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Migration In The Black Sea Region

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  • Migration In The Black Sea Region

    MIGRATION IN THE BLACK SEA REGION

    A1+
    04:28 pm | June 04, 2009

    Politics

    A new series of IOM reports published today provide a unique insight
    into migration flows to, through and from the Black Sea Region,
    a vast track of land connecting nations in Europe, the Middle East
    and Central Asia. The region is home to an estimated 350 million
    inhabitants, including some 23 million migrants.

    The profiles, which detail migration patterns in 12 countries (Armenia,
    Albania, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece, Moldova, Romania,
    the Russian Federation, Serbia, Turkey and Ukraine), underline the
    fact that poverty and a lack of job opportunities are the main push
    factors for migration flows within and outside of the region.

    It notes that limited opportunities for legal migration continue to
    fuel irregular migration, with the Black Sea region at the crossroad of
    several smuggling and trafficking routes towards the European Union,
    such as the Eastern Mediterranean, the Central and Eastern European
    and the Balkan routes.

    Human trafficking, within and from the region, remains one of the
    biggest challenges that many of the Black Sea countries, such as
    Ukraine, Moldova, Romania, Bulgaria and Albania, have to face.

    The report details migration patterns within the region and especially
    towards the Russian Federation, which hosts more than 12 million
    migrants. These migrants are in particular Russian-speakers from the
    Commonwealth of Independent States who are either employed legally
    or not in the construction, trade and services sectors.

    The report also looks at the role of remittances in the economic
    development of the region. Recorded at USD 26.7 billion in 2007,
    official remittances contribute significantly to the gross domestic
    product, with remittances to Moldova accounting for 36. 2 per cent
    of the country's GDP.

    However, the report states that more needs to be done to develop
    remittance-linked financial products for migrants, to reduce the cost
    of money transfers and to encourage diasporas to invest some of their
    remittances productively.

    "The purpose of the migration profiles is to provide reliable
    and comparable migration data so as to strengthen the ability of
    national migration authorities in the region to effectively manage
    migration flows," says Frank Laczko, IOM's Head of Research and
    Publications. "The overall objective is to contribute towards greater
    coherence of national migration policies and to promote regional
    cooperation."

    The project was funded through IOM's 1035 facility, which has supported
    more than 200 projects in 85 Member States since 2001.
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