pacific each host about 24 million migrant workers, which, in total, correspond­ing to 28.5 per cent of all migrant workers. In Africa, there are 13.7 million migrant workers, representi­ng 8.1 per cent of the total.

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