UN top officials declares that allowing
refugees to access the legal labour market is a good practice to be duplicated
in a Newsweek
article dating 28/04/2015 :
Allowing refugees to enter the workforce
helps to relieve the humanitarian burden in host countries and is "best
practice" according to a top UN official, who is warning that Turkey needs
help from the international community to deal with "an unprecedented"
number of refugees. Many refugees will enter the labour market, both legally
and illegally warns Clark, but if they enter it illegally they are in danger of
being exploited. "In the case of access to the labour market, this is most
definitely a best practice," she adds.
Helen Clark, the administrator of the UN
Development Program (UNDP) says countries bearing the brunt of the refugee
crisis caused by the ongoing conflicts in Syria, Iraq and Libya, need more
support. She points out that legislation proposed by the Turkish
government, which will allow refugees to enter certain sectors of the
labour market if passed, is a positive move, and one that other countries
should consider also adopting.
Warning that the number of refugees
in Turkey could reach 2.5 million by the end of the year, Clark, who is a
former prime minister of New Zealand, told Newsweek: "Turkey is now the largest host of refugees anywhere
in the world." Clark says
the situation in Turkey is unprecedented. "In the case of Turkey it began
receiving a few hundred, then a few thousands, then a few tens of thousands,
then a few hundreds of thousands of people, and now it has up to the 1.7
million from Syria alone. "
"Turkey for a long time has never
asked for any help but this is becoming quite a burden and where we see that
the partners can help is the host communities do need support with the
provision of basic services, they need support with regional economic
development to absorb people."
According to the UN Refugee Agency
(UNHCR), there are more than 1.7 million Syrian refugees in Turkey, along with
around 300,000 from Iraq. It's believed that by the end of the year as many as
500,000 more refugees from Syria will have made their way to Turkey.
"We would really ask for
international partners to be stepping up support for the host community side of
the appeal," says Clark, adding that the authorities in countries hosting
large numbers of refugees need more support due to the increased pressure on sanitation,
jobs, and accommodation.
Clark adds that from the highest level of
Turkish government the attitude to Syrian refugees has been one of
hospitality."I regarded that as really very positive, the fact Turkey
willingly invested in camps, and the camps are a higher standard than ones I've
seen in other parts of the world, then the progressive moves on the labour
market," she explains.This hospitality appears to be reflected in Turkish
society, although a further influx of refugees could exacerbate tensions,
according to Alev Scott, a Newsweek correspondent based in Istanbul.
"There are tensions but everyone is
quite suprised by how relatively, it's not that bad," she says. "Of
course there have been some fights breaking out, especially in south-eastern
border towns, which have borne the brunt of it in the sense that Istanbul is a
massive city already so it can absorb more. The smaller cities are less well
equipped to absorb that number of refugees."
The secretary-general of the United
Nations meanwhile has called the Mediterranean a "sea of tears"
following the deaths of hundred of migrants trying to cross from Libya to
Europe, calling on the international community to do more to help.
"I think it seems to be the worst
humanitarian crisis since the Second World War," said Ban Ki-moon on board
an Italian naval ship the San Giusto yesterday, on a visit to see Italian naval
operations in action.
"So many thousands of people have
lost their lives in their pursuit for a better future. I know why they have been
risking their lives despite very difficult challenges. It is because [of a]
lack of opportunity, their pursuit for peace and a better future. We have to
care for them. At the same time, I know it is a huge challenge for the Italian
Government and, in a broader sense, European governments. Not a single country
– like Italy – can bear all this responsibility."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments