1. Introduction
1. The work on this report was
launched after the conference with the same title held on 18 December
2015 at the French National Assembly, which raised many issues as
to how action on the part of member States and partner countries
could be better co-ordinated and responsibilities better shared
in managing the lasting migration and refugee crisis.
The motion for a resolution pointed
to systemic weaknesses in existing regulations and mechanisms revealed
by the scale of mass arrivals of refugees in Europe and to the divisions among
Council of Europe member States according to their political stances
and geographical situations. It suggested that the Parliamentary
Assembly could serve as a platform for the exchange of ideas, opinions
and experiences between countries of origin and transit and host
countries, in order to build up operational models for asylum and
integration.
2. In preparing the report, I have explored three main strands
of what may be understood as “comprehensive political and humanitarian
responses” to the current crisis. Firstly, at the level of the Parliamentary
Assembly’s own work, I have looked at the many recommendations adopted
on specific aspects of migration,
which while taking into account
new developments will be presented in the draft resolution as a single,
“comprehensive” corpus of recommendations related to humanitarian
action and common political strategies.
3. The report also examines how the notion of “comprehensive”
applies to existing international law on migrants and refugees and
to what extent policies and programmes are inclusive with respect
to all the dimensions of the current crisis. While it is evident
that the current crisis is “global”, and that in a restrictive sense
it concerns essentially refugees fleeing conflicts rather than other
types of migrant, international organisations each have a different
scope, different visions of what global action implies and different
means of carrying it out. At the same time, States defend their
right to decide on their own policies and national situations vary
enormously, even within the usual migratory categories which divide
countries into those of origin, transit and reception.
4. Thirdly, the report looks at the obstacles to a commonly accepted
and supported approach to migration as, despite the protracted nature
of the crisis and its global repercussions affecting the whole of
Europe, and despite the numerous calls for co-operation from all
sides, solidarity and burden-sharing are not generalised. At the
Paris conference, one of the moderators pointed out that the solidarity
which had been demonstrated among Europeans during times of extreme
hardship in the 20th century was much less evident today. The report
examines the manifestations of this relative breakdown in an effort
to define the reasons why States do not succeed in implementing
comprehensive responses and the obstacles to better co-ordination.
In conclusion, the recommendations made in the draft resolution
will aim to propose and promote realistic comprehensive humanitarian
and political responses to the migration and refugee crisis.
5. In the framework of the work on the report, I carried out
a fact-finding visit to Hungary, where I met with parliamentarians
from majority and opposition parties, decision makers and experts
from the relevant governmental departments and with representatives
of the main national and international non-governmental organisations
(NGOs) working with refugees and migrants. I also visited the “transit
zone” centre for asylum seekers at Röszke near the border with Serbia.
I would like to thank the Hungarian parliamentary delegation for
their assistance in organising the mission.
6. An exchange of views was held during the January 2017 part-session
meeting with Lisa Matos from the William James Centre for Research,
ISPA, and a number of other think-tanks and academics working on
the subject were asked to give their professional opinion on how
to improve co-operation in ensuring humanitarian management of the
migrant and refugee crisis. These were taken into account in the
preparation of the report and the draft adopted texts.
2. Is international law concerning migrants
and refugees “comprehens5)ive”?
7. Migrants and refugees fall
within different types of legal systems, from the specific 1951
Geneva Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and its 1967
Protocol which provide protection for persons displaced from their
countries through conflict, to national legislation which reflects
European Union directives where member States are concerned. These
may operate simultaneously or have a “cascade” effect according to
the hierarchy of norms they represent. To take migrant children
as an example, unaccompanied migrant minors are to be treated first
and foremost as children and provided with the same rights as all
children, protected by the United Convention on the Rights of the
Child and the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5), before
their situation and care as migrants are addressed under the specific
provisions of rules applying to migrants. This is expressed clearly
in Assembly
Resolution
2136 (2016) on harmonising the protection of unaccompanied minors
in Europe.
