1. Introduction
1. Climate change, environmental degradation and migration
are among the key topics that dominate the international and national
political arena today. The complex interdependence between these
phenomena and the potential consequences of the failure to tackle
them in time are beginning to attract increasing public and scientific
attention. Yet manifested political commitments to the pursuit of
sustainable development, environmental protection and the respect,
protection and fulfilment of human rights - and even more so to
their inter-linkages – are often limited by narrow geopolitical
interests when action becomes necessary.
2. It is estimated that 60,000 deaths from climate-related natural
disasters occur every year
and that 30 million
people worldwide are being displaced because of serious degradation
of environmental conditions, natural disasters and depletion of
natural resources. This figure is expected to soar by the middle
of this century. While there are no authoritative global figures
on the number of people who will move for environmental reasons
in the future, the Stern Review provides an estimate of 150-200
million becoming permanently displaced due to the effects of climate
change by the year 2050
. However,
the international community is largely ignoring the issue that may
potentially become one of the greatest global demographic and humanitarian
challenges for the 21st century.
3. Throughout human history, migration has been a coping strategy
for people facing environmental changes
.
What is different today is the role of human activity in contributing
to this change, the effects of climate change on the climate itself
and on the ecosystems upon which it depends, the scale of its impacts
and the urgency of the challenges the environment and migration
nexus poses, and the speed.
4. Already in the 90s, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change (IPCC) noted that the greatest single impact of climate change
might be on human migration. Successive reports of the IPCC and
other publications addressing the impacts of climate change have
spurred a general recognition of the fact that gradual or sudden
environmentally induced migration will dramatically increase over
the next decade, posing major challenges for human security, peace
and social and economic development on an international scale
. Indeed,
the Asian Tsunami in December 2004 alone displaced more than 2 million
people, many of whom remain in camps. Hurricane Katrina in August
2005 displaced 1.5 million persons, some 300,000 of whom are expected
never to return to their homes. The very recent disasters in Burma
and China have displaced another estimated 7 million persons temporarily
. In fact, today more people
flee due to environmental problems than because of war.
5. Despite the huge number of people already affected and even
greater numbers potentially involved in the future, there is no
international consensus about how to define the environment-migration
phenomenon. Various labels are invariably used, including “environmental
migrants”, “environmental refugees”, “climate migrants”, “environmentally
forced migrants”, “environmentally induced migrants”, etc. There
is no single organisation either that focuses explicitly on the
problems of people compelled to leave their natural habitat because
of environmental degradation. Nor is there any agreed policy; and
the legal and normative frameworks are deficient, leaving several
categories of people seeking safe and sustainable existence without
protection. This contributes to the difficulty, on the one hand,
of measuring the number of persons moving as a result of environmental
degradation and, on the other, their legal protection. Thus many
environmental migrants fall through the cracks of international
refugee and immigration law and policy, often being dismissed as
migrant workers or irregular migrants in the absence of proper legal
mechanisms to protect them.
6. The goal of the present report is to contribute to the global
debate on environmental change and migration. It aspires to help
pan-European and European national policy-makers to understand the
nature of the challenge and the urgency needed to deal with the
complex relationship between climate change, environmental degradation,
human security and various forms of human mobility. It sheds light
on the current universal policy-making context and how organisations
dealing with human mobility in its many forms approach environmental
change. The paper also looks at the existing international legal
and normative frameworks for the protection of persons affected
by environmental degradation as well as the gaps hindering full-scale protection
of those who decide upon their own free will or are forced to move
either internally or across international borders. Finally, your
rapporteur proposes some short- and long-term solutions that the
Council of Europe could offer within its own mandate to fill the
existing gaps.
7. The information presented in this report draws from the work
carried out on the subject matter by various international humanitarian
and development organisations as well as from the discussions of
a hearing organised on the issue by the Committee on Migration,
Refugees and Population in Paris on 20 May 2008. Your rapporteur
extends her particular gratitude to many useful comments and suggestions
she received, inter alia,
from the Representative of the UN Secretary General on the Human
Rights of Internally Displaced Persons, the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the United Nations Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the Norwegian Refugee Council
(NRC).
8. Finally, because of the absence of internationally agreed-upon
terminology, your rapporteur has chosen to use the recently coined
term “environmentally induced migration”, which she regards as the
most comprehensive and inclusive term for defining the global phenomenon,
reflecting best the Council of Europe human rights approach to this
issue. This term refers to migration of all persons for whom the
environmental factor is the major drive for migration. It also supports
your rapporteur’s conviction that there is a need for the status
and rights of all environmental migrants to be properly determined
in international law.
2. Nature of the issue
2.1. Main causes and effects of
environmentally induced migration
9. The causes of environmental deterioration or devastation
forcing persons to move from their natural habitat are many and
varied. They are due to events that may, or may not, be linked to
global warming, the incidence of which may be episodic or cyclical,
or which manifest themselves over a long period.
10. Climate change related impact could be divided into two distinct
drivers of migration:
- long-term
climate processes (sea-level rise, salinisation of agricultural
land, desertification, soil erosion, water scarcity) and
- short-term extreme climate events and extreme weather
events (flooding, hurricanes, storms, etc).
11. The world has been losing 60,000 square kilometres of productive
cropland each year to desertification processes and 1% of all irrigated
lands to water logging and salinisation.
The International Federation of the Red
Cross and Red Crescent Societies estimates that since 1996, the
average number of people affected annually by natural disasters
has totalled about 210 million.
12. The number and scale of natural disasters have increased markedly:
their recorded number has doubled from some 200 to over 400 over
the last two decades. 9 out of every 10 disasters are today climate
related
. These are often
human-induced, emanating from deforestation and salinisation of
agricultural land, or more generally from deforestation, environmental
degradation or simply demographic pressures.
13. Projects such as dams, irrigation canals, and urban construction
also force vast populations to resettle. Dam projects in India,
for instance, have displaced an estimated 33 million. Toxic contamination
(Bhopal 1984) and nuclear disasters (Chernobyl 1986) have also contributed
to massive displacement of people.
14. Non-climate drivers, such as state mismanagement and bad government
policy, population growth, over-exploitation of natural resources
and community-level resilience to natural disaster, also contribute
to the degree of vulnerability people experience. Failed states
and repressive regimes which hold their own population hostage,
such as North Korea, Burma, Zimbabwe or Somalia are among the biggest
producers of environmental migrants.
15. An additional responsibility for inducing environmental migration
lies on the western world and its trade policies in terms of agricultural
export subsidies and import restrictions, which are undermining
the livelihood of small hold farmers in marginalised regions. Also,
the European and American agribusinesses and their policies, such
as the patenting of genetically modified seeds, are destroying local
livelihoods without providing sustainable local returns.
