The Philippines has vowed to continue to take a lead role in the negotiations on the Global Compact for Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (GCM), a United Nations agreement that seeks to provide better treatment and protection for migrant workers.
“Manila will continue to champion the cause of migrants when it participates in the preparatory negotiations for the GCM, which will take place in Mexico from December 4 to 6”, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said in a news statement issued on Monday.
“Our experience in the promotion of the welfare and the protection of the rights of Filipino migrants led us to these fundamental advocacies. This firmed up our commitment to stirringly advocate for rights of all migrant workers. The GCM is the primary UN process for advancing these advocacies,” Foreign Secretary Alan Peter S. Cayetano said. The foreign secretary issued the statement from Macau, where he is on an official visit.
“We are also committed to work with our allies and friends in the West who share our values, but have issues and concerns that need to be addressed,” he added.
The DFA and the Department of Labor and Employment, under Secretary Silvestre H. Bello III, are prioritizing programs and issues on the protection and welfare of migrant workers.
“We remain guided by President Duterte’s directive for us to continue working to promote and protect the interests and welfare of our kababayan [countrymen] abroad. And the GCM process is important to the Philippines and we are ready to assume a leadership role to ensure a successful outcome,” Cayetano said.
He added that the government interagency team headed by Foreign Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs Sarah Lou Y. Arriola is now in Puerto Vallarta to push the Philippine migrant’s rights agenda in the GCM negotiations.
Ambassador Teodoro L. Locsin Jr., permanent representative of the Philippines to the United Nations in New York, said that the Philippines is one of the countries that led the campaign for the UN to adopt the Global Compact on Migration.
“The GCM shows that migration has become a major issue in the international agenda and that is why we have fought to mainstream migration into the United Nations development agenda and include it in the Sustainable Development Goals,” Locsin said.
In addition, Ambassador Evan P. Garcia, permanent representative of the Philippines to the United Nations in Geneva, stressed the importance of international migration issues to the country’s national interest.
“The country has to maintain its leadership on international migration governance for the good of our many kababayan now overseas or planning to go abroad,” Garcia said.
During the negotiations in Mexico, the Philippines is also convening a meeting on Migrants in Countries in Crisis Initiative, which produced the Guidelines to Protect Migrants in Countries Experiencing Crisis or Natural Disasters. The guidelines constitute a voluntary toolkit that may be used by states and other stakeholders to respond to protection needs of migrants in countries experiencing crisis or natural disasters.
The forthcoming meeting in Mexico is also expected to produce inputs to the negotiations on the GCM, which will be held at the UN Headquarters New York from February to July next year. The GCM will be adopted at an international conference hosted by Morocco in December 2018.