8. The existing international conventions are increasingly questioned
as to their capacity to cope with the current crisis. At the same
time, not all countries have committed themselves to the applicable
conventions, or apply them only partially, in particular Europe’s
neighbouring countries. Neither Jordan nor Lebanon are Parties to
the 1951 Refugee Convention, and although Turkey has ratified the
1951 Refugee Convention and 1967 Protocol, it applies a geographical
limitation excluding Syrian refugees.
In parallel, although most Council
of Europe member States comply most of the time with the European
Convention on Human Rights and other conventions, national sovereignty
means that provisions concerning migrants and their treatment may
be more restrictive than those provided by international norms,
for instance with respect to employment, social assistance benefits
and the right to residence (or citizenship).
9. The replies to a recent questionnaire on national integration
policies circulated by the European Centre for Parliamentary Research
and Documentation (ECPRD) to the parliaments of member States, at
the request of Ms Susanna Huovinen (Finland, SOC) in the framework
of the preparation of her report on the integration of migrants
has
shown the very great divergence between countries in these fields,
which would seem to indicate that unified, united responses cannot
be expected.
10. In a Human Rights Comment published in November 2016, entitled
“Migrants in limbo in Europe have the right to live in dignity”,
the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Council of Europe recalled
the need for European States to fully abide by their human rights
obligations and work together towards common solutions based on
inter-State solidarity, refraining from undermining existing human
rights standards by adopting even more restrictive asylum and immigration
laws.
11. As well as referring to the protection of the human rights
of migrants as enshrined in the European Convention on Human Rights,
the Commissioner regularly points to other Council of Europe mechanisms,
such as the European Commission against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI)’s
policy recommendations applying to irregular migrants, the recommendations
and reports of the European Commission for the Prevention of Torture
and Inhuman or Degrading Treatment (CPT) and other Council of Europe
texts and guidelines such as the Twenty Guidelines on Forced Return.
In addition, full implementation by Council of Europe member States and
partner countries of these rules and guidelines would go a long
way to ensuring that the rights of migrants and refugees are upheld.
12. The European Court of Human Rights has a growing corpus of
case law on migration issues. An often invoked example is the Hirsi Jamaa and Others v. Italy judgment
of 23 February 2012, where the European Court on Human Rights ruled
that Somalian and Eritrean migrants travelling from Libya, intercepted
at sea by the Italian authorities and sent back to Libya, had been
subjected to collective expulsion prohibited by Article 4 of Protocol
No. 4 to the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 46), and
that the applicants had fallen within the jurisdiction of Italy
for the purposes of Article 1 of the Convention (obligation to respect
human rights). The Court also found a violation of Article 3 of
the Convention (prohibition of inhuman or degrading treatment) because
the applicants had been exposed to the risk of ill-treatment in
Libya and of repatriation to Somalia or Eritrea. Another case is
that of Ilias and Ahmed v. Hungary, concerning
the border-zone detention for 23 days of two Bangladeshi asylum
seekers as well as their removal from Hungary to Serbia. On 14 March 2017,
the Court held that there had been a violation of Articles 5.1 and
5.4 (right to liberty and security) because the applicants’ confinement
in the Röszke border-zone had amounted to detention without any
reasoned decision, violation of Article 13 (right to an effective
remedy) and violation of Article 3 on account of the fact that the
applicants’ expulsion to Serbia exposed them to a real risk of being
subjected to inhuman or degrading treatment.
3. Addressing
the need for reform
13. Resolution 2147 (2017) on the need to reform European migration policies, adopted
in the framework of an urgent debate during the January 2017 part-session,
calls for a meaningful dialogue involving the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and other international
stakeholders on the interpretation of legal provisions of the 1951
United Nations Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, including
the criteria for qualifying for status, as well as on the issue
of definition of a third safe country. It also advocates efforts
to find a constructive solution concerning more negotiated repartition
of responsibility-sharing with a view to fully implementing the
European Council’s conclusions of June 2015 with regard to relocation and
resettlement of refugees. Significantly, the very mixed responses
to the European Union’s relocation and resettlement programmes,
with their proposed “quotas”, have also shown that solidarity and
responsibility-sharing are not a given attitude when it comes to
migrants and refugees.
14. During my visit to Hungary on 15 and 16 May 2017 the authorities
were awaiting the decision of the European Court of Justice on the
country’s refusal to accept the allotted quota for the reception
of refugees and asylum seekers set by the European Union (1 500
persons). Although the parliament and government representatives
with whom I spoke stated the intention of the country to respect
the Court’s decision whatever the outcome, it was clear that Hungary
did not approve this attempt by the European Union to impose the sharing
of responsibilities in this way. The slow fulfilment of the quotas
set for other countries has also demonstrated the limits of this
type of exercise seen as ultra vires on the part of some States.
15. On 6 April 2016, the European Commission published a communication
on reform of the common European asylum system and enhancing legal
avenues to Europe. Its declared objective is to “move from a system
which by design or poor implementation places a disproportionate
responsibility on certain member States and encourages uncontrolled
and irregular migratory flows to a fairer system which provides
orderly and safe pathways to the European Union for third country
nationals in need of protection or who can contribute to the European
Union's economic development”. The introduction stresses that success
depends on the system being “comprehensive, and grounded on the
principles of responsibility and solidarity”.
16. More generally, the Commission has proposed a “comprehensive
harmonisation of procedures across the EU” by replacing the Asylum
Procedures Directive by a regulation establishing a single common
asylum procedure instead of the currently diverging ones in the
member States. The new rules for conducting asylum procedures will
become directly enforceable in the national legislation of European
Union member States, and cover admissibility, the use of border
and accelerated procedures, the treatment of subsequent applications and
the right to remain in the territory. The Commission places priority
on the harmonisation of the maximum duration of the procedure, both
at first instance and at the appeal stage. However, the Assembly
regrets that progress on these policy and legislative fronts has
been far too slow.
17. Another hoped-for outcome of the regulation is a unified refugee
status valid in all countries. In its comments on the proposal,
the European Council on Refugees and Exiles (ECRE)
welcomes measures such as the mandatory
provision of free legal assistance and representation at all stages
of the asylum procedure, but is concerned about mandatory safe country
and admissibility concepts and about the extremely short deadlines
for applications. It points to a trend towards externalisation and
an effort to prioritise administrative efficiency and convenience
over the detailed examination of protection needs.
4. Can
a comprehensive solution include elements located “outside” Europe?
18. The “Malta Declaration by the
members of the European Council on the external aspects of migration: addressing
the Central Mediterranean route”, adopted on 3 February 2017, refers
in its very first sentence to the “EU's comprehensive migration
policy”, going on to state that “a key element of a sustainable
migration policy is to ensure effective control of our external
border and stem illegal flows into the EU”. The declaration goes
on to set out the Union’s intention of pursuing solutions which
displace many aspects of the management of the migration and refugee
crisis outside the European Union’s frontiers, specifically in Libya,
with all the risks of reduced human rights protection and control
this could entail. The recent deterioration in the political situation
in Libya appears to make the proposed solutions of capacity-building
and training increasingly unrealistic for the near future.
19. The implementation of the EU–Turkey Agreement of 18 March
2016, after a slow beginning, has undeniably helped to reduce the
pressure of refugee flows towards Greece and the Balkans. It would
also appear that the investment in reception and processing facilities
has enabled reasonable living conditions to be ensured. But continuing
political instability and the lack of systematic external inspections,
as well as the absence of long-term visibility of the new structures
in Turkey, makes an early assessment premature even if both the
European Union and Turkey are able and willing to maintain their
commitments in the medium term. Indeed, the European Union needs
to assume its own responsibilities with respect to Turkey in order
for the agreement to be fully operational.
20. The idea of establishing “hotspots” outside Europe in order
to avoid refugees risking their lives in dangerous sea crossings
and to deal with reception and asylum processing has also made significant
headway recently, raising however concerns as to the human rights
and humanitarian consequences of such establishment. The Assembly’s
own
Resolution 2147 (2017) recommends the exploration of “possibilities for better
identifying people in need of international protection and organising
external processing of asylum applications by means of safer procedures
established outside Europe in safe third countries, provided that
the human rights of the asylum seekers are safeguarded as already
recommended by the Assembly in previous resolutions and according
to European Union standards”.
