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    IOM Chief commends Sri Lanka’s dynamism and perseverance as the Chair of the CP

    April 03, 2017

    Director General of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), Ambassador William Lacy Swing has commended Sri Lanka on its dynamism and perseverance as the Chair of the Colombo Process (CP) which has led to numerous achievements, and steered the CP to a progressive path and to a very good future.


    Noting that due to its regular engagement, CP is among the strongest Global Regional Consultative Processes, Ambassador Swing commended Nepal for taking up the leadership of the process, adding that the IOM stood ready to continue supporting the Chair of the CP.

     


    Ambassador Swing made these observations on the occasion of the transfer of the Chair of the CP, from the Government of Sri Lanka to the Government Nepal, during a meeting held at the IOM Headquarters in Geneva on 29th March.

     


    Sri Lanka which assumed the CP Chair for a second time in October 2013, developed a 'road map’ which sought to strengthen engagement between CP Member States and countries of destination, under the overall theme "International Labour Migration for Prosperity: Adding Value by Working Together".

     

     Initially 5 thematic areas were identified  and working groups comprising experts in each considered pragmatic ways and means on how to: promote skills qualification and recognition; foster ethical recruitment; promote pre-departure orientation and empowerment with an additional focus on migration and health; reduce the costs of remittances transfer; and track labour market trends.In August 2016 at the 5th Ministerial Meeting held in Colombo led by the CP Chair-in-Office Minister of Foreign Employment Talatha Atukorale, the CP expanded its scope by adding 4 more thematic areas, namely:  enhancing consular support for migrant workers; promoting migrant health; operationalizing the migration-related goals in the SDGs; and promoting equality of women migrant workers.

     


    The period also saw an expansion in the CP membership, and  the strengthening of relations  with other migration related Processes and Partners, including the Abu Dhabi Dialogue (ADD), the European Union (EU), the Global Forum on Migration and Development (GFMD) and the Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of Migrants. During Sri Lanka’s stewardship the CP also strengthened the institution building process by operationalizing a self-funding mechanism and formalized the engagement among Geneva-based CP Member States to facilitate regular dialogue and work during inter-sessional periods between Senior Officials and Ministerial Meetings (SOMs).

     


    Speaking on the occasion as the Chair of the Geneva-based CP operational platform, Sri Lanka's Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva Ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha said, “over the past 3 ½ years Sri Lanka had sought to build an overarching institutional architecture, to overcome the conventional wisdom, that the CP countries in most instances being competitors, were beyond the capacity of leveraging as a Group. Detailing the tangibles achieved in this period, the Ambassador  said “Sri Lanka can look back with satisfaction to this period of stewardship, confident that it sought to tackle some of the most pressing issues faced by labour migrants of CP Member States ; put in place some of the best practices to mitigate and overcome their problems; developed some of the most vital linkages between the sources of supply and demand; and strengthened both the institutional and financial capacity for the CP to be better prepared for the future.”Thanking all parties that helped in ensuring the success of Sri Lanka’s period as Chair, in particular to the member states and IOM in headquarters and in the field and the Swiss Development Cooperation (SDC), and assuring Nepal Sri Lanka’s support as the CP Chair, Ambassador Aryasinha noted, that Sri Lanka’s Minister of Foreign Employment Talatha Atukorale, recently assumed the Chair of the larger migration platform of Asia – the Abu Dhabi Dialogue (ADD) which brings together both migrant labour sending and receiving countries, “will no doubt be a matter of re-assurance to Member States of the CP, that Sri Lanka will continue to work for the welfare of the Asian migrant workforce with even greater vigour”.

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