Brussels, 02 February – Senior Officials from the European Union (EU) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) met in Brussels today for their tenth annual meeting under the EU-IOM strategic cooperation framework.
IOM Director General Amy Pope endorsed the long-standing dialogue between the EU and IOM as a model of multilateral cooperation on human mobility.
The ongoing war in Ukraine, de-stabilizing crises and conflicts in Africa and the Middle East, the pervasive effects of climate change, and political agreement on the New EU Pact on Migration and Asylum formed the backdrop of the high-level exchange.
In this context, Director General Pope emphasised the importance of approaching migration as a means to unlock human potential through partnerships and initiatives that can enrich our societies.
“We often say there are no quick, easy solutions to managing migration better, but nothing moves forward without cooperation,” said Pope. “In partnership with the EU, we are committed to working comprehensively and globally to leverage the opportunities and promise of safe, orderly migration at a time when the world needs it most.”
Gert Jan Koopman, Director General for European Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations, emphasised the need to work with a comprehensive, holistic approach founded on mutually beneficial objectives and clear deliverables.
“Our efforts across various aspects of migration are closely aligned with our endeavours in additional policy domains such as trade and investment and the rule of law. The International Organization for Migration is an important partner in our endeavours and for the implementation of sustainable solutions for the forthcoming challenges,”said DG Koopman.
Discussions at today’s meeting focused on events impacting stability and mobility in the EU’s neighbourhood and globally, key migration policy developments, new initiatives to promote legal migration pathways, return, reintegration and migrant protection, and the challenges for migration and displacement, particularly in Africa.
The EU highlighted the key role IOM has as a humanitarian and implementing partner of EU migration policy supporting the EU in its comprehensive approach to migration and displacement issues, and delivering in various policy and operational areas, from emergency assistance, humanitarian aid and protection, to border management, fight against smuggling as well as in the field of return and reintegration.
The EU currently has over 80 short and longer-term projects implemented through IOM across all countries and regions, for an overall amount of over EUR 1 billion. Together with its Member States, the EU represents IOM’s biggest donor.
The EU-IOM meeting was hosted by the Directorate-General for European Neighbourhood and Enlargement Negotiations (DG NEAR) on behalf of the EU. Joining IOM Director-General Amy Pope and senior IOM officials were senior representatives from the Directorate-General for European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (DG ECHO), the European External Action Service (EEAS), the Directorate-General for Migration and Home Affairs (DG HOME), and the Directorate-General for International Partnerships (DG INTPA).
Background
In July 2012, the EU and IOM established a Strategic Cooperation Framework to enhance collaboration on migration, development, humanitarian response and human rights issues. This built on their shared interest in bringing the benefits of well-managed international migration to migrants and society. Today’s meeting, the tenth of its kind since the launch of the Strategic Cooperation, was one of the high-level discussions that advance cooperation between the two organisations. The first EU-IOM Senior Officials Meeting under the Strategic Cooperation Framework was held in Brussels on 03 May 2013.
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For more information, please contact:
Ryan Schroeder at IOM Brussels + 32 492 25 02 34, rschroeder@iom.int