21. Coming back to the Malta Declaration, most of its policy proposals
concentrate on the action which will be taken to stabilise Libya:
build capacities in order for the Libyan authorities to acquire
control over the land and sea borders; and combat transit and smuggling
activities. The European Union aims at “an inclusive political settlement
under the framework of the Libyan Political Agreement and to support
the Presidency Council and the Government of National Accord backed
by the United Nations”. An “integrated approach will involve Libya
and other countries on the migration route, as well as relevant
international partners, … Europol and the European Border and Coast
Guard”. Objectives of the agreement include ensuring adequate reception capacities
and conditions in Libya for migrants, in co-operation with the UNHCR
and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), and “information
campaigns and outreach addressed at migrants in Libya and countries
of origin and transit, in co-operation with local actors and international
organisations”.
22. It remains to be seen whether shifting more reception facilities
and even asylum procedures to the other side of Europe’s borders
can function adequately.
Many humanitarian
organisations warn against this type of externalisation, considering
that the stakes are too high and that success depends too heavily
on the unstable political context of Europe’s neighbours.
23. In September 2015, the European Commission proposed the adoption
of a regulation establishing an EU common list of “safe countries
of origin” in order to facilitate the swift processing of applications
of people from these countries, with the objective of moving towards
a fully harmonised list of safe countries of origin at EU level,
based on proposals by the Commission, with priority given to the
inclusion of third countries from which a significant number of
applicants originate. This list is still not official, due to disagreement
among member States as to the countries to be listed. In the meantime,
countries draw up and use their own lists of safe countries.
24. As regards the “safe third country” mechanism, which enables
certain applications to be declared inadmissible where protection
could be availed of in a third country, the European Commission,
in a communication of 10 February 2016, encouraged all member States
to foresee and require its use in their national legislation. The
Commission also announced its intention of proposing a more harmonised
EU approach to its use, in full respect for the international obligations
enshrined in the European Union Charter of Fundamental Rights, the
European Convention on Human Rights and the Geneva Convention, so
as to guarantee that it is applied in the same manner in all member
States, and to establish a mechanism for the adoption of an EU list
of safe third countries.
5. What,
therefore, constitutes a comprehensive response?
25. The Paris Conference identified
the need for common strategies aiming to ensure, in particular,
respect for human rights of migrants, education and awareness-raising
for all and integration. The main measures were seen to be:
- more financial and humanitarian
solidarity between the countries in the front line of massive arrivals, those
of transit and final destination countries. It was largely consensual
that the scale of arrivals had become too large for the transit
countries to handle;
- the need to combat corruption and criminal activities,
and to improve international co-operation of police forces and intelligence;
- enhanced co-operation between international organisations,
including police files and databases of asylum applications, etc.;
- efficient and co-ordinated funding channels for humanitarian
aid and infrastructure;
- renewed efforts to tackle the root causes of the crisis
through, inter alia, the negotiation
of political solutions by destination countries;
- recognition of migration as an opportunity for economic,
social, cultural and demographic European development, and the countering
of reactions of rejection through “powerful ideological communication”;
- greater efforts to ensure decent humanitarian and security
conditions in transit countries and countries of origin, thereby
creating more attractive living conditions and addressing the general
security situations which often lie behind the departure of migrants.
These
areas for enhanced co-operation are examined in more detail below.
5.1. Financial
and humanitarian solidarity and efficient and co-ordinated funding
channels
26. Resolution 2118 (2016) “Refugees in Greece: challenges and risks – A European
responsibility” states that “the refugee and migrant crisis in the
eastern Mediterranean must be fully accepted as a European and global
problem, and not only a Greek one. The only effective response will
be based on respect for the human rights of refugees and migrants,
in accordance with the fundamental values common to the Council
of Europe, the European Union and their member States, and on genuine
solidarity and the practical sharing of responsibility”.
27. With respect to funding,
Resolution 2164 (2017) on possible ways to improve the funding of emergency refugee
situations encourages all European States to step up their financial
burden-sharing, including through co-operation in frameworks such
as the European Union, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR) and other international humanitarian organisations.
It also calls on the European Union “to continue its diversified
funding to improve reception conditions, accelerate asylum procedures
and encourage short- and medium-term integration of migrants and
refugees, alongside additional measures to reinforce security, border
controls and returns systems and urges the United Nations and its
member States to do their utmost to fulfil the ‘Grand Bargain’ agreed
at the World Humanitarian Summit in May 2016”.
28. On 4 and 5 April 2017, the European Union, Germany, Kuwait,
Norway, Qatar, the United Kingdom and the United Nations co-chaired
a Conference in Brussels on supporting the future of Syria and the
region, bringing together over 70 countries, international organisations
and civil society that collectively committed to continued engagement
and support for Syria and the region. The conference concluded with
Commissioner Stylianides announcing the global commitment of €5.6
billion for 2017, of which €3.7 billion is from the European Union
and member States, including €1.275 billion from the Commission
for both humanitarian and resilience support. The Commission pledged
an additional €560 million for 2018 for inside Syria, Jordan and Lebanon,
thus maintaining the level of its engagement. The co-chairs, supported
by all participants, adopted a joint declaration, including specific
annexes on supporting the resilience of host countries and refugees
in the context of the Syrian crisis for Jordan and for Lebanon and
of the pledges made.
29. The declaration adopted at the conference underlined the need
to respond to the humanitarian situation by ensuring assistance
and protection for populations in need and support to the neighbouring
countries, and stated that “a political solution was more urgent
than ever before”. The participants called for more political efforts
in supporting a resolution to the crisis in order to secure a future
for Syria and its people. But it should be noted that refugees come
also from other countries, for instance Eritrea, Somalia, Iraq and
Afghanistan.
5.2. Combating
corruption and criminal activities
30. Until recently, international
police co-operation with respect to migrants was partial. With the
increase in insecurity and the need for better international two-way
protection of migrants and resident populations, efforts have been
made to step up the exchanges of information and the improvement
of international databases. Closer surveillance of the number of
asylum applications made could help to identify suspicious activities
and organised crime.
31. In September 2016, the Committee on Migration, Refugees and
Displaced Persons held a hearing with Mr Brian Donald, Head of Cabinet
of the Director of the European Police Office (Europol). Describing
its mission, he underlined the fact that Europol had no operational
powers of its own but was intended to support member States’ and
third countries’ efforts to combat serious organised crime and terrorism.
Europol thus dealt with, for example, serious offences relating
to trafficking in human beings, migrant smuggling and exploitation when
they involved two or more member States, and currently ran two projects
particularly relevant to these topics: Focal Point Phoenix, on human
trafficking; and Focal Point Checkpoint, on combating the facilitation
of illegal immigration (migrant smuggling). In this context, a “migrant
smuggling centre” with 60 officers had been set up as part of the
response to the migration crisis, notably in front-line States Greece
and Italy.
32. Europol wished to operate using a victim-centred approach
rather than a solely security-based approach and aimed to raise
awareness and stress the humanitarian dimension of police work.
Europol has continued to support national authorities and other
actors in addressing the risks to which children may be exposed, including
trafficking, labour exploitation, sexual abuse and being coerced
into committing petty crimes. Today in the organisation, the need
was felt to raise the profile of Europol’s work, in order to better
confront the new scale of trafficking and its global nature, which
was also a problem as there were no co-ordination agreements with
key regions such as North Africa and Libya, for instance.
33. The recent report and evidence on unaccompanied migrant children
have also highlighted the need to ensure co-operation between national
police forces in order to constitute reliable, comprehensive and
regularly updated databases on unaccompanied children who go missing,
to involve Europol and the European Agency for the Management of
Operational Cooperation at the External Borders of the Member States
of the European Union (Frontex) in investigations against criminal
groups that might harm and exploit unaccompanied children and to
fully co-operate in efforts to track missing children and to support
the further development of the Schengen Information System (SIS).
