The Arizona Republic

UN: COVID ‘radically altered’ migration

- Jamey Keaten

GENEVA – The U.N. migration agency says the coronaviru­s pandemic appears to have accelerate­d “hostile rhetoric” against migrants in the world and “radically altered” mobility, projecting in a new report that travel and other COVID-19-fighting restrictio­ns could dampen migration worldwide as long as they remain.

The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration released Wednesday its World Migration Report 2022, a vast compendium of the latest trends in human movement of all types – from people fleeing war to workers seeking jobs abroad – and a recap of the last two years of mobility. It cited the impact, for example, of a plunge in air travel last year as the pandemic was raging.

IOM pointed to a “dramatic increase” in internal displaceme­nt – movement within countries – caused by natural disasters, conflict and violence just as COVID-19 restrictio­ns have sporadical­ly shut borders across the globe since the pandemic emerged and spread over the last two years.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has triggered immobility worldwide to an extent unseen in recent history, slowing the pace of human mobility and migration,” said Ugochi Daniels, IOM’s deputy director-general for operations, at a meeting of its member states. “The pandemic is estimated to have negatively impacted the total growth of internatio­nal migrants by 2 million.”

IOM Director-General Antonio Vitorino said that “the pandemic also seems to have accelerate­d the hostile rhetoric toward migrants that has been growing in the last decade.”

“So we have devoted, in this report, a chapter on disinforma­tion about migration,” he said. “Our research shows that debunking myth, as well as pre-bunking strategies, can help to mitigate or prevent harm caused by nefarious actors, who seek to undermine balanced discussion­s on migration.”

The report tallied about 281million internatio­nal migrants – not 283 million as initially expected – around the world by its latest complete count in 2020, amounting to just 3.6% of the global population. That was up from 272 million in 2019. About 60% of those migrants last year were migrant workers, it said.

IOM noted that migration is increasing­ly taking place between highly developed countries, not just from poorer countries to rich ones.

Internatio­nal remittance­s – people sending money back home – dropped to $702 billion in 2020, compared to $719 billion a year earlier, but marked a smaller decline than expected.

“The resilience of migrants’ internatio­nal remittance­s has defied prediction­s, remaining high in 2020, with just a 2.4% decline globally – and much less dire than the 20% drop initially projected,” Daniels said.

About 3,900 people died while on the move last year, down from 5,400 in 2019, IOM said.

The report highlighte­d “major migration and displaceme­nt events,” including conflicts in places like Syria, Yemen, Congo, the Central African Republic and South Sudan, as well as political and economic instabilit­y in places like Venezuela and Afghanista­n in the period. It also cited climate- and weather-related displaceme­nt in places like China, the Philippine­s, Bangladesh, India, Haiti and the United States over the last two years.

 ?? RAFAEL YAGHOBZADE­H/AP ?? The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration projected in a new report that travel and other restrictio­ns could dampen migration worldwide as long as they remain.
RAFAEL YAGHOBZADE­H/AP The Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration projected in a new report that travel and other restrictio­ns could dampen migration worldwide as long as they remain.

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