Fury as EU use migrant crisis in Brexit talks as deal on the brink over huge fish row – The Sun

BRUSSELS sparked fury this morning after using the fate of desperate Channel migrants as a Brexit bargaining chip - as a deal remained on the brink over a huge row over fish.

The EU is refusing to help stop small boat crossings until Britain caves on a slew of unreasonable trade talk demands, sparking a major backlash.

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The latest round of talks broke up today without any progress again, sparking a bitter war of words between negotiators Michel Barnier and David Frost.

Sources said the bloc could use the crisis - which Britain has long been pushing the EU for action on - as part of the ongoing Brexit negotiations on a future trade deal.

Former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith fumed: '"hile Brussels plays games, migrants die in the channel because of their pathetic politicking."

Privately Ministers accused Eurocrats of having "blood on their hands" as the latest round of talks ended in a bitter war of words and sniping.

Nearly 5,000 migrants have attempted to make the dangerous crossing to Britain from France this year alone - double that of the total last year.

Britain wants the bloc to help stop the tide of attempts by taking them back to French shores. It's unclear what will happen at the end of the transition period this year when Britain wants to reclaim full control of its border.

Despite the tragic death of a young man in the Channel this month, Brussels cheifs are set to drag their feet on reaching an agreement - and could bring the migrant crisis in as leverage.

A EU diplomatic source working on migration told Reuters: "The UK has interest in this. We can wait.

"The 27 are not that worried. Of that, 25 do not really care at all. France and Belgium can be to some extent preoccupied, but far less than the UK is."

A second diplomat said: If they dont get the overall deal - they dont have a migration deal either.

If they do go for a deal - they may get something on migration as well.

But other sources stressed that fish and EU rules were likely to be more of a sticking point for both warring sides.

The French fear they will end up "on the hook" for all returns from the UK if there's no agreement on asylum as part of the wider trade deal.

British negotiators want any pact to ensure we can carry on sending back migrants to all EU countries after Brexit.

But they don't want it to entirely replicate Brussels' controversial returns rules, which the Home Office says are open to abuse by "activist lawyers".

The EU's contentious Dublin Regulation says Member States can return asylum seekers to the country where they first entered the bloc

Brexit discussions hit the buffers this week as Brussels insisted yet again on Britain signing up to the bloc's rules on state aid - or a deal can't be done.

The UK accused Michel Barnier of "unnecessarily" blocking progress on a Brexit deal as trade talks broke up in acrimony.

Both sides issued gloomy statements following the latest discussions, and a tense dinner earlier this week.

Britain blamed the EU for standing firm - effectively blocking further progress.

Unless we agree to roll over and accept their laws, a deal may not be made at all, Mr Frost suggested.

Mr Frost said today: The EU is still insisting not only that we must accept continuity with EU state aid and fisheries policy, but also that this must be agreed before any further substantive work can be done in any other area of the negotiation, including on legal texts."

He said this blocker makes it "unnecessarily difficult to make progress" and "there is a lot of detail to work through" with little time to get it done.

"Time is short for both sides," he added, vowing to work hard to reach a deal if it's possible.

And when the EU accepts Britain is seeking a free trade deal just like other countries around the world have, it will speed up talks.

A senior source close to the negotiations accused the EU of deliberately putting "obstacles" in the way of the talks.

They stressed that now was the time to move to text-based talks but Brussels were refusing to engage with the draft text they had put forward.

Michel Barnier said today he was "disappointed" by the lack of progress and lashed out at the UK for wasting time - declaring the talks are now "going backwards".

And EU rules are "non-negotiable" if Britain wants continued access to European markets, he said.

He thinks a deal is "unlikely" but Britain is more optimistic, saying its "still possible" but admitting it "will not be easy" to achieve.

The UK wants a deal wrapped up by September, but with talks on the rocks and both sides getting frustrated, it's not set to happen.

Privately British officials said they are "frustrated" with the "strange" approach taken by eurocrats.

No 10 is open to the possibility of scheduling extra rounds in the Autumn and will do "anything necessary" to get a deal over the line if one is close.

Sources said despite the fractious state of the talks and their different backgrounds the two chief negotiators get on well.

One said: "They've struck up quite a good relationship. All the meetings they have are courteous and friendly.

"Sometimes they say quite difficult things to each other, but they keep the process going."

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The next round of discussions comes on 7 September, where British officials have pinned their hope on pushing through the deadlock.

Britain will leave the transition period at the end of the year whatever happens, Boris Johnson has said.

If there's no EU deal, Britain will go onto World Trade Organisation terms with them instead - which could mean extra tarriffs.

Continued here:

Fury as EU use migrant crisis in Brexit talks as deal on the brink over huge fish row - The Sun

Syrian filmmaker recalls ‘terrifying’ journey to UK in projection on Dover cliffs – Arab News

LONDON: Syrian refugee filmmaker Hassan Akkad recalled his terrifying journey across the English Channel and into the UK in a video projected on the White Cliffs of Dover on Friday, in an effort to raise compassionate awareness for migrants being smuggled into the country.

Hello everyone. Apologies for taking over the cliff, but I have a few words that I would love to share with you, the filmmaker and NHS worker said.

My name is Hassan, and five years ago I was on the other side of this Channel trying to cross here. These cliffs were actually visible from our makeshift camp, and they represented hope.

The video, which was organized by activist group Led By Donkeys and which went viral across Twitter and Facebook, comes at the same time that a 28-year-old Sudanese asylum seeker in Calais drowned while attempting to cross the Channel.

Crossing the sea in a rubber dinghy is terrifying and devastating, Akkad said.

Devastating because it makes you feel so helpless and insignificant. And I wouldnt wish it on my worst enemy.

Akkad continued by stating that the UK was not facing a migrant crisis, despite a local news agency reporting that nearly 5,000 migrants have successfully made their way across the border.

Last Thursday, theUK was criticizedby French National Assembly member Pierre-Henri Dumont, who said its refusal to allow asylum claims to be made outside the country had led to the tragedy.

He tweeted: How many more tragedies does it need for the British to find an ounce of humanity?

The inability to claim asylum in Britain without being physically present in the country causes these tragedies, he added.

UK Home Secretary Priti Patel said the incident was an upsetting and tragic loss of a young life, and a brutal reminder of the problem of people smuggling.

Akkad also warned that ministers were using the refugee plight as a distraction.

I will say it again they are using us to distract you from how badly they have managed during thispandemic.

The past few months have proved that the people who made Britain their home didnt hesitate to roll up their sleeves and keep this country running during the worst public health crisis in modern history, he added.

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Syrian filmmaker recalls 'terrifying' journey to UK in projection on Dover cliffs - Arab News

Thousands of migrants denied help in the pandemic – BBC News

Image caption Jeremiah fell through the welfare safety net at the start of the pandemic

Poverty and destitution. That's the reality for thousands of migrants in the UK since the pandemic started.

As lockdown hit, migrants across the nation who often work in casual and low-paid roles saw their jobs disappear or incomes slashed.

But unlike the rest of the country, they have no welfare safety net to fall back on, because a controversial immigration policy known as No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF) means they cannot access benefits.

Recently-released government figures show that applications to the Home Office for the ban to be lifted rose by more than 500% during lockdown compared with the first three months of the year.

That gives an indication of the unprecedented level of financial hardship that families across the country are experiencing.

There are an estimated 1.4 million migrants to the UK from outside the EU who have visas subject to this rule, according to the Migration Observatory, at the University of Oxford.

These migrants cannot receive most government-funded benefits, including child benefit, child tax credits, council tax benefit and disability living allowance. As a last resort, many migrants are having to turn to charities for help.

The Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants (JCWI) says that for the first time in its 53-year history, in addition to its advisory services, it's also providing material support such as cash, food and clothing to migrants.

"During the pandemic, people have been unable to do work that they were otherwise doing," says JCWI chief executive Satbir Singh.

"If that's been casual work or informal work or cash in hand, they obviously don't have access to job retention schemes or the support schemes for self-employed.

"So we've seen an increase in people becoming street homeless, acutely hungry and not being able to afford even basic medication because they literally have no support available to them."

Jeremiah (not his real name) is a migrant from Africa with permission to live and work legally in the UK on a temporary basis.

He has been in the UK for 16 years, working in construction helping to build new homes in and around London. He lives with his wife and three children.

