MPI Europe Event
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Migrants in Africa & COVID-19: From emergency measures to inclusive social protection systems |
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Most African states closed their borders in attempt to contain COVID-19, halting crossborder trade and pastoral corridors, resulting in a loss of livelihood that has been devastating for many, including migrants, in the absence of a community-based safety net. For instance, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) reports migration flows in West and Central Africa were nearly halved between January and April, leaving tens of thousands of people stranded and requiring assistance with shelter, health care, and food. Already under pressure to deliver health services and emergency safety nets for their citizens, host countries often lack the capacity and the resources to support migrants, especially the ones who are in transit or informal workers without legal status. As a result, assistance for migrants during this public-health crisis has often come from international organisations such as IOM, civil-society actors, or diasporas. In the longer term, the coronavirus crisis raises questions about social protection systems in Africa and which dimensions should be set up and prioritized for funding. In many ways, the pandemic has confirmed the pressing need for social protection for everyone, particularly in terms of health care, as vulnerabilities in one group can affect overall community wellbeing. But the looming economic crisis also risks limiting the appetite of host governments and development aid donors for more ambitious protection systems for non-nationals, which may ultimately reduce the benefits of regional and continental free movement regimes that African countries have been working towards for a decade. Join MPI Europe for a discussion exploring what emergency measures have been deployed by African governments and aid actors in response to COVID-19 to assist migrants in need. Speakers will examine what the health crisis says about social protection systems, the incentives for inclusionary systems for all, who should support these mechanisms in times of crisis, and how to make (at least some of) these measures sustainable. |
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