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Ministerial-Level IOM Council Marks Organization's 60th Anniversary and Looks to the Future of Migration
About 50 government ministers, deputy prime ministers and deputy
ministers will be among those attending IOM's 100th Council next
week to mark the Organization's 60th anniversary and to look to the
future of migration.
The IOM Council, taking place in Geneva between 5-7 December,
will be the largest ministerial gathering in the Organization's
history.
Keynote speeches will be made by Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser, the
President of the 66th Session of the UN General Assembly and Peter
Sutherland, the UN Secretary General's Special Representative for
Migration and Development on 6th December.
A statement by IOM Director General William Lacy Swing, focusing
on the future of migration or the so-called "third wave" of
globalization will set the stage for the Ministerial segment of the
Council on the same day.
Complementing those insights will be the official launch of the
World Migration Report 2011 which this year focuses on
Communicating Effectively about Migration given the all too-often
biased, polarized and negative debate on migration and
migrants.
The launch of the report, which advocates the need for migrants
to have a greater say in the migration polemic in a bid to more
clearly illustrate the human dimension of this global phenomenon,
will be followed by a special panel of Migrants' Voices.
Sharing their experiences and thoughts on how migration has
shaped our world, panellists include Oxford University Professor
Ian Goldin, the well-known basketball player Dikembe Mutombo, the
Sierra Leonian Deputy Foreign Minister and one-time migrant, Ebun
Aforo-Jusu, journalist Katie Nguyen, a Vietnamese refugee and Eric
Urfer, director of the Yverdon Conservatory of Music.
Meanwhile, at least 14 new countries have applied for membership
to IOM at this special Council. Their admission on the first day of
the gathering will increase IOM membership from 132 countries to
146.
These include Antigua and Barbuda, Chad, the Union of Comoros,
Djibouti, Ethiopia, Guyana, the Holy See, Maldives, Micronesia,
Mozambique, Nauru, South Sudan, Seychelles and Vanuatu.
In addition, the Economic Community of Central African States
(ECCAS), the East African Community (EAC), the Southern African
Development Community (SADC), the Common Market for Eastern and
Southern Africa (COMESA) and the NGO Committee on Migration, will
be admitted as Observers to IOM.
"The admission of so many new Members and Observers at this
Council not only underlines IOM's significant growth in the past
10-15 years, but also the critical importance of migration to
global development. There is a clear and growing recognition that
despite the many economic challenges the world is currently facing,
migration is here to stay and that we all need to work together to
ensure its success in the future," says IOM Director General
William Swing.
Please note there will be a live webcast on 6th December of the
statement by IOM Director General Swing, keynote addresses, the
launch of the World Migration Report 2011 and the Migrants' Voices
Panel.
For further information on the agenda and the 100th IOM Council
as well as on IOM 60 years on, please go to the home page of:
class="paragraph-link-no-underline" href=
"http://www.iom.int">www.iom.int
Journalists not accredited to the UN Palais des Nations and who
wish to attend the IOM Council, please contact as soon as possible
in Geneva:
Jean Philippe Chauzy
Tel: + 41 22 717 9361
+ 41 79 285 4366
E-mail:
"mailto:jpchauzy@iom.int">jpchauzy@iom.int
Jemini Pandya
Tel: + 41 22 717 9486
+ 41 79 217 3374
E-mail:
"mailto:jpandya@iom.int">jpandya@iom.int
Jumbe Omari Jumbe
Tel: + 41 22 717 9405
+ 41 79 812 7734
E-mail:
"mailto:jjumbe@iom.int">jjumbe@iom.int