His casual work in construction stopped abruptly following lockdown. Since then, he's struggled to provide for his family.

At the start of lockdown, NRPF barred him from claiming any benefits, including child benefit for all three of his British-born children, although he had been paying taxes on his income for years,

"I've not worked since March this year," he said, adding that he had been having sleepless nights, while he and his wife had had to cut back to one meal a day in order to make sure their children had enough to eat.

After the BBC spoke to Jeremiah, he got in touch to say his application for NRPF to be lifted was successful. He says he is relieved to finally get access to financial support, but is angry his family had to endure four months of poverty while waiting for a decision.

Since Covid-19 was declared a global pandemic, the Citizens Advice Bureau says it receives calls every 20 minutes from migrants desperate to access benefits.

Migrants who are applying for, or who have, leave to remain on family or private life grounds can apply to the Home Office for NRPF to be lifted. But the decision can take months.

Charities across the sector, the Local Government Association and the Work and Pensions Committee have recommended the government suspend NRPF altogether during the coronavirus crisis.

MP Stephen Timms, who chairs the committee, says: "What we need is for the 'no recourse to public funds' restriction to be suspended for the duration of this crisis.

"So that hard-working, law-abiding families can apply for universal credit, just as three million other people have done since this crisis began."

Home Secretary Priti Patel insists there are safeguards in place to support those affected and that the policy is in the public interest.

A government spokesperson said: "We have been clear that no one should find themselves destitute during this crisis due to circumstances beyond their control.

"Extensive action to support those with no recourse to public funds has been taken, such as rent protections, the Job Retention Scheme, the Self-Employed Income Support Scheme, allocating more than 3.2bn to local authorities and 750m for charities to support the most vulnerable."

But charity Khalsa Aid, which normally supports international refugees, says it is not seeing that financial boost filter down to people on the ground.

It set up a food parcel delivery service soon after lockdown, responding to migrants on student visas and undocumented migrants who were struggling to feed themselves.

The charity's workers are delivering more than 200 food parcels each week. Jagdeep Khera, a 22-year-old student and full-time volunteer there, says demand for food boxes has been overwhelming and that it continues to rise as more people find out about their service.

Undocumented migrant workers without official immigration status have no option at all to access welfare.

Pavan Sharma (not his real name) arrived in the UK from India almost 20 years ago. He has been homeless for much of that time. He works for cash in hand for as little as 5 a day - because of the pandemic, that work has gone.

He has been housed by the government as part of their Everyone In scheme for the homeless, but knows the emergency accommodation will come to an end soon.

He thinks the government should give undocumented migrants temporary permission to stay and work in the country. Similar schemes are under way in Italy and Portugal.

"I don't want recourse to public funds. All I need is for the government to give me a document that says I am Pavan Sharma with permission to work," he says.

"I would be independent of the state. I could save some money, leave the shelter, rent a room. I would be able to carry on with my life working six days a week."

The Citizens Advice Bureau points out that the overwhelming majority of people affected by NRPF are people of colour. Black and ethnic minorities, Public Health England says, are also disproportionately affected by Covid-19, partly because of their over-representation in frontline key worker roles.

And without access to benefits, they are incentivised to work even if they are sick or need to shield, which makes NRPF a public health issue.

Satbir Singh, from JCWI, argues NRPF as a policy should be lifted on public health grounds alone.

"It's creating more danger by creating spaces in which people won't necessarily access health care, in which people will work in dangerous conditions," he says.

"It's a political strategy of being as performatively hostile as possible to migrants. And that's why we don't see any movement."

For the time being, those migrants fortunate enough to qualify can apply for NRPF to be lifted on a case-by-case basis.

For the thousands of migrants who don't qualify and who have been affected by coronavirus, charities say they are at heightened risk of, or are already living in, poverty.

They warn that the coronavirus crisis, alongside hostile immigration policy, will only widen existing economic inequalities in the UK.

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Thousands of migrants denied help in the pandemic - BBC News

Syrian refugee who crossed Channel and now works in NHS recalls ‘terrifying’ journey in message projected on to White Cliffs of Dover – Sky News

The face of a Syrian refugee who arrived in Britain thanks to a people smuggler and now works in the NHS has been beamed on to the White Cliffs of Dover.

Hassan Akkad, an NHS cleaner, recalled his own "terrifying" journey to the UK in an emotional plea for compassion for migrants crossing the English Channel.

In a video projected on to the cliffs, he said: "Hello everyone. Apologies for taking over the cliff but I have a few words that I would love to share with you.

"My name is Hassan and five years ago I was on the other side of this Channel trying to cross here. These cliffs were actually visible from our makeshift camp and they represented hope."

Like many migrants arriving on the Kent coast in recent weeks, Mr Akkad said that he had to put his trust in a people smuggler because safe and legal asylum routes are unavailable.

He continued: "Crossing the sea in a rubber dinghy is terrifying and devastating.

"Devastating because it makes you feel so helpless and insignificant. And I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy."

Nearly 5,000 migrants have successfully crossed to the UK in small boats this year, according to the PA news agency, but Mr Akkad said Britain was "not facing a migrant crisis".

He accused ministers of exploiting the issue for their own ends, saying: "I will say it again - they are using us to distract you from how badly they have managed during this pandemic."

"The past few months have proved that the people who made Britain their home didn't hesitate to roll up their sleeves and keep this country running during the worst public health crisis in modern history," he added.

:: Listen to the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

The projection on to the landmark was organised by Led By Donkeys, a group of activists famed for billboards displaying politicians' tweets.

It came as French prosecutors continued to investigate the death of a Sudanese migrant whose body was found on a beach in Calais earlier this week.

He has now been identified as Abdulfatah Hamdallah, who is understood to have decided to try to reach the UK using shovels for oars after having his asylum claim rejected in France.

The 28-year-old's body was discovered on Wednesday morning after a walker found his friend suffering from hypothermia in the middle of the night. A major search took place before his body was found at 8am.

See the original post here:

Syrian refugee who crossed Channel and now works in NHS recalls 'terrifying' journey in message projected on to White Cliffs of Dover - Sky News

Immigration risk is troubling for the EU and southeastern Europe – Euromoney magazine

The Covid-19 crisis has raised the stakes worldwide, plunging the global economy into recession and creating unanticipated fiscal pressures for many countries already struggling with domestic problems, geopolitics and global trade wars.

Consequently, analysts have downgraded Bulgaria, Cyprus, Malta, Romania and Turkey in Euromoneys risk survey.

Greece is the main exception, but lying 60th in the global rankings with a legacy of debt and another economic downturn to endure, it remains one of the riskier EU member states, worse off than Italy or Spain.

For some, such as Turkey, there are domestic risks to consider, which Euromoney has detailed previously.

The lira is on the backfoot again because of concerns about policymaking and institutional risks, two factors that have been consistently downgraded (among others) in the risk survey.

Meddling in the central banks independence is scaring investors, prompting both a current-account deficit, underpinned by increased lending, and portfolio outflows, with capital withdrawn, resulting in the central bank depleting its FX reserves to prop-up an ailing currency.

However, there are also three themes with cross-country indeed, region-wide implications putting southeastern Europe under the radar, and all three are interconnected.

Covid is clearly one. Economies are struggling, not least because of the lack of tourism.

In Romania, crashing 14 places in the global risk rankings this year, to 69th out of 174 countries, political risks are rising again ahead of parliamentary elections scheduled for November, to be preceded by local elections in September.

The main opposition this week called a no-confidence vote that it is close to winning amid unwanted macro-fiscal strains and tensions created by the governments handling of the crisis.

Romania also has a migration crisis of its own, with around 3.5 to four million emigrants, accounting for around a quarter of the population. Many of them work seasonally in the agricultural and tourism sectors, and in healthcare in other parts of the EU.

Gheorghe Savoiu,University of Pitesti

Since April, return migration has brought back 1.3 million Romanians from abroad, of which around 350,000 will be looking for work, putting pressure on the labour market and unemployment rate, says Gheorghe Savoiu, a contributor to Euromoneys country risk survey and a professor at the University of Pitesti.

He also highlights the background political risks with the elections approaching and the fiscal deficit.

Real GDP is forecast to decline in Romania by more than 6% in real terms this year, the unemployment rate is seen scaling up to 9% and the fiscal deficit widening to 8% of GDP, causing a rise in public debt, according to the OECD.

