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Global migrants reach 191 million
![]() Many African migrants make dangerous journeys to Europe Nearly 200 million people now live outside their country of origin - up by about a quarter since 1990, a United Nations report on migration says. The report by UN Secretary General Kofi Annan says most migrants have gone to rich countries - one in five of them to the US. In some countries money sent home from abroad accounts for a large proportion of the national income. Mr Annan said migration was a now a major feature of international life. He described his report to the UN General Assembly as an "early road map for this new era of mobility". "International migration can be highly beneficial for the development both of the countries they come from and of those where they arrive" Kofi Annan UN Secretary General His report found there were an estimated 191 million migrants around the world in 2005. This compares with 155 million in 1990. Most migrants moved to wealthy countries, although some 75 million people moved from one developing country to another. Money sent by wire transfers amounts to a high share of national income in the Philippines and Serbia and Montenegro. 'Engine of history' "International migration, supported by the right policies, can be highly beneficial for the development both of the countries they come from and of those where they arrive," Mr Annan said. But, he warned, these benefits "are contingent on the rights of the migrants themselves being respected and upheld". Mr Annan's report also highlighted the risk of "brain drain". An estimated 60% of the highly educated people of Guyana, Haiti and Jamaica now live abroad. The report proposes setting up a permanent forum on the issue so governments can compare their different policies. The report found that Europe hosted 34% of all migrants in 2005, North America 23% and Asia 28%, with 9% in Africa, 3% in Latin America and 3% in Oceania. Meanwhile, senior African and European officials have drafted a joint plan to tackle the growing crisis over illegal immigrants making dangerous journeys from Africa to enter Europe. Their plan, to be formally adopted at a conference on migration in Morocco next month, includes tougher preventative measures with aid to encourage young Africans to remain in their homelands. But Senegal Interior Minister Ousmane Ngom told the meeting in Dakar that migration could not be eradicated as it "remains an engine of history" which has some "immense advantages". ![]() Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/5054214.stm
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"Do not be suprised, my friend, that I long so much for remote lands in which people feel immensely rich with very little; it is true that I live in Rome enjoying a life of fame and prestige, but it is also true that I was born from Celts and Iberians." --Marcus Valerius Martialis, Epigrammata |
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Quote:
Even for a trip of hardships and dangers like those taken by Sub-Saharan immigrants on boats, the costs are usually too high for the average Sub-Saharan to be able to afford it. Thus, many of those taking the chance are not from the lower classes in their countries. Other travel options are probably/surely more expensive. This, however, does not seem to apply to immigrants from South America. Rather the opposite. Also, South Americans returning to their countries of origin are more likely get a job back at home as their experience through exposition in Spain gives them an added value. On the other extrem, someone was commenting the other day on a story related to how immigration does not help the countries of origin and how it can even be negative in some cases: The story goes about one Sub-Saharan immigrant in Spain who was sending an amount of money back to his family in Africa. Say some 100 to 150 euros per month. Two years later he retuns home expecting that his family will have invest that money wisely. Instead, he finds out that his family had abandoned the lands that belonged to them and that they cultivated and spent all of the money that he had sent to them. So, he found himself in a situation with no money left and their means of income (the land) abandoned and ruined.
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'Dardanidae duri, quae uos a stirpe parentum prima tulit tellus, eadem uos ubere laeto
accipiet reduces. Antiquam exquirite matrem: hic domus Aeneae cunctis dominabitur oris, et nati natorum, et qui nascentur ab illis.' We can easily forgive a child who is afraid of the dark; the real tragedy of life is when men are afraid of the light. –Plato– |
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