5.3. Recognising
migration as an opportunity for economic, social, cultural and demographic European
development, and countering reactions of rejection of migrants
34. Any comprehensive political
solution to the migration and refugee crisis depends on the positive
stance of politicians at national level, and especially on their
presentation of the benefits of well-managed migration for host
societies. The Assembly has adopted several recent texts promoting
the recognition of migration as part of the solution to many of
Europe’s challenges, from attenuating the consequences of population
ageing and the “demographic winter” (see
Resolution 2137 (2016)), to developing lagging economies by attracting new skills
and additional labour force (
Resolution
1972 (2014)). In order to achieve this win-win situation for host
countries and migrants, measures need to be taken to remove obstacles
to the rapid entry of refugees into the labour market once their
asylum procedures are completed, to recognise the educational diplomas
and vocational skills of migrants, and to improve public information
on the economic benefits of legal migration and cultural diversity
for society.
35. In Hungary, the government maintains the fear of migrants
among the population by broadcasting video-clips between popular
programmes invoking the risk of invasion by violent migrants, which
also focus on religious differences and show Islam as a threat.
This is surprising as the numbers of asylum seekers have dropped
drastically over the past months as a result of dissuasive measures
(the construction of a wall and the closure of open reception centres
in favour of “transition zones” denounced by NGOs as places of arbitrary detention.
36. My own country, Portugal, is an often-quoted example of good
practices in positive, participative approaches to hosting migrants.
Perhaps the relatively small size of the country and the limited
numbers of non-Portuguese speaking migrants help in implementation
of programmes, but the spirit in which they are carried out deserves
to be promoted as a model for other countries. From the “one-stop
shop” system for reception and integration of migrants to the voluntary
mentoring programmes and vocational and entrepreneurship training
offered to migrants, Portugal has taken fully into account the relative
advantages of migration for the country’s renewal and socio-economic
development as well as the fact that it represents an opportunity
to foster cultural diversity.
6. “After
the crisis” – avoiding catastrophe in the future
6.1. Inclusive
and forward-looking policies
37. During the Paris conference,
one of the “comprehensive responses” seen as necessary was that renewed
efforts be made to tackle the root causes of the crisis through,
inter alia, the negotiation of political solutions
by countries of destination. In
Resolution 2147 (2017) on the need to reform European migration policies, the
Assembly “regrets the absence of a global and comprehensive vision
for the management of migration flows and sustainable solutions
as well as the lack of a serious debate at European level on the migration
phenomenon in a long-term perspective and its consequences for host
societies”. It is clear that years after the first signs of crisis,
States and international organisations are still to some extent
“fire-fighting” as new developments arise,
38. The Assembly has been examining problems of mass migration
for over a decade, as can be seen for instance in
Resolution 1521 (2006) on the mass arrival of irregular migrants on Europe’s
Southern shores. Yet looking at the responses so far, the United
Nations humanitarian programmes constitute fire-fighting emergency
reactions to situations as they unfold, and the European Union’s
action gives the impression of being largely improvised. National
responses are even regressing in some countries as political standpoints become
more radically protectionist and populist politicians play on fears
and tensions in their communities. It is astonishing that in the
face of such a protracted crisis, Europe has not been able to devise
more united, comprehensive political and humanitarian solutions
and that solidarity has remained extremely fragile.
39. In some countries (Sweden, for instance) development aid is
being used to help the Swedish authorities cope with the influx
of refugees; while this is understandable as an emergency measure,
reducing aid to countries of origin will have negative consequences
in the medium term. In other countries (for example Denmark), further
restrictions to family reunification are not only a violation of
the right to family life but will run counter to the integration
of refugees and are likely to create social and public order problems;
this issue will be considered in the report that our colleague Ms
Ulla Sandbæk is preparing on the issue of family reunification.
40. In view of the need to promote the implementation of international
standards for the protection of migrants and to serve as a platform
for the dissemination of best practices and pan-European co-operation,
I believe that the Council of Europe should shoulder once again
the important responsibilities which it decided to renounce just
before the refugee and migrant crisis emerged in Europe through
the setting up of an intergovernmental structure involving all member
States. This would allow the policies elaborated and the activities
carried out in the framework of the Organisation’s different programmes
to be followed up and its intergovernmental co-operation in the
area to be consolidated. The rights-based approach of the Council
of Europe would also complement that of the European Union, more
focused on security of Europe’s citizens and the protection of its
borders. This is why I have proposed a recommendation to the Committee
of Ministers in the framework of this report, to reinstate a steering
committee on migrants and refugees.