The organization paints a bleaker picture under a double-hit scenario, factoring in a possible second wave of the virus.

There are similar downturns in other countries, with Bulgaria and Greece enduring an 8% real-terms decline in GDP. Greek debt (in gross terms, on a Maastricht basis) will rise again to 197% of GDP, and its unemployment rate to 20% by 2021. In Turkey, the unemployment rate is seen peaking at just over 15% this year.

With tourism and trade buckling, Cyprus and Malta are struggling, and analysts have downgraded in particular the GNP-economic outlook and employment/unemployment indicators for these countries in Euromoneys risk survey this year.

However, Covid is not the only source of anxiety. In a region troubled by doorstep instability, in Libya, Syria and now Lebanon, the Middle East and North African immigration crisis is also rearing again, driving a wedge between Turkey and Greece, on the one hand, and with other countries affected, too, by the flow of refugees, stretching all the way to France and the UK.

In late February, Turkey declared it would apply an open-border policy, no longer trying to stop migrants trying to reach Europe, creating tensions with Greece, says ECR survey contributor Monica Bertodatto, a public finance consultant.

-Monica Bertodatto

The migrant flows stopped when the Covid crisis erupted, with Greece suspending asylum applications and increasing border patrols, but the situation has reverted.

The first-entry countries are facing higher costs in terms of Covid-related sanitary controls and quarantines on top of regular healthcare and identification and screening of asylum applications, she says.

For small countries, like Cyprus or Malta, the risk of outbreaks of Covid due to sick migrants is an issue, as many test positive and the healthcare systems in such states are not sufficient to cope with such sanitary emergency.

However, immigrants rarely stay and are travelling vast distances to destination countries, which also shoulder the costs in terms of housing, language skills, workforce integration and social support.

The immigration crisis is complicated by the third factor: the gas exploration dispute driving a wedge between Greece and Turkey, which are Nato members and allies of the US.

The Turkish-Greek dispute over refugees has a complex backdrop, according to country risk expert and ECR survey contributor Owais Arshad.

While Athens has been recently criticised for its apparent deportation of thousands of asylum-seekers back into the Mediterranean, its dispute with Turkey is also arguably about the exact delineation of maritime economic zones and energy, he says.

Ankaras military might has helped secure the survival of Libyas UN-backed government. As a reward for its intervention, Tripoli has inked several agreements with Turkey delineating their maritime borders and agreeing to cooperate on energy exploration.

However, Arshad adds: Greece, Egypt, Libyas rebel factions, France and the Gulf states oppose these agreements and are eager to claim their own share of these prized resources.

The proxy war in Libya will continue to drive the population overseas, but Arshad sees the economic prizes taking priority over resolving the human crisis, with Greece doing little to assist Libyas government after Nato abandoned the country.

-Alexander Heneine

Another survey contributor and country risk analyst, Alexander Heneine, believes the depressed outlook for the Middle East will continue to present a distinct challenge for countries along the Mediterranean basin.

He says: As economies juggle between containing an acceleration of Covid cases and exercising financial limitation, existing social structures are increasingly prone to buckling under pressure.

The weaponization of immigration, as Heneine calls it, and the mounting economic and political disputes will expose countries to sovereign risks [and create a] more durable paradigm shift in managing the relationship between land and people.

The fact the Middle East is feeling the full force of the global recession and souring political relations, worsening already poor standards of living, threatens to reinforce the exodus towards southern and southeastern Europes major entry points, says Heneine.

On top of that, he notes the aggressive stance of Turkey towards Greece and Cyprus, and the EU more generally.

At face value, an altercation over the rights to offshore natural gas exploration embodies the geopolitical and even cultural tug of war that has truly intensified in recent months, says Heneine.

Economies across southern and southeastern Europe are railing from Covid-19 and its economic implications, but the region is also suffering from a lack of clarity on the part of the EU when it comes to immigration.

For Heneine, the answer is clear: the EU needs to have a conversation about immigration and it needs to control its borders more effectively.

The lack of consensus on this, and other issues, is the largest source of sovereign risk.

Read more here:

Immigration risk is troubling for the EU and southeastern Europe - Euromoney magazine

Delighted migrants pull gang signs & wave as theyre ferried to UK by lifeboat as Coastguard called to boats i – The Sun

DELIGHTED migrants today made gang signs and waved while being ferried to the UK by lifeboat.

The UK Coastguard said it is dealing with a number of incidents in the Channel as more migrants made the dangerous trip across the 21-mile strait.

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This morning, a 16-year-old was found dead on a French beach after a desperate bid to reach UK shores.

The Sudanese youngster had got into difficulty in the sea on Tuesday night and was discovered at Sangatte, near Calais, this morning.

He is believed to have fallen overboard from an inflatable toy dinghy in what is thought to be the first known migrant death this year.

Today, a large group was seen waving and smiling as they were pulled into Dover, Kent, after making the journey in high winds.

One member of the group appeared to be making a gang sign as he made his way into the coastal town.

A Coastguard spokesman told The Sun Online: This morning we have been assisting Border Force with incidents off Dover.

HM Coastguard is committed to safeguarding life around the seas and coastal areas of this country.

We are only concerned with preservation of life, rescuing those in trouble and bringing them safely back to shore, where they will be handed over to the relevant partner emergency services or authorities.

It comes after the leader of Kent County Council yesterday said they cannot take any more child migrants after reaching the limit - with about 420 arriving already this year.

The county has been stretched to capacity to care for the unaccompanied minors arriving on its shores.

Roger Gough, Kent County Council's leader said: "I am deeply disappointed and concerned that, despite our many efforts to avoid this unthinkable situation, it has been necessary to make this announcement today.

"This is a huge challenge for Kent, but a relatively small challenge to solve nationally, and should have been resolved before now."

He warned on August 12 the council was just "days away" from reaching capacity.

More than 100 migrant children are expected to arrive in August - a monthly figure not seen since the last major migrant crisis in 2015.

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Recent figures showed 1,004 migrants were brought ashore by Border Force between August 4 and 13.

A total of 4,511 migrants have made the perilous journey so far this year, compared with 1,823 in 2019.

Home Secretary Priti Patel has vowed to end the illegal crossings through the Channel and crack down on criminal gangs who prey on families' desperation to find a way to get to the UK.

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Delighted migrants pull gang signs & wave as theyre ferried to UK by lifeboat as Coastguard called to boats i - The Sun

Sky News hit with 840 Ofcom complaints after live broadcast while following migrants crossing the Channel on – The Sun

SKY News has been hit with more than 800 Ofcom complaints after its live broadcast while following migrants cross the Channel on a boat.

The telly watchdog today released its weekly broadcast report which showed 840 people complained after watching Sky News' live report on August 11.

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The huge number was 765 more than the next programme on the list Emmerdale which received 75 complaints for Monday nights episode.

Sky News footage showed its team approaching and filming small boats attempting to navigate their way to Britain.

Its team approached a group of around 10 people on a small dinghy in the English Channel.

Reporter Ali Fortescue leant over the side of the boat and asked where they were from.

One answered Iran while another migrant asked please no camera.

The live broadcast was widely slammed on social media with Labour MP Zarah Sultana comparing it to a grotesque reality TV show.

She said: We should ensure people dont drown crossing the Channel, not film them as if it were some grotesque reality TV show.

It comes as 16-year-old Sudanese migrant who disappeared at sea was found dead on a beach near Calais, a French minister has said.

Marlene Schiappa, who is in charge of citizenship in France's government, said the teenager was found on the beach of Sangatte on Tuesday morning.

This is a major news story following the governments suggestion that it needs a military response, and we will continue to cover the story in a responsible and human way."

The tragedy comes as migrants making the perilous crossing has been a focus of the UK Government amid a record number of journeys.

Last week, migrants were spotted taking selfies as they waited to be rescued from the Channel and brought to the UK.

The group of 22 men were left stranded halfway across the dangerous waterway when their dinghy's motor broke down.

Pictures show the men huddling together with their arms in the air as they wait to be rescued - while two members of the group took selfies and others lifted their arms in prayer.

Recent figures showed 1,004 migrants were brought ashore by Border Force between August 4 and 13.

A total of 4,511 migrants have made the perilous journey so far this year, compared with 1,823 in 2019.

Home Secretary Priti Patel has vowed to end the illegal crossings through the Channel and crack down on criminal gangs who prey on families' desperation to find a way to get to the UK.

