Chattanooga Times Free Press

UN seeks $7.9B to help migrants, host communitie­s

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GENEVA — The U.N.’s migration agency is launching its first “global appeal,” seeking $7.9 billion to help people on the move and ensure smoother pathways to migration, at a time when the fallout from climate change, conflict and both economic distress and opportunit­ies has caused millions to leave their homes.

The annual appeal from the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration puts the Geneva-based agency more in the hunt for aid funds, along with other U.N. agencies and humanitari­an groups, at a time when many top donor government­s face tight budgets or are reducing aid outlays.

The U.N. humanitari­an aid chief, Martin Griffiths, last month decried a “severe and ominous funding crisis” and said the overall $57 billion appeal from his U.N. Office for the Coordinati­on of Humanitari­an Affairs last year was only about onethird funded, making it the worst funding shortfall in years. His agency is seeking $46 billion this year.

IOM says it hopes funding for its appeal will come from individual and private-sector donors in addition to government­s.

It’s part of a five-year strategic plan under IOM’s new director-general, Amy Pope, and would benefit 140 million people — both migrants and the communitie­s that take them in.

“Irregular and forced migration have reached unpreceden­ted levels and the challenges we face are increasing­ly complex,” Pope said. “The evidence is overwhelmi­ng that migration, when well-managed, is a major contributo­r to global prosperity and progress.”

Speaking to reporters in Geneva on Monday, she said agencies like hers should be planning for future migration rather than simply reacting to waves of migration when they happen.

“The evidence shows us that only being reactive means that more people are dying and being exploited as they migrate. This appeal will allow us to save more lives and work together more responsibl­y,” she said.

The agency plays up the promise of migration — reporting that some 281 million internatio­nal migrants, ranging from manual laborers to whitecolla­r job-holders, generate nearly 10% of global economic output.

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