UN Committee On Migrant Workers Publishes Findings On Congo, Senegal And Türkiye
GENEVA (19 June 2024)
The UN Committee on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families (CMW) today issued its findings on the Republic of the Congo, Senegal and Türkiye.
The findings contain the Committee’s main concerns and recommendations on the implementation of the International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families, as well as positive aspects. Key highlights include:
Congo
The Committee
commended the several measures taken by Congo to combat
trafficking in persons and exploitationand to improve
birth registration. It, however, was concerned about the
lack of detailed information and statistics on many
migration-related issues.It recommended that the State
party establish a system to collect data on the situation of
migrant workers and their families, particularly those in an
irregular situation, and provide publicly available
statistics on foreign migrant workers, migrant workers in
transit, nationals working abroad and their employment
conditions, to effectively promote human rights-based
migration policies.
The Committee also remained concerned about the information received on child labour in the informal sector and the fact that children often work in dangerous conditions.The Committee called for a national plan to reduce and eliminate child labour. It asked Congo to provide necessary assistance, including psychosocial rehabilitation, to migrant workers, especially children, who have been victims of labour exploitation, increase unannounced and spontaneous labour inspections, especially in the informal sector, as well as to prosecute and punish those exploiting migrant workers, in particular children.
Senegal
The Committee
welcomed Senegal’s adoption of legislation and strategies
to combat trafficking in persons and irregular migration.
It, however, regretted the lack of a comprehensive plan on
migration, a lack of a national coordination mechanism, and
the shortcomings in processing disaggregated data about
migrant workers. The Committee recommended the adoption of a
comprehensive strategy on migration and a centralized system
to collect data on migrant workers and their families,
particularly those in irregular situations, in cooperation
with the African Union Migration Observatory.
The Committee expressed its concern about the alleged exploitation of “talibé/koranic students” children, particularly those from neighbouring countries such as Guinea, Mali, Gambia and Guinea-Bissau, and the failure to reintegrate them into their families of origin. It also raised its concern over economic exploitation, particularly of migrant domestic workers and of children in gold mines. The Committee reiterated its previous recommendations to scale up the fight against this worrying phenomenon and ensure the perpetrators of forced labour and exploitation, especially children, are held accountable.
Türkiye
The
Committee recognized Türkiye’s efforts in safeguarding
the rights of migrant workers and their families, including
as one of the world’s largest refugee-hosting countries.
It, however, noted with concerns the continued reports of
arbitrary detention and the detention of children, people
with disabilities and others in vulnerable situations. It
called on the State party to effectively implement
alternatives to administrative detention, ensure that
measures are taken to prevent arbitrary and unlawful
detention, and cease migration-related detention of migrant
workers and their families who are in vulnerable situations,
in law and in practice.
The Committee also voiced its concern about information received on the large scale of expulsion of migrants, in addition to reports of involuntary returns. It called on the State party to uphold the principle of non-refoulement and the prohibition of collective and arbitrary expulsion by thoroughly evaluating each case individually and by transparently investigating allegations of coercion.
The above findings, officially known as Concluding Observations, are now available on the session page.