A Sky News spokesperson told The Sun Online: Sky News has covered the migrant crisis in great depth and from many angles since 2015.

Our recent coverage on all Sky News platforms has focused on the human stories of refugees and their attempts to cross the channel and reach the UK.

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We have produced a range of news reports on land and at sea talking to people who are attempting to reach the UK.

This is a major news story following the governments suggestion that it needs a military response, and we will continue to cover the story in a responsible and human way.

Ali Fortescues reports have made it clear that the captain of the boat she is on calls the coastguard about every dinghy and stays with each boat to make sure it is safe as it comes to shore.

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Sky News hit with 840 Ofcom complaints after live broadcast while following migrants crossing the Channel on - The Sun

Do Bihar migrants have the choice to not go back to cities? – Down To Earth Magazine

North Bihars unique geo-physical settings and hydro-meteorology make it one of the most vulnerable regions to environmental forcestofloods

The north Bihar plain has fertile alluvial soil endowed with surface and sub-surface water resources. The people in the region depend mostly on agriculture.

The region is, however, also plagued with low productivity, limited crop diversification, less scope for non-agricultural activities, high incidence of rural poverty, marginalisation, feudal exploitation and persistent poor governance.

There is alsoa vulnerability to floods because the region is drained by two major rivers, the Gandak and the Koshi and their tributaries, the Bagmati, Burhi Gandak and Kamla-Balan.

North Bihars unique geo-physical settings and hydro-meteorology make it one of the most vulnerable regions to environmental forces of floods and submergence.

In the past few decades,floodshave almost became a yearly phenomenon, though their intensity varies from one year to another. The flood plains aregenerally submerged during the monsoon from July to October every year and greatly affect life, physical assets andthe livelihoods of people.

Agrarian distress due to environmental forces of flood

Rural Bihar is mostly dependent on agriculture and its allied sector in terms of livelihood. This dependence is, however, gradually declining. Around 75 per cent of the rural households were dependent on agriculture as their main source of income in 2004-05. This, however, almost dropped to 50 per cent within a decade and a half.

Household dependency on agriculture and non-agricultural sectors (in per cent)

Sector

2004-05

2007-08

2009-10

2011-12

2018-19

Agriculture and allied

75.10

75.20

65.40

64.50

49.20

Non-agriculture

24.90

24.80

34.60

35.50

50.80

Source: NSSO employment and unemployment rounds, Periodic Labour Force Survey

A major reason behind this decline was the extensive damage to crops from extreme weather events. Agricultural production is quite uncertain, especially during the monsoon, as it is an area of continuous flooding.

Villagers were earlier dependent on agriculture and used to cultivate a particular variety of paddy, locally known as lathaun a low-yield, flood-resistant variety according to Sahib Khan, 36, a resident in Kathihar districts Azamgarh block.

A large section of villagers earlier worked as agricultural labourers on others land, but received wages insufficient to feed a family of five-six.

The 1987 flood was a devastating experience for them: People realised if they did not migrate to cities for work, they would not be able to survive. Several villagers including Khan said this out-migration of the rural male population essentially began after the 1987 flood.

With time, migrant workers accumulated their experiences and established a good network with their employers in urban areas. This made it easy for the next generation of migrant workers.

The flood, however, was not the only reason for a declining dependency on agricultural activities. The face of agriculture changed over the period. It became more commercialised and was yet not very profitable due to increased costs of inputs and a lack of more appropriate technology.

Employment opportunities in Bihars agricultural sector began to shrink for both men and women, with the advancement of mechanisation and increasing population.

The introduction of different types of machinery, high-yield varieties of seeds, herbicides, pesticides, etc, disempowered the agrarian community by making their skills and traditional knowledge obsolete and dispossessing them from production and decision-making processes.

Migration: A survival strategy

In a distress-driven economy, labour out-migration became a major survival strategy for rural households. The demand for cheap labour in urban areas drew men away from the farm in the open market economy. This was in contrast to the marginalisation of rural women, especially among landless households.

Labour migration in the districts of Bihar was predominantly for a short duration, cyclical in nature and also depended on the agricultural season at the source and destination.

Migrant workers either worked in construction sites in metro cities like Ahmedabad, Chennai, Delhi and Mumbai or moved to Punjab for carrot cultivation at the beginning of the sowing season. These workers then came back end of March, in time for harvesting.

The pandemic situation

Migration was not only a survival strategy for locals, but also brought prosperity with it. This year, unfortunately, the sudden lockdown to contain the spread of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19) forced nearly 2.5 million migrant labourers to return to their homes from cities.

They did not manage to save enough this time, but instead carried heartbreaking experiences of uncertainty, fear, conquest, pain and anguish. With this traumatised experience, a large proportion of the migrants do not want to return to cities and have begun to look for employment opportunities in their neighbourhoods.

Though the state government promised to involve the labourers with its Jeevika scheme, a big question remains how this can solve their livelihood crisis.

Impact of flood on migrants

The flood situation of the state made the migrant crisis more serious. With a high intensity of continuous rain for 10-15 days, a few rivers flowed above the danger level and inundated a large area of the north Bihar plain.

Around 4.6 million people in 14 north Bihar districts were affected by the flood situation July 31, 2020, with these numbers increasing every day, according to the state disaster managements daily flood bulletin.

Standing maize crops were submerged under water and paddy seedlings were also damaged, according to the state agriculture department.

The aggravated flood situation of the state further increased the uncertainty of earning among returning migrants and raised the question of whether going back to their migration destinations was even an option for them.

Views expressed are the authors own and dont necessarily reflect those of Down To Earth.

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Do Bihar migrants have the choice to not go back to cities? - Down To Earth Magazine

How We Cover Dictators, Dissidents, and Dangerous Places – The Daily Beast

Editors note: Our beloved World Editor Christopher Dickey wrote this ode to The Daily Beasts coverage and to his network of foreign correspondents just weeks before he suddenly passed away. It exemplifies the best of what he brought to the site, and to journalism, and to all of us, every day.

PARISAt The Daily Beast we like to say our world news coverage focuses on dictators, dissidents, and dangerous places, but when we first came up with that alliterative motto I dont think any of us imagined wed see so many reflections of dictatorship, dissent, and danger in the United States.

In fact, international news and U.S. news are perilously intertwined in ways they never have been before, feeding off of each other in a constant rush of events that The Daily Beast is covering around the globe and around the clock.

For The Daily Beasts membership drive, we're asking our reporters and editors to tell the stories behind some of their biggest stories.

One example: Since 2016, Americans have had to think about Russia a lot because Russian President Vladimir Putin clearly has thought a great deal about the U.S. and how he can unravel the fabric of American democracy. Now, thanks in part to him, its in tatters: the president of the United States has been impeached for abusing his power while following up on Putins conspiracy theories about Ukraineyet that president remains in office, more divisive than ever.

We can call the ongoing constitutional meltdown the Russian leaders mission accomplished, but we cannot call it a surprise. At every step of the way, including on the front lines of the Ukraine War, Anna Nemtsova, Michael Weiss, Julia Davis, Will Cathcart and others have brought us the story as it developed.

China has become not only a powerful economic and military competitorbut a source of frightening new diseases. Gordon Chang and Brendon Hong have cast their very clear eyes on the growing threats.

North Korea has managed to carry on a bizarre love-hate relationship with the U.S. president while showing no signs it will surrender nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles that can threaten every city in the continental United States. Donald Kirk, reporting out of Seoul, has covered every key development in this thermonuclear psychodrama.

Our correspondent in Japan, Jake Adelstein, made his rep writing about the yakuza, which turned out to be a great foundation for his coverage of the Shinzo Abe government and its slide toward authoritarianism.

For more exclusive access, insider interviews, and hot scoops, become a Beast Inside member.

Islamic State terrorists have lost their caliphate but metastasized like a cancer, embedding themselves all over the world, and just waiting for their chance to carry out a devastating attack on American soil. Florian Neuhof covered much of the fighting in Syria and Iraq while Anne Speckhard and her team of researchers conducted exhaustive interviews with captured jihadists. Spencer Ackerman, Adam Rawnsley, Rita Katz and others have tracked the continuing spread of terrorist cells and terrorist ideologies, Islamic and otherwise.

