
2. This model is controlled by large multinational corporations and some governments that move in the context of globalization and financialization of capital accumulation in an effort to deepen excessive environmental degradation and precarious employment. This process involves the intensification of uneven development and the asymmetries within countries and between countries and regions, with increasing inequality and social exclusion, discrimination, racism and xenophobia.
3. This growing ethnic, racial and gender reflect the emerging policies of criminalization of migrant women and men of all ages who have been moving in a growing militarization of borders, outsourcing and regionalization has its most raw in recent events in expulsion of Roma from France, the constant rejections Fence Melilla, in the Arizona Law, the thousands killed in the various borders of the world, thousands of displaced annual climate of Bangladesh and the slaughter of 72 migrants in Tamaulipas, Mexico.
4. Forced migration is a consequence of the restructuring process is a growing capitalist monopolization of production, services and global trade. These mass migrations due to the violence of conflict and disasters, human trafficking and smuggling of migrants and the dispossession, exclusion and unemployment.
global crisis and migration
5. is a multidimensional crisis of capitalism: economic, financial, energy, environmental and food industries. This crisis represents the failure of neoliberal globalization, especially in its financial dimension, with serious social and environmental consequences for all humanity.
6. In countries of origin, the crisis has meant an immediate reduction in migratory flows, a decline in remittances and most importantly, refutes the false paradigm of development based on international migration and remittances, promoted in recent years by the International Monetary Fund, World Bank and the Inter-American Development Bank as a way to justify the adjustment policies structural and the disappearance of national policies and social economic development as a priority for governments.
7. economies from the global south (Africa, Asia and Latin America), before the crisis experienced significant economic growth based on exports of raw materials, reaffirming the historic role of these countries as providers of resources energy and natural. This growth resulted in the expulsion of millions of people, with no chance of a genuine process of comprehensive economic and social development.
8. The model worked for large industrial and financial capital as host economies were able to absorb the vast flow of migrants, but now when the crisis persists and the north is a priority to restore the profitability of large corporations, is evidence that never a lack of sustainability of the model, which endangers life, reproduction of life, the very existence of humanity and the planet.
9. In connection therewith, el cambio climático (resultado de la degradación ambiental provocada por el desarrollo capitalista) se impone hoy día como una cruda realidad, trayendo consigo transformaciones dramáticas en los ecosistemas y en la vida de millones de personas, trayendo consigo más migraciones y afectando especialmente a los habitantes de las zonas rurales, costeras y urbano-marginales, convertidos ahora en los nuevos migrantes y refugiados climáticos, con particular impacto sobre los países económicamente dependientes. Esta situación se ve agravada por el desarrollo de megaproyectos como represas, carreteras, minería y agronegocio, generando así mayores desplazamientos especialmente de los pueblos indígenas, afrodescendientes and peasants.
Human rights and migration
10. At different stages of the global economic cycle, the constant is a systematic violation of human rights of migrants, refugees and displaced persons in countries of origin, transit and destination. This implies the challenge of securing the lives of all migrants through the design and implementation of public policies (in the social, economic, immigration) to put in the center of its design to people and incorporate the perspective of human rights, gender and cultural diversity, which implies effective participation of the migrants, accountability, equality and non discrimination, enforcement mechanisms, justiciability and not regressive.
11. defend the right to hold as a result of implementation of economic, social, cultural and environmental, human mobility and the free return, the right to migrate, to migrate no longer be moved and displaced and the right to peace. Facing the fact that borders have become areas of rights not we call for a new UN convention to ensure respect for human rights in all borders in the world.
12. international wars, internal armed conflicts, massive violations international humanitarian law and human rights continue to cause displacement and refugee flows for protection that affects the lives of millions of people. Governments deny the magnitude of the crisis and impose models of security and border militarization at the expense of the rights of people displaced and shelter.
13. is necessary to develop greater knowledge about the situation of the various forms of migration, with special emphasis on migrant women and girls, children, adolescents and youth, and generate indicators that account for the conduct and coverage of human rights of all persons migrants, refugees and displaced in different regions and countries, and to account for the contribution of migrants, refugees and displaced persons in countries of destination and the costs to countries of origin.
diversity, coexistence and socio-cultural transformations
14. recognize that international migration today, major challenges with regard to cultural diversity, multiculturalism, multiculturalism and identity construction. Recognising that there can be no hierarchy among cultures, but relations of complementarity and solidarity to enhance the knowledge of all the people involved in the dynamic process of migration.
15. In this regard, stresses the fact that the States in the countries of origin and destination, in most cases, little is done to develop policies that promote new forms of coexistence and recognition of diversity, that void is being filled by civil society organizations and associations of migrants who take the implementation of aid and support programs targeted to this population. It should be noted that in this framework, for example, transnational families do not have clear policies on the part of governments to favor one side reunification and other processes to ensure full participation in host societies and their countries of origin.