16. Often, these are combined effects and one may lead to another.
Both prevention and mitigation of climate change need to take into
account and address such coincident causes.
17. Decisions to migrate are very complex and depend on many factors.
Therefore isolating environmental and especially climate-change
related forces from other reasons for migration is difficult both
in theory and in practice. Nevertheless, migration provoked by environmental
change can be differentiated according to its major causes and duration.
Recently, the United Nations Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC)
Informal Group on Migration, Displacement
and Climate Change has offered a classification of four categories
of climate change impacts
:
- hydro-meteorological disasters
(flooding, hurricanes/typhoons/cyclones, mudslides, etc.)
- environmental degradation and slow onset extreme hazard
events (e.g. reduction of water availability, desertification, recurrent
flooding, salinisation of coastal zones, etc.);
- significant permanent losses in state territory as a result
of sea level rise etc. (e.g. the case of “sinking” small island
states); and
- armed conflict over shrinking natural resources (e.g.
water, food) owing to climate change.
18. The effects of climate change on peoples’ lives may not be
experienced uniformly. It is well known that the burden of providing
for climate migrants will be borne by the poorest countries that
are heavily dependent on agriculture, lacking resources and possibilities
to prevent further environmental crisis.
19. At present, the great majority of environmental migrants originate
in rural areas of least developed countries. This trend is expected
to shift slightly in coming years, as densely populated coastal
zones become increasingly affected by sea-level rise and more frequent
storms, and mountainous areas are affected by heavy rains and subsequent
floods and landslides
.
20. Most environmental migrants move and settle in urban centres
within their home countries, with smaller proportion migrating to
neighbouring countries. An even smaller fraction of people migrate
long distances to developed countries, contributing to the “brain
drain” phenomenon of skilled migrants. The burden thus falls overwhelmingly
on least developed countries
.
21. It is possible that certain low-lying Small Island Developing
States (Tuvalu, Kiribati) may disappear altogether, raising difficult
questions of statelessness. Other particularly vulnerable areas
are the Sahel belt, the Bay of Bengal, dry land South and Central
America, and dry land regions in Central Asia. Already today, in Sub-Saharan
Africa alone, more than 10 million people have been obliged to migrate
in search of food and water. More than 90% of all deaths from natural
disasters occur in the developing world, notably in Sub-Saharan
Africa, the Indian Subcontinent, China, Mexico and Central America.
22. That being said, Europe is not immune to climate change and
environmentally induced migration either. It is already feeling
the increasing pressure from victims of deteriorating climate conditions
in North Africa. In addition, the coming decades are likely to see
higher flood risk in Europe and greater economic damage. Between
1998 and 2002, Europe suffered about 100 damaging floods, which
affected 1.5 percent of its population, causing 700 fatalities,
half a million displaced persons and EUR 25 billion in insured economic losses
. Sea level
rise in the long term will cause considerable displacement of coastal
populations, the Netherlands and Denmark being the countries most
in danger.
2.2. Consequences of environmentally
induced migration
23. Not all consequences of environmentally induced migration
are negative. Leaving environmentally degraded and agriculturally
unsustainable regions can be seen as a legitimate coping strategy
for affected populations. In addition, migration could potentially
help slow the process of environmental degradation and allow those
who remain in affected communities to adjust their livelihood strategies
by changing their agricultural practices or, for instance shifting
to non-agricultural activities. Remittances, if channelled into schemes
to make local livelihoods more sustainable, might help to reduce
environmental degradation caused by human activity. Temporary or
circular migration can also bring and develop skills needed to reduce
negative impacts of human activity on vulnerable environments and
to improve environmental protection in areas of origin
.
24. The main impacts of environmentally induced migration, however,
are overwhelmingly negative. These include escalating humanitarian
crises, rapid urbanisation and associated slum growth, and stalled development.
In the absence of successful corrective action, the future for many
developing countries is likely to be a very difficult combination
of widespread land degradation, food insecurity, unmanageable and impoverished
mega-cities and large-scale migration
.
25. Proactive intervention by the international community is therefore
essential. Adequate measures for prevention, adaptation and mitigation
need to be taken in order for the countries to reduce their vulnerability
to the impacts of environmental disasters and manage the evolution
of environmental processes. For instance, orderly return migration
to areas of origin after conflict or disaster-induced displacement
can reduce the impact on the environment and, if coupled with sound
ecological restoration/reconstruction and rehabilitation, could have
a net environmental benefit
.
2.3. Vulnerable groups
26. Different people in a community are affected in different
ways: gender, age, socio-economic status all affect environmentally
induced migration. The most vulnerable groups such as women, children,
the elderly, persons with disabilities and indigenous peoples will
be affected the worst because of their low adaptive capacities.
27. In the face of gradual environmental degradation process those
who are able to move – those with money, social networks, and alternative
livelihoods – will tend to migrate independently. The vulnerable
poor, those with no capacity to move, the very young and the elderly
may be left behind initially, and forced to resettle later.
28. By the same token, small-scale farmers in Africa and Asia,
as well as indigenous peoples in every continent and the Roma population
in Europe – those who do not have access to safe drinking water, sanitation,
healthcare and social security – will suffer the consequences of
climate change earlier and disproportionately
.
29. Gender and demographic structure also play a role in environmentally
induced migration patterns. Women are likely to be more severely
affected than men by climate change. The traditional female roles
in many societies – such as collecting water - are largely dependent
on weather and climatic conditions. In many parts of the world,
especially the poorest, women are overrepresented in agriculture,
a sector that will be hardest hit by climate change.
30. On the other hand, studies show that when rural families attempt
to address environmental stress by having a member of family migrate
to the city to earn an income and thus shift direct reliance on
climate-dependent natural resources, the effect on women and gender
dynamics is complex. Women left behind by male migrants may experience
more autonomy and acquire stronger decision-making power as
de facto household heads. Male out-migration
can also enhance the economic situation of families when they send more
resources back home. At the same time, male out-migration can also
exacerbate the poverty of rural women. However, when faced with
environmental disasters and a diminishing resource base, women may seek
to migrate as well, usually to urban centres. While lone women migrants
will face similar challenges to their male counterparts in finding
employment, affordable housing, and accessing social services, they
are likely to face more difficulties due to gender-based discrimination
.
31. It is difficult to predict how sending and receiving communities
will adapt to climate change and environmentally induced migration,
and the resulting repercussions on gender dynamics; it is essential nonetheless
to recognise that climate change will have gender specific impacts,
and to mainstream a gender perspective into climate change induced
migrations discussions from the outset
.
2.4. The two-way process: impact
of climate change on migration and of migration on the environment
32. Environmental migration is a two-way process: on
the one hand, gradual environmental changes as well as environmental
disasters can lead to both internal and cross-border movements of
people; on the other, migration can directly affect environmental
conditions in areas of origin and destination, particularly when
large concentrations of people (in some cases, with even larger
numbers of livestock) are forced to seek refuge in ecologically
fragile areas.
33. The influx of environmental migrants into urban areas with
limited infrastructure and absorption capacity can have negative
environmental effects. Already, one-third of the world’s urban population
– about 1 billion people – live in slums and this number is expected
to rise to 1.7 billion by 2030. In these urban areas, the newly arrived
often end up settling in locations where a lack of security of tenure,
and inadequate basic services, as well as a perpetually looming
threat of forced evictions, compound and perpetuate the vicious
cycle of abuse and deprivation. Waves of new slum dwellers will
thus swell the ranks of the urban poor who live in precarious shelters
vulnerable to landslides and flooding, and are harshly exposed to
the risks of extreme weather conditions and consequent displacement.
34. Regardless of it often being a survival strategy for those
who move, sudden displacement caused by extreme environmental events
or conflicts can contribute to further environmental degradation
and security challenges in countries of destination.
2.5. Environmentally induced migration
and human security
35. Resource mismanagement by environmental migrants
in areas of destination can increase the likelihood of conflicts.
Contention can arise over diminishing resources available, including
fishing waters, freshwater supplies and fertile land, and increase
disputes over rights of property use. Frustration, despair and hostility can
easily explode into violence in countries comprised of a patchwork
of different ethnic, linguistic, religious and ideological groups.
Since most environmental migrants are likely to remain in their
home countries, such conflicts are more likely to be internal than
international. However, also international conflicts as a consequence
of climate-related migration have been ascertained as a potential
risk
.
36. It is therefore regrettable that the implications of inter-linkages
between environmental degradation, migration and potential for increased
conflicts have not been taken fully into account. These implications
are difficult to assess because of their interaction with other
social, economic and political factors, which affect human vulnerability
to environmental change and its migratory and other consequences
.
37. Africa, which holds 10 percent of the world’s population,
has 25 percent of its refugees. It is no coincidence that those
parts of the continent which are most affected by the environmental
crisis, are also the main theatres of conflicts, recurrent famine
and consequent refugee movements.
38. The Darfur crisis in Sudan is a major illustration of the
link between environmental crisis and armed conflict. During the
last 20 years, the Darfur region has suffered from two important
droughts, which have heavily undermined its agriculture. The numerous
tribes living in Sudan were in constant rivalry for the access to
natural resources. In 2003, when the conflict started, Sudan had
faced terrible environmental degradation with a large drop in rainfall
and desertification of the soil. Such climate changes forced thousands
of people to move southwards looking for water and food. Tensions
between farmers and herders over disappearing pasture and evaporating
water holes reignited the war between Northern and Southern Sudan.
.
39. The armed conflict in Darfur contributed to the accentuation
of the degradation of the environmental situation in the region
with limited natural resources. With massive refugees movements
provoked by this situation to neighbouring Chad, the war in Darfur
has raised important environmental issues, which have led to an
unprecedented humanitarian catastrophe.
40. Should more crises occur similar to that in Darfur, the world
may face a threat of global conflict, as massive displacements of
people would cause instability in destination and transition countries
and fuel the politics of resentment between those most responsible
for climate change (i.e. western industrialised states) and those
most affected by it. Impacts of climate mitigation policies (or
policy failures) will thus drive political tension nationally and
internationally. A recent report by the High Representative and
the European Commission to the European Council points out that
“climate change is best viewed as a threat multiplier which exacerbates
existing trends, tensions and instability”
.
41. The German Advisory Council on Global Change maintained in
a recent (2007) study, “If global temperatures continue to rise
unabated, migration could become one of the major fields of conflict
in international politics in future”
. Likewise, the British Government’s
Ministry of Defence Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre suggested
that “abrupt climate change” could lead to “societal collapse, mega migration
and intensifying competition for much diminished resources and widespread
conflict”
.
3. Protection, assistance, adaptation
and development: different institutional approaches
42. Within the current debate on climate change, environmental
degradation and subsequent migration, different schools and institutional
approaches have emerged as regards their understanding of terminology, typology
and protection mechanisms needed for facing the future challenges
discussed in the previous chapter.
43. A significant number of scholars and policy-makers consider
those forced to migrate as a result of environmental change as “refugees”
and advocate for the expansion of the definition of a refugee in
the 1951 Refugee Convention in order to include them. Others call
for the adoption of new instruments to provide them with protection
similar to that provided for refugees. Their opponents maintain
that the existing concepts and legal-normative frameworks are sufficient
and caution against undermining the current international protection regimes.
Yet another group maintains that any notion of the existence of
‘environmental refugees’ and their need for refugee-like protection
is at best exaggerated and at worst politically motivated and dangerous,
likely to play into the hands of those – governments – who wish
to classify all as economic migrants and thereby avoid their obligation
to provide refugee protection.
44. The debate today recalls much the fierce arguments twenty
years ago over the existence, definition and need for protection
of internally displaced persons. Similarly in today’s context, there
were those at the time who vehemently opposed the “creation” of
this category of people because they considered that it would provide
an excuse for governments to contain these persons in their own
country
. Yet the subsequent success
and adoption of the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement
shows that bringing issues to the surface and giving them a name
may serve a good purpose.
45. To this end, your rapporteur welcomes the recent discussions
held within the informal UN humanitarian Inter-Agency Standing Committee
(IASC) Working Group as well as the recently founded Climate Change, Environment
and Migration Alliance (CCEMA)
with a view to
defining a shared understanding about the main areas of concern
and proposing appropriate typology and terminology on migration
and displacement induced by environmental changes.
46. Your rapporteur considers that the Council of Europe should
contribute to this debate by:
- aspiring
to find a best possible solution for the protection of rights of
all individuals
- affected by any form of environmental degradation and
natural and man-made disasters,
- who
are either choosing or being forced to quit their own natural habitat,
- who are moving either internally or across international
borders
- who may or may not be able to return to their places of
origin
- striving to cover protection needs at all stages of movement,
i.e. in areas of origin, transit and destination, and for any length
of time necessary
- upholding the currently existing provisions of international
human rights law and normative framework and proposes new legislation
where gaps are identified
- promoting, in addition to the highly necessary humanitarian
action, climate change/environmental degradation adaptation (and
risk reduction), mitigation and development as integral elements
of the international response.
3.1. Terminology challenges: Refugees?
Displaced? Migrants?
47. One may argue whether terminology matters to those
in flight or in search for safer livelihood or shelter. Also, human
migration rarely has a single cause, which complicates any classification
or typology. In addition, there is always a risk of excluding someone
and creating more gaps with new labels and categories. Nevertheless,
from legal protection and policy setting perspectives, without at
least an agreed working or descriptive definition, targeted levels
of protection are impossible to achieve.