The fighting in Syria between the Russian-Iranian-backed Assad regime and Turkish-backed militias has intensified. They now appear headed for an apocalyptic dnouement and Jeremy Hodge is following developments closely.

Afghanistans Taliban may be willing to make deals helping U.S. troops leave their country, but only so they can take over again, vitiating completely whatever was achieved in the longest American war. Sami Yousafzai has extraordinary sources among the Taliban themselves.

The Iranian Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps has lost its most famous commander, blown away in Baghdad by American hellfire missiles, but it is calculating more ways to strike back. Nobody believes its commanders were satisfied with brain damage inflicted on more than 60 U.S. soldiers by Irans ballistic missiles. In addition to great work by our national security team, including Ackerman and Erin Banco, some of our most interesting coverage from Tehran has come through our partner publication IranWire, edited by Maziar Bahari.

The supposed deal of the century offered by the U.S. to Israels indicted prime minister makes Washington fully complicit in the denigration of the Palestinians, and opens the door to new violence, while America increasingly relies on Egypts dictator and Saudi Arabias murderous crown prince as its best buddies in the region. This, even as Saudi cadets training in the United States hatch terrorist conspiracies and kill their classmates. Noga Tarnopolsky, Neri Zilber, the national security team and I have written about all this extensively.

Indias frighteningly intolerant government, although strongly supported by Washington, has taken a very dangerous path in Kashmir, as revealed in an extraordinary series by Matthew Clayfield.

The European Union and NATO, the Wests great alliances, have been undermined repeatedly and aggressively by a hostile White House. Now Great Brexit pretends it can float out into the Atlantic and into the embrace of the United States. Nico Hines, Jamie Ross and royal watcher Tom Sykes follow developments in the sceptered, sundered isle.

On the continent, populist demagoguery is on the rise in many countries, whether at the upper reaches of government, as in Hungary, or on the mutinous streets, as in France. Erin Zaleski, Dana Kennedy, Nadette De Visser, Josephine Hetlin and I try to keep an eye on all the developments, which are part of a populist and sometimes white supremacist loop feeding and fed by the United States.

Correspondent-at-Large Barbie Latza Nadeau in Rome has reported on the migrant crisis that has affected European life profoundly, plus Italys crazy politics and beautiful culture, plus true crime stories all over Europeand the Vatican, where she has watched closely the hopes, disappointments, and political conspiracies surrounding Pope Francis.

Latin American regimes under pressure from the U.S. administration have resisted Washington, and Venezuela has humiliated it. Annika Henroth reported at the height of tensions there last year and was twice detained, at one point with a gun to her head. Eduard Freisler is on the scene for us now.

The U.S. border, meanwhile, has become a symbol of hollow promises and nauseating human rights abuses, while the drug war in Mexico just gets worse, as reported in vivid detail by Jeremy Kryt and Jason McGahan.

Africa, a continent dubbed full of shitholes, has been largely forgotten by Washington, but falls ever more deeply into the cauldron of climate change, which the U.S. administration pretends has nothing to do with human activity.

Philip Obaji Jr. in Nigeria has reported extensively on migrant flows, Boko Haram terror, and vast networks of human trafficking, some of which lead to the United States. Margot Kiser in Kenya writes vividly about wildlife as well as the rising threat of al Shabaabwhich sometimes coexist in the same forests near the Somali border. (Three Americans were killed in a Shabaab attack on a secretive Kenyan military installation just last month.)

Yeah. Its a 24/7 world of trouble, but it cant be ignored, and it better be understood.

Were able to break news on the biggest stories around the world thanks to the support of Beast Inside members. Join us today!

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How We Cover Dictators, Dissidents, and Dangerous Places - The Daily Beast

Dozens of migrants found dead in shipwrecks near Canary Islands and Libya – Sky News

Spanish authorities have found a boat near the Canary Islands with 10 dead migrants on board, while another 45 have perished in a shipwreck off the Libyan coast.

A plane spotted the first vessel while searching for a missing boat that had left Mauritania on 15 August with about 40 people on board and was believed to be heading to the Spanish islands off north-west Africa.

Two Spanish Maritime Rescue Service vessels reached the shipwreck about 85 miles south of the island of Gran Canaria.

The journey from western Africa to the Canary Islands has increasingly attracted migrants wanting to reach Europe without crossing the Mediterranean, where authorities have cracked down on boats.

It comes as 45 migrants - mainly from African countries - were found dead in a shipwreck off the coast of Libya.

The UN said it was "deeply concerned" and criticised the "sharp reduction" in efforts by European countries to respond to distress calls and carry out search and rescue operations.

"We urge states to swiftly respond to these incidents and systematically provide a predictable port of safety to people rescued at sea," the UN Refugee Agency said in a joint statement with the International Organization for Migration. "Delays recorded in recent months, and failure to assist, are unacceptable and put lives at avoidable risk."

NGO boats have stepped in to save lives "in the continued absence of any dedicated, EU-led search and rescue programme" - but this is not enough, the UN said.

When commercial vessels are the nearest boat capable of carrying out a rescue, the agency said they need to be quickly given a safe location for disembarking the rescued passengers.

They "should not be instructed" to return people to Libya, where they are at risk of "severe human rights violations" and "arbitrary detention".

Libyan authorities are increasingly taking responsibility for rescue operations, which has led to 7,000 people being returned to the country since January.

The agency welcomed the efforts of "two-thirds" of European countries who have continued to receive refugees despite the challenges posed by COVID-19.

"The pandemic should not be used as an excuse to deny people access to all forms of international protection," the UN added.

More than 300 migrants have died trying to cross the sea from Libya to Europe so far this year.

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Dozens of migrants found dead in shipwrecks near Canary Islands and Libya - Sky News

Despite online success Odisha rapper steers clear of Bollywood, wants to keep telling the truth to power – The Indian Express

Written by Avantika Chopra | New Delhi | Updated: August 21, 2020 7:54:16 pmHaving closely experienced the crisis, Duleshwar Tandi was compelled to write about it through powerful rap songs.

Khane ko nhi chawal dana par bank mai khata khulvaenge

Thus begins one of Dule Rockers rap songs. But Duleshwar Tandis lines are not about youth or rebellion but of the miseries of the migrants and their struggles following the nationwide lockdown.

The 27-year-old from Odishas Kalahandi district attained fame after his rap video, Telling the Truth, went viral, making even Bollywood sit up and take notice.

Tandi was among those who returned to his hometown. But soon he realised there would be little help coming his way from the government. Thats when he decided to voice his opinion in the form of rap.

Who is the government helping? No one. Which is exactly why I am questioning them, he says. His rap Telling The Truth highlights the governments apathy towards the poor, many of whom were left penniless and without means of livelihood.

If the government wanted, they could have helped out those walking on foot. They could provide busses and food but they are not come forward to do any of this, he adds.

Implemented on March 25, the nationwide lockdown left many migrant workers in limbo, forcing them to walk hundreds of kilometres to their native places. Only less than 10 per cent of them got to travel free by governmenttransport, data shows.

Having closely experienced the crisis, the Dalit youth was compelled to write about it through powerful rap songs in English, Hindi and Kosli. Since corona, our lives have been hampered in a lot of ways. Seeing the conditions, I decided to put my thoughts into words and that is what resonated with people, Tandi told the indianexpress.com.

Citing the example of actor Sonu Sood, who has been working to help migrants return to their homes, Tandi says: I commend the work he is doing, but this work is not his. Who is supposed to do this work? The government. And if they are not doing it then why are they even in power?

However, for Tandi, fame and recognition came after almost 11 years of struggle. I have been trying to be a rapper for a very long time. After I completed my college, I had decided to become a rapper. I did a lot of other work to earn money and in-between would find time to rap, he says.

After graduating in BSc from a government college, Tandi tried several odd jobs to make ends meet and even shifted to Raipur in search of work.

Tandi developed an interest in music from an early age. I have always been interested in dance, drama and music. It was a very common thing in our family. We children would watch the elders and get together, write scripts, assign roles and act them out.

Initially, I wrote poetry. I used to write for the college magazine and take part in annual day functions. Later, I developed a habit of writing rap. At that time, I did not know that what I am writing is called a rap, he told the indianexpress.com.

With Bollywood actors such as Priyanka Chopra and Richa Chadda sharing his videos, Tandi was approached by music and film producers from Bollywood. However, he steered clear from commercial music as it didnt sync with his thought process.

