The International Organization for Migration (IOM) will soon
launch a US$3-million project to improve China's migration
management "capacity building", IOM Director-General Brunson
McKinley said yesterday.
"Capacity building means research, training, workshops and
visits to places that have managed migration effectively," he
said.
The project will help Chinese government agencies and social
organizations improve their mechanism and services to protect the
rights of migrant workers at home and abroad.
Earlier, McKinley and Chinese Assistant Foreign Minister Cui
Tiankai formally opened the IOM liaison office in Beijing.
The main function of the liaison office will be to maintain
close contact with all parts of the Chinese governments and
society, McKinley said.
McKinley is on a four-day visit to China, during which he has
held talks with heads of the ministries of foreign affairs, labor
and security, which are IOM's major partners.
"We had very good talks, open and friendly, both at the
ministerial and the senior working level. I must say I found a very
positive attitude," McKinley said.
Set up in 1951, IOM is the leading inter-governmental
organization in the field of migration. With 120 member and 19
observer states and offices in more than 100 countries, the
Switzerland-based organization is dedicated to promoting humane and
orderly migration.
It provides services to and advises governments and
immigrants.
China became an IOM observer state in June 2001, and the two
sides signed an agreement on September 5, 2006, allowing IOM to
open a liaison office in Beijing.
As an observer country, China can attend its council meetings
but does not have the voting power.
McKinley said the Beijing project was made possible because of
the Chinese government, International Labor Organization and the
European Union.
IOM is looking for other "ideas, concepts or proposals" too, to
help the Chinese government, economy and society.
More than 500,000 Chinese work abroad for domestic companies,
and the number of those seeking employment with overseas firms has
been increasing in recent years, the IOM website says.
Besides, a huge mass of people move from China's rural areas to
its cities for employment, with their estimated number being more
than 100 million at any point.
Correspondently, China has a large population of overseas people
who work or study in the country.
Safeguarding the rights and interests of all these people and
maximizing the benefits of migration for national development are
today a priority for the government.
"China is now beginning to realize it's importance in
international migration. It's preparing to deal with migration as a
policy issue," McKinley said.
"There is a gap between the reality of China's migration and the
ability of Chinese society to deal with it in an effective way.
That's why our first program would be to train Chinese
officials."
Problems arising out of internal migration is also an issue that
IOM hopes to address with the help of the Chinese government.
Some of IOM's experiences in other countries may be useful to
China, especially the question migrants' integration in the urban
milieu, he said.
"IOM is not selling programs to China but asking it what it
needs. First step, listen; second step, help."
The problems associated with China's internal migration
integration are largely because of the shortcomings in the system,
said Han Keqing, an expert on social security with Renmin
University of China.
"The hukou (permanent residential permit) system, social and
regional prejudices are all related to the policies. So it's good
for IOM to share its experience, especially in 'capacity building'
with China," Han said.
China is the last leg of McKinley's four-nation tour in Asia
that has taken him to Japan, the Philippines and the Republic of
Korea.
(China Daily March 21, 2007)
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