48. Whether people displaced by environmental change impacts should
be defined as “refugees”, “displaced” or “migrants” has serious
implications for the obligations of the international community
under international law. Hence the keen interest by different institutional
groups to defend their respective mandates by having it reflected
in relevant terminology.
49. The current terminology debate is flavoured by two dominant
groups - the international humanitarian agencies on one side and
development/migration management agencies on the other – being led
by their respective institutional concerns. The fear for the humanitarian
agencies is the potential dilution or overlapping of emerging new
concepts with existing categories they are mandated to protect;
the concern of the development agencies is arriving at as broad
and as comprehensive an approach as possible. Both are supported
by considerable numbers of scholars, researchers, civil society
groups and other actors. In addition, various other solutions are
proposed by researchers in the field.
3.1.1. Environmental/climate refugees
50. The term “climate refugee” was coined before internally
displaced persons (IDPs) were recognised as a group with rights
to protection and assistance. With the increasing public awareness
on issues related to climate change and global warming, both “climate
refugee” and “environmental refugee” are widely used in public discourse.
Campaigners use the term to convey added urgency to the issue. They
argue that such people need to “seek refuge” from the impacts of
climate change, and that “environmental migrant” emphasises the
“pull” factor of the destination over the “push” of the source country
and carries negative connotation, especially after the 2001 terrorist
attacks.
51. Based on this logic, there have been several attempts to promote
the idea of a need for the creation of a new category of refugees
who have to move because of environmental factors, the most well-known definitions
having been presented by El Hinnawi in 1985
, Myers in 1993
and
Crisp in 2006
.
However, the appropriateness of the term “environmental refugee”
is much disputed. It is also rejected by key international agencies
dealing with migration and protection issues. UNHCR, IOM and more
recently the UN-IASC Working Group have spoken out against the use
of this term. This for many reasons:
52. First, they consider the term inaccurate under international
law. The UN 1951 Convention and 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status
of Refugees (known as the Geneva Refugee Convention) have a number
of criteria to define the status of a refugee. Only persons with
a well-founded fear of persecution due to their race, religion,
nationality, membership of a particular social group or political
opinion, are considered to be “refugees” and are granted the rights
that belong to this status. In the context of environmental refugees,
the fear of persecution is difficult to define.
53. Second, the term “refugee” implies a cross-border movement,
while most environmentally induced migration happens so far mostly
within national borders. Thus restricting the definition to those
who cross international borders may seriously understate the extent
of the problem.
54. Third, the concept of a “refugee” tends to imply the universal
right of return once the persecution that triggered the original
flight has ceased. This may be impossible under certain conditions
of environmental changes, e.g. in the case of “disappearing” small
island states because of rising sea level.
55. Fourth, the UNHCR is concerned that expanding the current
definition of “refugee” would possibly lead to an erosion of the
currently valid international refugee protection regime. According
to them, a modification of the refugee definition may have as a
consequence a renegotiation of the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention, which,
in the current political environment, may lead to a lowering of
protection standards for refugees under the present definition.
56. Finally, here is a different moral and possibly legal responsibility
involved. Whereas political and war refugees are victims of their
home state or of a regionalised conflict, with no direct responsibility
for their plight with the countries that eventually offer refuge,
the moral responsibility for climate change is different. As almost all
people moving as a result of the effects of climate change are likely
to come from countries that are least responsible for climate change
and least able to finance and implement adaptation programmes, many developed
countries in Europe and North America fear that accepting the term
refugee would compel them to offer the same protection as political
refugees; a precedent that no country has yet been willing to set. Meanwhile,
the international institutions currently charged with providing
for refugees, principally the UNHCR, are already overstretched and
are unable to cope with their current “stock” of refugees. The UNHCR
itself is taking on an expanded role in the provision of care to
IDPs and so is resistant to any further expansion of its mandate
.
57. The advocates of “climate/environmental refugees”, on the
other hand, argue that as there is no set definition for the term
“persecution” in the 1951 Convention, there is place for evolution.
Nevertheless, there is an increasing consensus among international
actors that the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention should not be touched.
During an international congress in October 2008 on this issue
,
no one proposed (any longer) to expand the current definition of
‘refugee’ under the 1951 Geneva Refugee Convention
.
58. There are however two contexts in which the notion of “environmental/climate
refugee” is or could potentially be accepted: in regional instruments
and in extension of environmental treaties.
59. First, in certain regional instruments the refugee definition
has been broadened to encompass other people who have fled events
that pose a serious threat to their life and liberty. For instance,
the 1969 Organisation of African Unity (OAU) Convention Governing
Refugee Problems in Africa states that refugees are also persons
who are compelled to flee owing to events seriously disturbing public
order, which could be reasonably understood to include situations
related to environmental disasters, in particular, if these lead
to a collapse of public order
. The 1994 Arab States Refugee Convention
accepted ‘natural disasters or devastating incidents’ as a cause
of refugees.
60. Second, Biermann and Boas, supported by the Global Governance
Project of eleven European research institutions
,
argue for extending the notion of “refugee” through a
sui generis regime specifically
tailored for climate refugees, which would offer the latter exactly
the same type of protection but not by subjecting this protection
to the 1951 Geneva Convention. The
sui
generis regime would build on a set of five core principles: planned
re-location and resettlement; resettlement instead of temporary
asylum; collective rights for local populations; international assistance
for domestic measures; and international burden sharing.
3.1.2. Environmental displacement
61. Most environmental migrants (will) differ from the
refugees for an important reason: they move inside the country.
Therefore the majority of humanitarian agencies prefer to refer
to “displacement” when talking about human mobility caused by natural
or man-made disasters, and regard the affected persons as falling
within the category of internally displaced persons (IDPs) protected
by the 1998 United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement
and the 2006 Operational Guidelines on Human Rights Protection in
Situations of Natural Disasters.
62. Indeed, according to the descriptive definition in the Guiding
Principles, “internally displaced persons” are “[…] persons or groups
of persons who have been forced or obliged to flee or to leave their
homes or places of habitual residence, in particular as a result
of or in order to avoid the effects of armed conflict, situation
of generalized violence, violations of human rights or natural or
human-made disasters, and who have not crossed an internationally
recognized State border”
.
63. The inclusion of disasters is recognition that persons displaced
by environmental disasters also have protection needs requiring
international attention.
64. However, the term “environmental displacement/environmentally
displaced” as currently applied has two major flaws. First, it only
implies internal movement, leaving those fleeing same disasters
by crossing international borders without similar protection. Second,
the IDP definition only refers to “natural and human-made disasters”,
implying sudden effects similar to conflict or generalised violence
contexts. However, it is not clear whether those who move due to
more gradual environmental degradation are covered by the Guiding Principles.
The latter group is estimated to cause more population movement
overall in the future than disasters.
65. In your rapporteur’s view the concerns of those who do not
favour a displacement based concept could be overcome by ensuring
that separate displaced categories are added and by including the
victims of both gradual environmental degradation and cross-border
movement within the descriptive and non-exhaustive definition of
the Guiding Principles.
3.1.3. Environmentally induced migration
66. The International Organization for Migration (IOM)
has proposed a working definition of “environmentally induced migration/
environmental migrants” to encompass people who move as a result
of natural or man-made disasters as well as those who migrate because
of deteriorating environmental conditions.
67. According to this definition, environmental migrants are “persons
or groups of persons who, for reasons of sudden or progressive changes
in the environment that adversely affect their lives or living conditions
are obliged to leave their homes or choose to do so, either temporarily
or permanently, and who move either within their country or abroad”.
68. This definition is inclusive of all persons who have an environmental
factor as the major cause of migration and acknowledges that environmentally
induced migration can be: internal as well as international; short-term
or long-term phenomenon, due to sudden or gradual environmental
change without ignoring other intervening political, economic and
social factors.
69. Several international humanitarian agencies, including the
UNHCR, have opposed this definition, arguing that the definition
is both overly broad to be of any use, and also potentially overlaps
with existing well-defined terms such as “refugee” and “internally
displaced persons”
.
70. Similarly, in a letter addressed to your rapporteur on 30
October 2008, the Representative of the UN Secretary General on
the Human Rights of Internally Displaced Persons Mr Walter Kälin,
drew attention to the fact that “international legal terminology
reserves the term “migrant” to persons who go abroad”. The letter further
argues that “this understanding is not only enshrined in the UN
Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers
and Members of Their Families, but is also implicit in the definition
of “migrant worker” in the European Convention on the Legal Status
of Migrant Workers (ETS No. 093)” and that the notion of internal
displacement “would also retain the psychological advantage of not
suggesting that persons displaced within their own country should
somehow be equated with “migrants” who, as foreigners, do not enjoy the
same rights as the local population”.
71. While your rapporteur fully understands the concerns of both
UNHCR and Mr Kälin, she also hears those who underline that there
is no universally accepted definition of “migrant”. And that those
who stick to the term “migration” also have defined categories of
“international migration” and “internal migration” in their constitution.
72. The terminology problem and the existing gaps have been discussed
by the IASC Informal Group on Migration, Displacement and Climate
Change. There was a discussion on whether to differentiate between “environmental
migration/migrants” as signifying voluntary movement and “environmental
displacement/environmentally displaced” as that of forced movement.
However, no consensus was achieved on this issue.
73. There are thus two significant debates currently on the table
around the definition of “environmental migrant”:
- should it only refer to cross-border
movement or also include internal movement, and
- should it be reduced only to voluntary movement or include
both voluntary and forced – plus everything in between.
74. As regards the first debate, the discussion surpasses the
scope of the environmentally induced migration issue as it concerns
the (lack of) definition of migration in general. The IOM points
out that the essence of migration is a population movement and such
movement can take place both within and across international borders.
Its constitution refers to “international migration” (as do most
of the international instruments) on the understanding that what
happens inside the country is usually not the focus of international
co-operation but a prerogative of the country concerned to deal
with. The very fact that the reference is made to "international migration"
implies that there may be other types of migration and the notion
of migration in general may be broader. Terms such as "internal
migration", "rural-to-urban migration" and "rural-to-rural migration"
are widely used, in particular by UN-HABITAT, UNFPA, UNECE
and academia.
75. Based on this approach, the term “migrant” is difficult to
be limited to the category of international migrants only. Likewise,
while those involved in the migration process are often considered
to be aliens or foreigners within the territory of a host state,
this is not necessarily the case with internal migration or return migration.
Attempting to understand persons involved in migration through the
prism of nationality alone would overlook the fundamental element
of migration, i.e. its dynamic characteristic.
76. The second contentious issue is also closely linked to the
focus of different stakeholders on their mandates. Many humanitarian
agencies concentrating on one aspect of human movement (i.e. forced movement)
prefer to separate the concepts of forced and voluntary movement.
The development agencies as well as agencies working on broader
population issues, on the other hand, argue that environmental migration covers
a whole continuum of movement from voluntary to forced. They agree
that there are some clear cases of forced environmental migration;
in practice, however, most people will be in situations where it
would be hard to determine whether their movement was forced or
not. Therefore attempting a clear-cut classification of environmentally
induced movements as voluntary or forced, may lead to a situation
where the majority of the affected will fall somewhere in-between.
To ensure inclusiveness, the definition of “environmental migrant” covers
the full range of human mobility caused by environmental factors.
77. Another important point is that, while the majority of environmental
migrants will be internal, it is not certain whether the majority
of these future migrants will be forced (or displaced). The difficulty
of distinguishing between forced and voluntary movement applies
not only to cross-border but also to internal movements. Environmentally
induced internal migration (including voluntary) is very important
for instance in the context of the discussions on urbanisation.
Therefore, the discourse on internal movements linked to the environmental factors should
not be limited to IDPs.
78. That being said, from her own institutional perspective, your
rapporteur sees the advantage of using the IOM or a similar broad-spectrum
definition. This working definition is inclusive, sufficiently robust
and flexible enough to allow a differentiated discussion about environmental
change and human mobility, while also being pragmatic and allowing
space to take action immediately. The terms “voluntary” and “forced”
may be used as sub-categories of migration; however, any new segmentation
into “voluntary” (migration) and “forced” (migration) movements
is artificial and would only create a need for further categorisation
of “semi-voluntary” and “semi-forced” migrants and displaced.
3.2. Applicability of the existing
protection framework
79. There exists a large body of well-established international,
regional and national legal instruments, covenants and norms to
protect the rights of people forcibly displaced by conflict, persecution,
natural disasters and development projects. Unfortunately, a similar
framework to protect the rights of people forced to move because
of environmental change does not exist. Several existing legal and
normative instruments can nevertheless be applied in the case of
migration for environmental reasons.
80. First, in the context of international cross-border movement,
international human rights law applies in general. The 1948 Universal
Declaration of Human Rights protects freedom of movement and other
social, cultural and economic rights which can be enjoyed under
international human rights law and international humanitarian law
but which might be threatened when people are forced to migrate
by climate-induced environmental degradation.
81. In cases of severe environmental degradation and sudden disasters,
the human rights principle of
non-refoulement may
apply. When there is a risk of certain ill treatment, people are
protected against return. This principle is clearly established
under Articles 2 and 3 of the European Convention of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms and its case law, as well as in Article
7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and
Article 3 of the Convention Against Torture. The
non-refoulement protection may be relevant
in situations of environmental change-induced forced migration,
notably if persons are fleeing conflict situations with an environmental
element (e.g. conflict over scarcity of resources)
.