There are people who have tonnes of money and then there are those who dont even have a roof over their heads or have enough food to eat. This is not humanity. I write such content and this was not liked by those in the commercial world.

With his raw videos and gritty lyrics attracting attention online, Tandi has quit his job to focus on rap. Earlier, people did not listen to such rap, but these days people are listening to me and are liking it.

Tandi feels the government should listen to the citizens, and thats his main muse. People are on the streets protesting against the government. They should analyse why this is happening and why people are unhappy.

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Despite online success Odisha rapper steers clear of Bollywood, wants to keep telling the truth to power - The Indian Express

Parties see opportunity in Dalit assertion in Bihar – Hindustan Times

Dalit leaders have been hogging the limelight in poll-bound Bihar as the state gears for assembly elections scheduled in October-November. Lok Janshakti Party (LJP) president Chirag Paswan has been attacking the Bihar government and chief minister Nitish Kumar over governance and management of migrant crisis and Covid-19 pandemic. Paswan has been upset over Janata Dal-United (JDU)s reluctance in accommodating LJP in the 12 nominations to the Bihar Legislative Council from the governors quota even as the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) wanted to give it one seat. The result has been the nominations still remain stuck.

JD-U has maintained it does not have an alliance with LJP in the state and has become friendlier with former chief minister Jitan Ram Manjhi as it seeks to have a Dalit leader by its side to offset possible exit of Chirag Paswans party from the ruling National Democratic Alliance.

Former Bihar minister Shyam Razak this month defected to Rashtriya Janata Dal (RJD) saying 99% of the leaders in JD-U were upset with the Kumar but did not have a voice. I cannot stay in a party where social justice is stripped, he said.

Also Read:RJD, Congress finalise seat-sharing deal for Bihar polls, Manjhis HAM not happy

BJPs Dalit leader, Sanjay Paswan, a former union minister, has asked Kumar to vacate his post for someone else after having served for 15 years. This also antagonized the JD-U, but Paswan termed it his personal opinion.

Sanjay Paswan said his attacks on Kumar were a kind of manifestation of the Dalit assertion. Why only Chirag, even Shyam Razaks move to resign as minister and assembly member... is a sign of growing Dalit assertion and there is nothing surprising in Dalit politics gaining momentum as it is a natural process.

Sanjay Paswan, who is a legislative council member, said the first phase of state politics was dominated by the forward castes, then came backward classes and now it was the turn of Dalits and extremely backward classes. Earlier also Bihar saw the emergence of Dalit leaders like Bhola Paswan Shastri, Karpoori Thakur, and Ram Sunder Das... Now, Dalit politics is becoming stable and self-reliant.

Sanjay Paswan said that Dalit leaders would have to make sacrifices and refrain from blackmailing for petty gains. They should not get carried away by the lure of identity politics as it will render them ineffective and defeat the larger goal.

DM Diwakar, a former director of Patnas AN Sinha Institute of Social Studies, said with over 18% of Bihars population, Dalits are a potent force that none of the political parties wants to antagonize. In the past, Dalits identified with the Left parties and then with the Congress, but gradually they too drifted towards liberal parties once the Left weakened. ...Dalits [in the 1990s] found in Lalu Prasad [Yadav of RJD] a saviour and along with Muslims formed a potent force. Today all the parties have their Dalit morcha to take advantage of identity politics among Dalits and that is the reason quite a few leaders have emerged and are in demand by one party or the other to counter one another.

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Parties see opportunity in Dalit assertion in Bihar - Hindustan Times

International flights to resume from September 1, but tourists won’t be allowed – The Kathmandu Post

The government has decided to resume chartered and regular passenger flights from September 1. However, only Nepalis and representatives of diplomatic missions, the United Nations and development partners will be allowed to fly into Nepal, with restrictions on foreign tourists until further notice, according to a Cabinet decision which was made public on Friday.

The daily arrivals, too, have been capped at 500 individuals.

Minister for Communication and Information Technology Yubaraj Khatiwada, also the government spokesperson, said other than tourists, listed individuals will be allowed to come to Nepal via regular and chartered flights from Malaysia, the United Arab Emirates, South Korea, Thailand, Japan, China, Hong Kong, Australia, the United States, Canada and European countries where RT-PCR tests are easily available.

People, including Nepalis, wont be allowed to take flights to Nepal from countries including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar where PCR tests are not easily available, according to Khatiwada. Nepalis stranded in these countries could be brought home on chartered flights, said Khatiwada.

Though the government said on July 20 that international and domestic flights will resume starting August 17, and asked the travel and tourism industry to take bookings for the autumn season accordingly, it revised its decision on July 21 in the wake of the rising number of coronavirus cases in the country.

The government had also halted chartered flights, putting Nepali workers ready to return home in limbo. The new decisions, however, will provide some respite for migrant workers.

The government has also no immediate plan to allow domestic flights as there are prohibitory orders in Kathmandu Valley and dozens of other districts, according to Mahendra Guragain, secretary at the Prime Ministers Office, who is also the member secretary of the Covid-19 Crisis Management Centre.

According to Khatiwada, those coming to Nepal must produce a RT-PCR test report conducted in the last 72 hours, proof of advance booking of hotels for seven days and produce a barcode or print copy of the form they need to fill up by accessing from the Covid Crisis Management Centre website (ccmc.gov.np).

After completing seven days in quarantine, they have to give in writing that they would spend another 14 days in home quarantine, said Khatiwada.

Airlines will have to collect the expenses of hotel quarantine from their passengers and ensure that they pay the respective hotels as per the bookings. However, if they violate any rules and bring people having no PCR tests, the concerned airline will have to bear all the quarantine expenses of all their passengers, according to the Cabinet decision.

The government will take legal action if they break the rules, said Khatiwada.

The government said it will set up an Integrated Quarantine Management Committee led by the home secretary. The committee includes officials from Health and Federal Affairs and Local Development ministries, director general of the Department of Urban Development, and chief district officers of the Kathmandu valley as members. The committee will manage integrated quarantine facilities in Kathmandu Valley.

Guragain said that an integrated facility is being set up to quarantine migrant workers arriving every day at one place in the Valley so that it is easier for the authorities to manage them.

PCR tests of the returning Nepalis will be conducted within five days of their arrival and they will be sent home after seven days.

The Health Ministry will manage 6,000 isolation beds in the Valley at state-run as well as private, community and teaching hospitals and health institutes, if necessary, and the number of beds would be increased as needed, according to Khatiwada.

Outside the Valley, provincial governments will arrange for isolation beds in coordination with the Provincial Covid-19 Crisis Management Centre and District Covid-19 Crisis Management Centres.

The committee will also manage integrated quarantine facilities that will house migrant workers who return on repatriation flights. All their necessary expenses would be borne from the Foreign Employment Welfare Fund, according to the Cabinet decision.

All quarantine expenses of repatriated migrant workers would be borne from the Welfare Fund on the recommendation of District Covid-19 Crisis Management Centres. In the case of other stranded Nepalis, who are repatriated, the expenses of living in the integrated quarantine would be borne from the Coronavirus Fund at the recommendation of the District Crisis Management Centres.

Returning Nepalis, other than migrant workers, with no or partial symptoms and those who wish to stay in home isolation can do so but under the monitoring of an institution the Health Ministry designates and they must follow all necessary health and safety protocols. Only those with Covid-19 symptoms would be admitted to designated hospitals for treatment.

The government has also decided to use all the facilities of private hospitals and their resources, non-profit community hospitals and health academies for the treatment of symptomatic Covid-19 patients. Any hospital can be declared a Covid hospital, according to minister Khatiwada.

The government will take necessary legal action if any individual or hospital refuses to cooperate, said Khatiwada.

After flights resume on September 1, anyone willing to fly out will be allowed to travel.

People wanting to go abroad can go from September 1, but they should make all the necessary arrangements including visas, tests, entry to the destination country and their stay there by themselves, said Secretary Mahendra Guragain.

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International flights to resume from September 1, but tourists won't be allowed - The Kathmandu Post

After a Lull, the Number of Migrants Trying to Enter the U.S. Has Soared – The New York Times

The shelters population reflected the recent shifts in the migratory flow. Last year, during the peak of the migration crisis, as many as 200 migrants slept there a night, most hoping to present themselves at the border and apply for asylum, said Gilda Irene Esquer Flix, who runs the shelter.

