Baltimore Sun

U.S. not among 164 nations to back migration proposal

U.N. members will meet next week to endorse accord

- By Amira El Masaiti and Jamey Keaten

MARRAKECH, Morocco — Defying fierce opposition from the U.S. and a few other nations, nearly 85 percent of U.N. member states agreed Monday on a sweeping yet non-binding accord to ensure safe, orderly and humane migration.

The debate over the Global Compact for Migration, the first of its kind, has proven to be a pivotal test of the U.N.-led effort to crack down on the often dangerous and illegal movements across borders that have turned people smuggling into a worldwide industry, and give people seeking economic opportunit­y a chance.

“Unregulate­d migration bears a terrible human cost: a cost in lives lost on perilous journeys across deserts, oceans and rivers; and a cost in lives ruined at the hands of smugglers, unscrupulo­us employers and other predators,” U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres told a migration conference in Marrakech, Morocco.

“More than 60,000 migrants have died on the move since the year 2000,” he said. “This is a source of collective shame.”

Migration affects hundreds of millions of people across the globe — farmers coming off the land or forced by climate change to head to cities, families fleeing war or persecutio­n at home, impoverish­ed workers from the developing world looking for jobs in rich countries.

It can also involve highskille­d workers from developed nations looking for opportunit­ies beyond their homelands.

Defenders say migration greases the wheels of the world economy by diversifyi­ng and rejuvenati­ng workforce in aging rich countries and providing a needed source of cash to poorer countries through remittance­s sent home by migrants.

Opponents often fear that an influx of migrants can dilute their countries' character, import poverty or crime, reduce wages and take jobs from tax-paying citizens.

A total of 164 countries among the 193 U.N. members approved the agreement by acclamatio­n Monday. The U.N. General Assembly will meet Dec. 19 to endorse it.

At the two-day conference, U.N. leaders were hoping to lure in holdouts from mostly Western nations who were not signing: Australia, Austria, the Czech Republic, the Dominican Republic, Hungary, Latvia, Poland and Slovakia along with the United States, which under President Donald Trump did not participat­e in drafting the accord.

Louise Arbour of Canada, a former U.N. human rights chief, said the issue also has been tied up in parliament­ary debates in Belgium, Bulgaria, Estonia, Italy, Israel, Slovenia and Switzerlan­d — although some of them did participat­e in creating the accord, which has since been ensnared by tough political headwinds.

The conference is the capstone of efforts set in motion two years ago when all 193 U.N. member states, including the U.S. under President Barack Obama, adopted a declaratio­n saying that no country can manage internatio­nal migration on its own and agreed to work on a global compact.

The U.N.’s Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration defines migrants as anyone working or living far from home. It says every refugee — people who flee persecutio­n in places like Myanmar or Syria — is a migrant.

The Trump administra­tion, which is demanding a wall on the Mexican border and has sent U.S. military troops to the border to block a migrant caravan that made its way to the U. S. t hrough Central America, pulled out of the accord a year ago.

It claimed that parts of the compact clashed with “U.S. immigratio­n and refugee policies.”

Some European Union countries now have antimigran­t populist government­s that have reacted strongly after more than 1 million migrants poured into Europe in 2015.

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