6.2. Climate
change – the next crisis?
41. One of the next migration crises
will be caused by climate change.
The
subject has fallen to some extent under the radar of international
surveillance, as on the one hand, climate change has until now provoked movement
internally, within countries, rather than over borders, and on the
other, the acuteness of the refugee crisis resulting from the management
of the fallout of war has overshadowed concern for environmental migration.
In addition, some intentional short-sightedness may be suspected
on the part of politicians, as the enormous implications of the
problem are difficult to communicate, and mobilising voters on a
subject which seems distant and unclear is a complicated task.
42. Nevertheless, the decision makers and international organisations
must begin to anticipate the forced migration which will result
from climate change and answer the questions it raises, namely whether
the current refugee regime based on the Geneva Conventions, with
its fixed set of refugee rights, can be extended to cover a group
of refugees that is many times larger than that which is currently
covered. Such an extension could even produce a trade-off between
climate refugees and the (political) refugees protected under the
Geneva Convention. The UNHCR has a variety of programmes for environmental/climate
refugees, and environmentally internally displaced persons fall
under the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement of the Office
of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
43. The current legal regime on refugees provides only marginal
protection, with no specific mandate, to climate refugees, which
the UNHCR indeed prefers to call “environmentally displaced persons”,
because of the legal rights that the intergovernmental system currently
bestows upon refugees as persons who cannot avail themselves of
the protection of their home State for fear of (political) persecution.
The main responsibility is placed with their home countries, which
contradicts the global responsibility for the victims of climate
change. In addition, the maximum number of persons the UNHCR can
currently deal with is only a fraction of the additional number
of climate refugees that many studies predict for 2050.
44. António Guterres became United Nations Secretary-General on
1 January 2017 after serving as United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees. He has declared himself “strongly opposed” to the
extension of the Geneva Convention by creating a “climate refugee”
status. Instead, he urges for better global protection, perhaps
contained in a new convention which would be inspired by the Nansen
Initiative, which has been launched by Switzerland, Norway, Australia,
Germany, Bangladesh, the Philippines, Costa Rica, Mexico and Kenya,
to create solidarity mechanisms.
45. At all events, existing governance arrangements are not sufficient
to cope with the looming climate “refugee” crisis, so new frameworks
should be discussed and agreed internationally, taking into account
the specificities of displacement due to the environment (the minimal
chance of return, the predictability of situations, the collective
rights of the communities concerned, the need for international
assistance to be given to specific third countries and regions).
7. Conclusions
46. The need to find comprehensive
humanitarian and political responses to the refugee crisis is becoming ever
more urgent. In my work on this report, it was extremely frustrating
to realise that most of the potential immediate and viable solutions,
as well as roadmaps for future sustainable migration management,
are present and exist at both international and national levels.
The problem lies in the effective implementation of policies on
the ground and in the fulfilment of promised and pledges by European
States; this is therefore the main message of the present report.
47. Comprehensive solutions must involve dialogue with countries
in situations of armed conflict, implementation of relevant international
treaties, in particular the 1951 Geneva Convention and its 1967 Protocol,
the European Convention on Human Rights and the United Nations Convention
for the Protection of the Rights of the Child. States must continue
their denunciation of cases of abuse of human rights of refugees and
asylum seekers where and when they occur, and governments should
be systematically called to account over such cases. Efficient transnational
information systems must be maintained and developed.
48. The protection of the fundamental rights of migrants should
be equal wherever they find themselves, but there are no universal
solutions to the challenges of migration countries which suit the
very different geographical, economic, social and cultural situations.
States should have the liberty to seek appropriate solutions while
complying with international law and sharing best practices. Migration
of all types will be an increasing feature of the world’s societies
in the foreseeable future, and as a consequence the chances of well-being
for tomorrow’s civilisations depend on the effective protection
of the fundamental rights of people on the move, especially refugees,
who have been deprived of the individual possibility and collective
capacity to ensure their livelihood. Immigration into Europe is
necessary for renewed dynamic and modernisation of societies and
their cultures and is an absolute necessity for Europe’s survival
of the “demographic winter”.