But since the Trump administration had effectively suspended access to the asylum program, nearly all of those migrants who had been waiting for an opportunity to cross had left the shelter, returning to their home countries, melting into Mexican society or trying to find an illegal route across the border.

In recent months, only a handful of migrants have been showing up at the shelter each day, Ms. Esquer said, with most being failed border crossers who needed a place to rest for a night or two after being caught in the United States and sent back to Mexico.

Two Mexican women traveling together were among about a dozen residents there one night last week. They had met during a failed crossing several weeks ago and had since tried three other times, to no avail.

Various friends have been successful, lamented Dinora, 24, who allowed publication of only her first name. She had been compelled to migrate, she said, after she lost her job as a seamstress in a factory in her home state of Campeche on the Gulf of Mexico.

She had heard that the Americans were not detaining people, making it much easier to try again. But after four failed crossings, and the duress of trying to cross the desert, she had decided to head back home.

No more, she said.

Her friend, however, was determined to try again.

Zolan Kanno-Youngs contributed reporting from Washington, D.C.

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After a Lull, the Number of Migrants Trying to Enter the U.S. Has Soared - The New York Times

‘It’s no wonder they come here’ – Kent Online

As hundreds descended on Dover beach to bask in the sun on the hottest day of the year, scores of migrants, just metres away, took their first step on British soil.

In a designated corner of the marina - inconspicuously separate from the beach, the ferry berths, and Dover's celebrated cruise terminal - Border Force speed vessels ferry boatload after boatload of foreign nationals in to the harbour.

The migrants have attempted the perilous journey to the Kent coast in self-piloted inflatable boats and this group is lucky enough to have averted tragedy by being rescued by Border Force and taken into the safety of immigration authorities.

One small child, wearing a standard issue Border Force life jacket, is seen clapping his hands in relief, as one of the government agency's rigid hull inflatable boats (RHIB) pulls up at the dockside.

The RHIB is carrying what, from a distance, looks like women and children only.

They arrive in numbers far fewer than the horrifying videos we've seen in recent months, where up to 18 people are crammed into inflatable crafts, with waves lapping mid channel over the dangerously weighted down hull.

The voice of a crying child carries over the hum of traffic and boat engines towards the cargo terminal where I stand watching with a press photographer.

Border Force personnel work quickly to disembark them and the women walk with the children up a white steel gangway where waiting officials meet them.

It's a scene I've seen countless times, in pictures and videos taken by sailors and media, but this is my first time seeing with naked eyes migrants entering the country.

Minutes before the RHIB had entered the harbour, another search and rescue speed boat CPV Speedwell prepared to leave the marina from where she was berthed next to Dover Lifeboat Station.

Her skipper waited for sister ship CPV Hunter to arrive.

Hunter came in towing a small red dinghy, and on board were a number of males, all in orange/red life jackets.

As the men prepare to disembark from the safety of Hunter they show more restraint than the clapping boy.

Still I suppose the moment their foot touches the tarmac a sense of achievement, triumph or catharses must be evoked after possibly months travelling from their country of origin.

After all, this successful attempt might not have been their first.

In recent years the small boat crosses have overtaken daily attempts to break into and hide in HGVs.

At first the clandestine boat trips were under the cover of darkness, facilitated by gangs of people smugglers charging thousands for passage per person.

Now migrants with means are choosing the more brazen route, in calm seas and in broad daylight. Without the traffickers enlisting experienced men to drive the boats, the groups are risking passage alongside one of the busiest shipping lanes in the world and sometimes they try in kayaks and makeshift rafts.

We've reported before how the French are accused of watching on as the small boats power into British waters and into the interception of Border Force without first apprehending and returning them to France. Video and radar images would certainly suggest that.

But the Home Office replies to each of these claims by explaining that the priority at sea is to preserve lives - thus our authorities take responsibility for the boats in our waters.

This, and the operation inside Dover Marina is a cycle that repeats itself with no sign of stopping.

Predictably it intensifies when the weather is fine - this week's figures are proof of that.

Today's operation, which I observed for little more than an hour, follows a new record set for migrants yesterday.

The Home Office revealed 235 cases had been intercepted.

Border Force cutter Seeker and patrol boats Speedwell and Hunter intercepted 17 vessels, one of which was carrying 26 people.

This new figure is up 34 from the past record of 201 set last week.

Today 130 migrants in 13 vessels were intercepted.

And weeks after Home Secretary Pritti Patel met with her counterpart to arrange for more migrants to be returned to France, we await the figures of how many of yesterday's and today's arrivals will be returned.

Ben Bano from migrant welfare charity Seeking Sanctuary this afternoon attributed the influx to the conditions in Calais and their treatment in police clearances.

He told KentOnline: "Its not surprising that so many people, including children are coming across the Channel in these flimsy and dangerous boats.

"The conditions for hundreds of people in Calais are appalling, with daily clearances by the police and no access to water and sanitation during this heatwave.

"This is a situation in which the traffickers who exploit vulnerable people can thrive.

"This situation would stop if the British and French authorities work to create safe and legal ways to claim asylum in the UK.

"It cannot be right that people make dangerous trips in order to exercise their legal right to claim asylum once in UK territorial waters."

Yesterday KentOnline reported how an activist was arrested while filming migrants being loaded into coaches which he claimed, were taken to four star hotels.

I followed in his footsteps today and found three coaches waiting at the dockside. I wasn't challenged as I approached and filmed.

From what I saw at the Marina today Ms Patel's threats that Royal Navy assets may be deployed have had no impact on migrants' momentum.

It seems despite threats of Naval intervention, and the perilous 23-mile journeys across the world's busiest shipping lanes, the small boats will keep on coming.

And as fine weather continues, that cycle will carry on.

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'It's no wonder they come here' - Kent Online

No foreseeable end to the strain on Border Force – Kent Online

Kent's Border Force officers are enduring scorching temperatures as they battle to process around 200 migrants a day while government continues to struggle to stop the crossings.

Priti Patel visited Dover today and was seen getting off a police boat after a short trip out to sea. She was seen walking up the gangway to the Border Force hub the same gangway that hundreds of migrants are taken up every week.

Border Force are working continuously rescuing asylum seekers from the Channel

The people dealing with these new arrivals are under increased pressure, as this present crisis intensifies, they are working longer hours to get new arrivals registered with the authorities.

That's according to Lucy Moreton, professional officer for ISU, the union for borders, immigration and customs workers.

She told KentOnline that staff are struggling to process the sheer scale of cases and the significant and unprecedented pressure on the force shows no signs of letting up.

Before last week's record day of cases, Dover based officers would see an average of 100 arrivals a day. Now they are seeing 200.

She said: "As a force, we have peaks and troughs, things happen and you get different changes in the patterns of traffic. The issues that have come up most recently is that folk can't be searched out at sea because they are being picked up by other agencies including the RNLI and the Coastguard.

"It means the immediate intercepting team have to wear body armour on a quay with no shelter - and in the temperatures we've had recently - it has been horrendous.

"They are already working long hours, with no cold water but now they're wearing 10 kilos of body armour."

Our reporter observed on Friday how search and rescue vessels operated a continuous cycle, bringing migrants ashore, discharging them and going straight out on patrol as another vessel came in to follow the same protocol. There were no visible breaks for the boat staff and the Mercury continued to soar to over 30 degrees.

The officers, based on the quay at Dover Marina, are under the same pressure and bring the migrants to shore where they enter a quayside welfare unit.

This is where their needs are assessed.

They are given water, food and, if needed, they can shower and put on fresh jumpsuits or tracksuits to wear.

Once they have been initially processed they are loaded into coaches from the Marina to an intake unit for fingerprinting.

According to Ms Moreton, staff are arduously working long hours on this early identifying process to get the new arrivals ready to be taken on by the relevant authorities.

Kent currently takes responsibility for migrants with children and unaccompanied children. Any others that come ashore - like single males, who make up the majority, are shipped off to authorities like Birmingham, Manchester, London, Cardiff.

There, like with many homeless people in their care, they are housed in hotels until accommodation becomes available.

Covid-19 screening is adding to the burden when somebody presents with virus symptoms.

She said there are difficulties in fingerprinting with gloves on, and the masks exacerbate the heat.

Arrivals can not be forced to wear masks.