82. Although the case may be weak for extending the 1951 Convention
and 1967 Protocol to include so-called “environmental refugees”,
they may nevertheless qualify as refugees in the legal sense in
cases of “environmental persecution”
, i.e. if their own
governments are intentionally destroying their environment, are discriminating
against them in the provision of assistance and/or are using the
consequences of the disaster in ways that amount to persecution
for one or more of the reasons of the 1951 Refugee convention. The environmental
degradation or disaster cannot be considered as a persecution ground,
but it could be considered as a form of persecution
.
83. There are also various ‘subsidiary’ norms and instruments
which afford different forms of human rights protection for migrant
groups either directly or indirectly, e.g. he 1966 Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights and the 1996 International Convention
on Civil and Political Rights, as well as a range of international
conventions dealing with specific social groups, such as the 1990
International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All
Migrant Workers and members of their Family, the 1989 Convention
on the Rights of the Child, the 1981 Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women and the 1991 ILO Convention
on the Rights of Indigenous People
.
84. Given that statelessness is a danger for citizens of small
island states, which will be submerged by rising sea levels, their
protection is a critical challenge under the 1954 UN Convention
Relating to the Status of Stateless Persons, the 1961 UN Convention
on the Reduction of Statelessness and the protection mandate of UNHCR
for stateless people
.
85. Second, many of the environmental migrants are likely to be
internally displaced. Disaster displacement is recognised in the
1998 United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement
and the 2006 IASC Operational Guidelines on Human Rights Protection
in Situations of Natural Disasters.
86. The Guiding Principles provide a unique normative framework
for developing assistance and protection response strategies. They
have become a practical tool identifying the rights and guarantees
relevant to the protection and assistance of IDPs in all phases
of displacement regardless of the cause. It is a synthesis, drawing
out relevant parts of human rights law, refugee law by analogy and
international humanitarian law. Arguably, the principles should
be considered legally binding to the extent that they reflect existing,
binding international law. This approach has been considered an
innovation in international normative development
.
87. Third, as mentioned above, regional instruments such as the
1969 Organisation of African Unity (OAU) Convention Governing Refugee
Problems in Africa
;
the 1984 Cartagena Declaration on Refugees, and the 1994 Arab States
Refugee States Convention provide certain protection to refugees
– victims of environmental disasters, in particular if these lead
to a collapse of public order.
88. In Europe, the European Convention of Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms, its additional Protocols and case-law offer the strongest
protection mechanism for the protection of environmentally induced migrants,
both for those moving within the zone of Council of Europe member
states as well as those cross-border environmental migrants arriving
in Europe from other regions. Although the case law of the European Court
of Human Rights has not so far dealt directly with the protection
of environmental migrants, in two recent judgments (
Öneryildiz vs. Turkey and
Budayeva
vs. Russia ), the Court has made it clear that
a state becomes liable for failure to protect life if deaths have
occurred because of the authorities’ neglect of their duty to take
preventive measures when a natural hazard had been clearly identifiable
and effective means to mitigate the risk were available to them.
89. Although not explicitly recognised, in certain cases environmental
migrants could probably trigger temporary protection according to
the 2001 EU Council Temporary Protection Directive
and
2004 EU Council Qualification Directive
,
subject to the positive majority decision by the Council that a
natural disaster calls for invoking these mechanisms.
90. Fourth, at national level, only Sweden and Finland so far
grant subsidiary protection on the grounds of natural disasters.
The Swedish Aliens Law (Chapter 4 Section 2) includes a person who
“is unable to return to the country of origin because of an environmental
disaster” in the category “person otherwise in need of protection”.
Similarly, the Finnish Aliens Act Section 88 grants persons who
cannot return “because of an armed conflict or environmental disaster’
protection and issue them with residence permits.
3.3. Gaps in existing protection
frameworks
91. The IASC Working Group has recently identified three
major potential legal and operational gaps
:
- Those moving across international
borders as a result of hazard events (and subsequent designation
of prohibited areas) are protected by international human rights
law, which however, does not entitle them to admission and stay
in another country. They are not automatically protected by the
1951 refugee convention, unless they meet established criteria.
In some cases they might be in need of protection and assistance
temporarily, pending return.
- There is a lack of criteria to distinguish between voluntary
[migration] and forced [displacement] movements in hazard related
disaster settings
- Should a state lose its entire territory, one of the constituent
elements of statehood, it is not clear whether its statehood would
continue to be recognised by the international community. There
is a risk that its population would be rendered stateless. Specific
arrangements will need to be forged which permit for their movement
elsewhere and prevent statelessness.
92. Regarding the first concern, not only that cross-border environmental
migrants would not qualify as refugees who are entitled to international
protection within the existing international refugee framework,
they would not be necessarily classified as labour migrants either.
While benefiting from the applicability of human rights norms, their
status remains unclear. At the same time states have no specific
obligations with regard to the treatment of environmental migrants,
and until now there is no international legal document which can oblige
rendering international assistance to environmentally displaced
persons when their state cannot afford such protection.
93. Regarding the second concern, indeed environmentally induced
migration covers the whole continuum of movement from voluntary
to forced. What is lacking in today’s IDP-humanitarian normative
framework, covered by the Guiding Principles, is a protection framework
of a whole significant segment of persons migrating across international
borders or because of gradual environmental degradation. Many face
challenges and have needs similar to conflict-induced displaced
persons; however, protection and assistance will largely depend
on whether or not the international organisations include them in
their mandates (so-called operational protection gaps
).
94. Regarding the third, several difficult questions arise concerning
the rights of the affected population and who would be responsible
for protecting them. Not only in the case of “disappearing” small
island states but many of those displaced by the consequences of
climate change may never be able to return home because their places
of origin have been destroyed or inundated
. A serious issue of concern is who will
accept these forced migrants when they can no longer live in their
own countries. New approaches to durable solutions will be needed.
95. It is also noteworthy that there are gaps in environmental
law: neither the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, nor
its Kyoto Protocol includes any provisions concerning specific assistance
or protection for those who will be directly affected by the effects
of climate change.
96. Your rapporteur joins the IASC Working Group’s call on the
need for significant further research and analysis regarding the
scale, nature and patterns of climate related population mobility,
and regarding those who do not and cannot move. Also existing law
and protection possibilities should be further investigated in order
to determine how best to remedy the already identified and potentially
other protection gaps. Furthermore, the extent people displaced
by environmental factors are subject to violations of basic human rights
in the way that refugees and IDPs are, should be further explored.
97. Finally, current protection frameworks suffer from a significant
implementation gap, in most cases because of lack of capacity and
in some cases because of lack of political will. How to plug this
implementation gap remains an important debate to resolve
.