16. is very important to consider the gender, ethnic, generational, class, religious diversity and sexual diversity, to think and implement policies for the migrant population. They can not give equal treatment to groups and individuals with specific characteristics. Certain groups, such as women, girls, children, adolescents and youth, Afro-descendants and indigenous people with different sexual orientations and practices, people with disabilities, among others, are more strongly discrimination and xenophobia, which is indispensable to adapt policies to recognize these differences as a way to overcome in practice, its consequences.
New forms of slavery, human exploitation and servitude
17. In the context of globalization, accelerated opening of national economies, dismantling and privatization of state structures, the crime industry increasingly controls the trafficking and smuggling of migrants, as a new space for the recovery of their activities producing new forms of slavery, human exploitation and slavery in the different global migration corridors. This forces the different national states to ensure protection of migrants, refugees and displaced persons (especially women, children and young people), respect for international conventions, international cooperation between countries to ensure this and fight and punishment of international organized crime networks.
18. The increasing feminization of global migration flows, is explained largely by the incorporation of women into global chains of care in the countries of destination, under heavy labor precariousness that entails a process of personal degradation and serious impacts family in communities of origin, forming one of the new forms of servitude century. With regard to trafficking for sexual exploitation in many countries for the protection of victims apply immigration laws and no protection laws recommended by the Palermo Protocol.
19. demand the elimination of programs called temporary workers, guests and invitees, which constitute a legal form of slavery under new forms of agreements that give legal tender for the operation of the labor force, violating all the rights labor, social and political rights of migrants, with both the complascencia authorities of the sending countries as countries of destination.
proposals, demands and challenges
20. With regard to the role that fits him like WSFM process, the challenge of building a new paradigm of civilization to ensure a harmonious relationship between human rights and of Mother Earth, and in turn to suggest and define new policies on development and migration, requires moving from the vision of forums such as events, towards a perspective of learning and global collaboration of actors that allows the strengthening of migrant organizations in the areas of decision making, strengthening Network to address the impacts of the crisis model and the construction of the new model.
21. This challenge also implies the building of local authorities, regional, national and global, allowing gradually be gaining ground in the definition of public agendas, programs and projects with a focus on full rights for all inhabitants of the planet: collective construction of a Universal Citizenship, with the strengthening of organizations of migrants and their home communities and new agents of social transformation.
22. New development models with a comprehensive view of human rights must articular migration as an element having positive impacts and costs and that require public policies that promote alternative development and reduce the first seconds. Migrant organizations that have acquired a growing social and political role in their countries of origin and destination, with several joint initiatives of local development and advocacy, may act as a strategic ally of their own home communities in the implementation of new development strategies.
23. Another challenge in the dynamics of building and strengthening of new players, is the incorporation of the vision of girls children, adolescents and youth, which requires appropriate mechanisms and strategies that incorporate their proposals and ensure effective participation in the process.
24. We demand full respect for human rights of migrants and the immediate closure of all admission and detention centers throughout the world. And removal of mounting raids and deportations of hundreds of thousands of migrants in transit countries and destination.
25. denounce the criminal and criminalizing approach of mass media on migrants, who incite xenophobia and racism. We require information objective and informed.
26. The WSFM reiterates its call for solidarity and support to the causes of all the peoples of the world, especially to the cause of the Palestinian people to ensure their right of return and in its condemnation of the Israeli government's racist policies. We also support the cause of the Saharawi people, Kurdish people and all those who suffer violence, expulsion and displacement of economic or political reasons on every continent, among the most critical cases of Colombia, Sudan, Iraq.
27. promote the development of partnerships with other stakeholders, unions and progressive academic institutions.
28. required to sign and ratify the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and their families as well as the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, to all states not been made, the preparation of periodic reports and its effective implementation by States Parties. We also recommend alternative reporting by civil society.
29. We demand that the United Nations framework to materialize a body for migration from the perspective of human rights.
30. demand the annulment of the agreements and readmission agreements and the cessation of such agreements between Europe and third countries and third countries to each other, and the protection of migrants being deported to the implementation of these agreements. 31. We reaffirm our collective commitment to building a new model of civilization that privileges life, integrating people, harmony between women, men and nature and to ensure reproduction and sustainability of humanity and Mother Earth for the following millennia.
ONE WORLD RIGHTS FOR ALL PEOPLE EVERYWHERE AND AT ALL TIMES ... collapsed MODEL ACTORS BUILDING.
October 11, 2010
Quito, Ecuador
0 comments:
Post a Comment