3.4. Need for new legislation?
98. The various identified gaps indicate a need for new
protection frameworks. Two areas imperatively call for additional
legal measures:
- the potential
statelessness in the “disappearing states” scenario; and
- the need for a prohibition of deportation of people from
countries hit by a natural disaster or from areas known to have
suffered severe environmental degradation or not providing environmentally
safe livelihood, who are not refugees under the 1951 Convention
yet should not be returned for humanitarian reasons. This need could
be met, for instance, by granting humanitarian protection or another
protected status.
99. Whether the international community is ready for more, remains
to be seen: negotiating a convention is time-consuming; significant
consensus around a convention that ultimately concerns an issue
of state sovereignty is not evident; even binding conventions sometimes
have little impact because of lacking enforcement mechanisms; whereas
the Guiding Principles are increasingly being incorporated into
national laws and policies, despite their non-binding character.
100. On the other hand, the accumulative effects of climate change,
increased incidence of natural disasters, rising food and energy
prices as well as the global financial crisis on most vulnerable
states and regions may turn the scale for adopting new legal protection
instruments. In a recent policy document
, the UNHCR states that “[...] additional
tools, standards or agreements will be needed if the basic principles
found in the international human rights instruments are to be translated
into tangible forms of protection and support for the populations
concerned”.
101. Various forms of binding or non-binding protection mechanisms
could be envisaged as climate and environment-induced migratory
processes increase.
102. One way to address the protection gap could be to draft and
adopt a completely new and separate international convention. This
could draw upon environmental law as well as on human rights and
refugee law. Weaknesses that need to be overcome in the environmental
branch of international law relate to enforcement, and the difficulties
in establishing liability, making protection based on responsibility
difficult
.
103. Another option could be to extend the descriptive definition
the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement to include persons
displaced by slow-onset environmental disasters, while in parallel
creating a similar synthesis of existing international law on External
Displacement in the form of principles.
104. Alternatively, the idea of negotiating a binding convention
on internal (and possibly external) displacement may be worth revisiting.
The scheduled adoption in spring 2009 of the new draft Organisation
for African Union (OAU) Protocol for the Protection and Assistance
of Internally Displaced Persons in Africa, a first legally binding
instrument for the protection of internally displaced persons in
the world, may signal a new horizon for that. Not only would the
OAU convention be binding upon signatories but it also increases
the scope of the protection found in the Guiding Principles (e.g.
to include persons displaced as a result of a lack of development)
and provides the OAU with the right to intervene in member states
in order to protect displaced persons
.
105. Yet another legally binding alternative has been proposed
by Biermann and Boas who oppose the idea of independent international
convention as requiring too lengthy a negotiation process to answer
the urgency to act today. They propose an alternative new legal
instrument specifically tailored to the needs of climate refugees
– a Protocol on Recognition, Protection and Resettlement of Climate
Refugees to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
(UNRCCC) – as well as a separate funding mechanism, the Climate
Refugee Protection and Resettlement Fund, and a network of “implementing
agencies” under the authority of the meeting of the parties to the
new Protocol
.
They also maintain that the new legal instrument would require some
terminological adjustment within the UNHCR regime, but is legally
and practically unproblematic as it would not touch the 1951 Geneva
Convention definition. The Protocol could also theoretically be
incorporated into a broader adaptation protocol as long as key elements
of its principles and financial support were preserved.
106. Needless to say, in all those proposed cases, much more research
would be needed before any concrete measures could be delivered.
The international community has yet to have to hold a meaningful debate
on what kind of instruments are needed to face new challenges. However,
the point of departure for any of these solutions should be the
same, i.e. that all individuals who are clearly forced to move by environmental
degradation processes, even if mixed with other socio-economic factors,
should be protected adequately by an international mechanism that
would afford them certain rights.
3.5. The "guardians" of environmental
migrants
107. There is no common position as yet within the international
community as to who is actually going to handle this issue at the
level of protection and assistance, standard setting or adaptation
and development. Nevertheless, the question is being raised whether
the current architecture of humanitarian action is adequate, or
whether new institutions, new coalitions and new partnerships are
needed. These questions understandably need to be collectively reflected
on.
108. As regards the humanitarian dimension, the UN institutions
indisputably have a leading role to play. In the framework of the
so-called humanitarian reform, the UN has engaged in strengthening
the protection of IDPs through a “cluster approach”
. The cluster approach is
regarded as having improved division of labour, filled gaps and
strengthened the protection of IDPs in many emergencies. Strengthening
the cluster approach may be one way to improve the institutional
response mechanisms to environmentally induced migration.
109. There is however still not one mandated agency for the protection
of and assistance to IDPs, even if UNHCR now has a special role
and accountability as protection cluster lead on IDPs from conflict.
“This challenge remains enormous and more must be done, through
UNHCR’s protection cluster leadership, to ensure a more predictable,
accountable and effective protection response in natural disaster
context”
.
110. Where it comes to standard-setting and notably “decision-making
related to the questions of protection of populations forced to
move due to the impacts of environmental degradation and disruptions
”,
the informal Inter-Agency Standing Committee is undeniably the most
competent body, whose role and status merit to be reinforced and
extended.
111. Your rapporteur nevertheless believes that the international
response to the challenges of environmental migration should go
beyond the humanitarian action and therefore equally welcomes the
recent establishment of the Environment, Climate Change and Migration
Alliance, the aim of which is to serve as a focal point and platform
for future policy and science exchange. In the long run, however,
she would see the benefits of an effective co-ordination structure
to be established that would pull various international agencies
and stakeholders together, including the currently existing co-ordination
structures. To this end, a Co-ordinating Commission for Environmental
Migration could be created with a mission to co-ordinate the work
of international organisations that focus on different aspects of
the problem of environmentally induced human mobility, including
through risk reduction, humanitarian response, adaptation and development.
4. Ways forward for Europe
112. Industrialised countries, including most Council
of Europe member states, have higher capacities to adapt, which
makes climate-induced migration for these countries either less
likely or less problematic. Likewise, most of the environmental
migrants and displaced persons in the world today and in the near
future do not or cannot arrive at European borders.
113. However, it is evident that the costs of prevention are immensely
lower than those of mitigation, and that the industrialised and
capital/resource-rich world has to take the largest part of the
burden of responsibility: it is the acknowledged major cause of
climate change and it has the technology and the resources to respond. European
countries, alongside the United States, will therefore have the
leading responsibility not only in intensifying measures to cut
down on their greenhouse gas emissions to meet the Millennium Goals
but also in moving towards greater disaster risk reduction measures,
including prevention, vulnerability analysis, early warning and
preparedness.
114. In order to prevent a potential increase in security risks
caused by environmentally induced migration, there is a need for
elaborating both strategies directed at the causes of environmentally
induced migration, and measures for managing it where it is unavoidable.
More international co-operation is needed in strengthening the adaptive
capacities of communities at risk from climate change impacts.
115. At European level, the key determinant for the successful
management of environmentally induced migration will be the elaboration
of a comprehensive immigration policy strategy, together with encouraging more
liberal economic and trade policies vis-à-vis third world countries.
This strategy should anticipate the migratory flows, offer adequate
protection to the victims of climate disruptions, provide instruments
for compensation for the harm suffered by these displaced persons
(social, economic, cultural), and encourage raising awareness and
sensitivity of the populations and of the authorities concerning
these issues.
116. An appropriate system of funding, at European-level, should
be created for the compensation of the displaced persons and supporting
development and migration management projects.
117. Migration policy should be better integrated into the national
development agendas as well as the development co-operation. Development
co-operation can help vulnerable communities living in absolute poverty
to mitigate the impacts of environmental degradation and climate
change and to reduce their vulnerability to the effects of such
phenomena. However, development strategies must in the future also
pay more heed to the sustainability of development plans in light
of foreseeable climate impacts at local level. For example, the
agricultural development of a region likely to be strongly affected
by drought in the future should be re-evaluated.
118. In terms of legal status and protection of environmentally
induced migrants, European states could support the idea of elaboration
of a new international convention, which would provide internationally
assured protection to people displaced because of environmental
degradation and or climate change, as well as of inclusion of these
provisions in other existing international legal instruments.
119. Nevertheless, as the above is likely to be a lengthy progress,
Europe should assume a pioneering role in standard setting in the
field of legal protection of victims of environmental displacement
and develop its own provisions to protect and assist environmental
migrants through regional protection programmes. Existing EU and
Council of Europe instruments serve as a good reference point here.
120. In the Council of Europe context, member states should be
continued to be encouraged to continue to adopt the Guiding Principles
on Internal Displacement as well as the Committee of Ministers Rec
(2006)6 into national legislation. The Finnish and Swedish national
legislation and case-law granting subsidiary protection on the grounds
of natural disasters should also be looked into to see whether it
could serve as best-practice for national protection mechanisms.
121. With regard to enhancing the human rights protection mechanisms
vis-à-vis the challenges of climate change and environmental degradation
processes, a separate Protocol to the
European Convention of Human Rights on the right to a healthy and
safe environment could be added.
122. In addition, a comprehensive legal study on the gaps in existing
international law and normative regulations could be undertaken
with a view to an eventual elaboration of a European Framework Convention for the Status and Rights
or Environmental Migrants.
123. A working group on the questions of the protection and accommodation
of populations forced to move due to the impacts of environmental
disruptions should be put in place by the Council of Europe in co-operation with
the EU institutions.
124. In addition, broad-based co-operation should be established
in areas of multi-disciplinary research, including climate science,
geography, migration, development studies, social cohesion and health
with a view to improved understanding and recognition of the links
between the movement of people and environmental forces. Furthermore,
multi-disciplinary initiatives of NGO’s on public awareness raising
and initiatives to incorporate solutions for environmentally-induced
human migration in the development aid community need to be welcomed.
Reporting committee:Committee
on Migration, Refugees and Population
Reference to committee:Doc. 11084, Reference No. 3297 of 22 January 2007, modified by
Reference No. 3317 of 16 March 2007
Draft recommendation and draft
resolutionunanimously adopted by the committee on 11 December
2008
Members of the committee: Mrs
Corien W.A. Jonker (chairperson),
Mr Doug Henderson (1st vice-chairperson),
Mr Pedro Agramunt (2nd vice-chairperson),
Mr Alessandro Rossi (3rd vice-chairperson),
Mrs Tina Acketoft, Mr Francis Agius, Mr Ioannis Banias, Ms Donka
Banović, Mr Márton Braun, Mr André Bugnon, Mr Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu, Mr Sergej Chelemendik,
Mr Vannino Chiti, Mr Christopher Chope (alternate: Mr Bill Etherington), Mr Boriss Cilevičs,
Mrs Minodora Cliveti, Mr Telmo Correia, Mrs Claire Curtis-Thomas, Mr Ivica Dačić,
Mr Taulant Dedja, Mr Nikolaos Dendias, M. Arcadio DíazTejera,
Mr Mitko Dimitrov, Mr Karl
Donabauer, Mr Tuur Elzinga, Mr Valeriy Fedorov, Mr Oleksandr Feldman,
Mme Doris Fiala, M. Bernard Fournier, Mr Paul Giacobbi, Mrs Gunn
Karin Gjul, Mrs Angelika Graf, Mr John Greenway (alternate: Mr Humfrey Malins), Mr Tony Gregory, Mr Andrzej
Grzyb, Mr Michael Hagberg,
Mrs Gultakin Hajiyeva, Mr Davit Harutyunyan (alternate: Mrs Hermine Naghdalyan), Mr Jürgen Herrmann,
Mr Bernd Heynemann, Mr Jean Huss, Mr Ilie Ilaşcu, Mr Tadeusz Iwiński, Mr Mustafa Jemiliev, Mr Tomáš Jirsa, Mr Reijo
Kallio, Mr Hakki Keskin, Mr Guiorgui Kandelaki (alternate: Mr David Darchiashvili), Mr Egidijus Klumbys,
Mr Ruslan Kondratov, Mr Dimitrij Kovačič, Mr Andros Kyprianou, Mr
Geert Lambert, Mr Younal
Loutfi (alternate: Mrs Aneliya Atanasova),
Mr Andrija Mandić, Mr Jean-Pierre Masseret (alternate: Mr Denis Jacquat), Mr Slavko Matić, Mrs
Ana Catarina Mendonça, Mr Gebhard Negele, Mr Hryhoriy Omelchenko, Mr Morten Østergaard,
Mr Alexey Ostrovsky, Mr Grigore Petrenco, Mr Cezar Florin Preda,
Mr Milorad Pupovac, Mr Frédéric Reiss, Mrs Mailis Reps, M. Gonzalo Robles Orozco
(alternate: Mr Gabino Puche),
Mr Giacomo Santini, Mrs Michaela Sburny, Mr Samad Seyidov, Mr Steingrímur
J. Sigfússon, Mrs Miet Smet, Mr Giacomo Stucchi, Mr Vilmos Szabó, Mr Tuğrul Türkeş, Mrs Özlem Türköne, Mr Michał
Wojtczak, Mr Marco Zacchera, Mr Yury Zelenskiy, Mr Andrej Zernovski,
Mr Jiří Zlatuška
N.B.: The names of the members who took part in the meeting
are printed in bold.
Secretariat of the committee:Mr
Lervik, Mr Neville, Mrs Odrats, Mr Ekström