Her insight comes as Home Secretary Priti Patel faced pressure to tackle the crisis - and today she returned to Dover.

Meanwhile Prime Minister Boris Johnson said we need to look at the legal framework for migrants crossing the English Channel and being allowed to stay here despite entering illegally.

It comes as 20 men, identifying as Syrian, were intercepted in the channel by border force speed boat Hunter this morning.

Despite a formal request to the Ministry of Defence for military assistance to deter foreign nationals from undertaking journeys to Dover in small boats, Ms Moreton says: "I can't see a let up in the foreseeable future.

"We were able to get some things like water and shelter on Friday but this slipped over the weekend.

"These numbers are going to continue."

Read more: All the latest news from Kent

Originally posted here:

No foreseeable end to the strain on Border Force - Kent Online

Mood of the nation: Majority believe Centre and states responsible for migrant crisis – India Today

A majority of Indian citizens -- 43 per cent -- believe that both the central and state governments are responsible for the migrant crisis. This is according to the findings of August 2020 round of India Today Mood of the Nation Survey.

FULL RESULTS OF THE INDIA TODAY MOOD OF THE NATION AUGUST 2020

43 per cent of the 12,021 respondents surveyed in the MOTN poll said both the central and state governments were responsible for the mass exodus of migrant workers. Another 14 per cent blamed only the state governments for the migrant crisis, while 10 per cent pointed fingers at the Centre.

However, 13 per cent of the respondents feel it was the fault of employers of the migrant workers and labourers due to which they suffered. Meanwhile, 12 per cent put the blame on rumour and misinformation that the migrants 'fell prey to'.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi's March 24 announcement stoked panic. Migrant workers everywhere began their long march home.

Migrants were walking thousands of kilometres on foot, with many hitch hiking on trucks or rode bicycles.

The Shramik special trains announced by the government finally came as a relief in May.

On June 6, the Railway Board said that 58 lakh migrant workers stranded across the country were ferried to their native places during the Covid-19 lockdown. The Indian Railways operated 4,286 Shramik special trains till June 6. Following which, the demand for the trains started to decrease. The government said that workers who were found walking on roads were provided with transportation to the nearest railway stations.

METHODOLOGY OF MOTN POLL

The India Today Mood of the Nation (MOTN) poll was conducted by Delhi-based market research agency between July 15, 2020 and July 27, 2020. This poll has traditionally been conducted using face-to-face interviewing method. However, in this edition of the survey, due to the unprecedented situation arising out of Covid-19 pandemic, all interviews were conducted telephonically using a standard structured questionnaire, which was translated into regional languages.

A total of 12,021 interviews were conducted-67 per cent in rural and 33 per cent in urban areas-spread across 97 parliamentary constituencies and 194 assembly constituencies in 19 states-Andhra Pradesh, Assam, Bihar, Chhattisgarh, Delhi, Gujarat, Haryana, Jharkhand, Karnataka, Kerala, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, Odisha, Punjab, Rajasthan, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal. In each of the assembly constituencies, a fixed number of interviews were done.

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Mood of the nation: Majority believe Centre and states responsible for migrant crisis - India Today

Asia-Pacific to bear the brunt of COVID-19 crisis, may see $31.4-54.3 billion remittance losses: ADB – The Financial Express

Asia Pacific, which accounts for a third of the global migrant workforce, is likely to face remittance losses of USD 31.4-54.3 billion due to the coronavirus pandemic, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) said in a report.

The governments need to come up with policy measures to reduce the economic and social fallout arising out of it, the ADB said.

Job losses stemming from COVID-19 are hurting households around the world, but for Asia and the Pacifics 91 million migrant workers a third of the global migrant workforce the impacts will be particularly severe, the ADB said in August 2020 brief on COVID-19 Impact on International Migration, Remittances, and Recipient Households in Developing Asia.

ADB economists estimate that the region faces remittance losses ranging from USD 31.4 billion to USD 54.3 billion. To reduce the economic and social impacts, policy responses are proposed in areas such as social protection, immigration, labour, and health, it said.

In 2019, six of the 10 largest remittance recipients globally were from this region-India, China, the Philippines, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Vietnam, the Manila-headquartered multi-lateral funding agency said.

The countries likely to face more severe effects from the pandemic-induced decline in remittance inflows are the ones where remittance shares to gross domestic product (GDP) and per capita remittances are high.

These include Tonga, Samoa, and other Pacific countries, with remittances relative to the size of their economies and populations very high.

Central Asian countries such as Georgia, the Kyrgyz Republic, and Tajikistan, sending a large number of seasonal and long-term migrants mainly to the Russian Federation and Europe, will also be hard-hit, along with some of the major migrant origin countries such as Nepal and the Philippines, it added.

Remittances to Asia and the Pacific, amounting to USD 315 billion in 2019, are an important and stable source of income for families back home and help strengthen external financing alongside foreign direct investment and tourism recipients in many developing economies, said the report penned by four ADB economists.

They boost general consumption as well as investment and help sustain government debts by contributing to the foreign currency revenue base, said the economists.

Jobs and worker welfare are severely affected by the pandemic globally but some sectors are hurt more than others such as retail and wholesale trade, hospitality and recreation, manufacturing, and accommodation and food service sectors.

These are the sectors largely in non-essential services with frequent face-to-face interactions and the migrant and informal workers are among those facing the most severe impacts, as they often do not have regular contracts nor strong bargaining power, said the report.

Migrant workers are more vulnerable from layoffs once prolonged lockdowns and production breaks drive companies out of business. Also, uncertainty looms about the timing of full recovery, even as lockdowns are lifted, with concerns about persistent weak demand in some economic sectors.

The wide-scale economic cost of the COVID-19 pandemic is expected to reach between USD 5.8 trillion and USD 8.8 trillion globally, equivalent to 6.4 per cent to 9.7 per cent of global GDP, reflecting the spread of the pandemic to Europe, the United States, and other major economies, said the report.

The ADB said that employment in host economies of Asian migrants is contracting significantly.

The remittance flows to developing Asia is to plunge amid the pandemic as during the first months 2020, remittances began to contract in major migrant source countriesWhile some migrant workers may feel altruistic and send more money to their families in extremely difficult situations, prevailing weak economic forecasts are pointing toward declining remittances.

However, relative increase in remittance inflows is observed in June in selected countries which can be attributed to lifting of lockdowns in destinations that allowed migrants to remit over the counter and introduction of policy measures that incentivise transfer by reducing restrictions and transaction fees, the ADB said.

Citing a study of 10 migrant sending countries in Asia, the ADB said remittance dependent households are at risk of falling into poverty, as it is estimated that a 1 percentage increase in the share to GDP to remittances inflow from overseas is associated with a reduction in poverty gap by 22.6 per cent and poverty severity by 16 per cent.

A study based on microdata from selected economies in South Asia and Southeast Asia suggests that a 10 per cent increase in remittance inflows leads to a 3-4 per cent rise in real GDP per capita, it said.

Recommending policy actions to the host and source countries, ADB economists said governments of host countries of migrants need to ensure that migrant workers have access to social protection, including employment-related support and social assistance, as well as health services.

They should support employers to help retain and hire laid-off workers, including migrant workers.

Such effort contributes to the smooth recovery of the economy by ensuring workforce availability and the reduction of contagion risks, said the report.

Among others, the host and source countries should continue to recognise remittance service providers as one of the essential businesses to allow migrants and families to transact without disruption as remittance money is a lifeline for many poor and vulnerable families left behind.

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Asia-Pacific to bear the brunt of COVID-19 crisis, may see $31.4-54.3 billion remittance losses: ADB - The Financial Express

The SWAN reports: Records of heroism by migrant workers – Frontline

Sujit Kumar, a worker from Bihar stranded in Bathinda, Punjab, had not eaten in four days when a volunteer from Stranded Workers Action Network (SWAN) spoke with him on April 3.

Two tribal women from Jharkhand had been told they would be paid Rs.9,000 a month to work in an incense factory in Bengaluru. They were beaten up, paid Rs.200 and made to work for 15 hours a day. One woman was even raped inside the factory premises twice. Civil groups managed to rescue and secure their passage home.

Sanoj was part of a group of 15 people who had been living on the pavement post-lockdown. They had difficulty accessing food and received no help from the police in finding shelter. Fortunately, a SWAN volunteer chanced upon the group and helped it.

Several such stories of suffering and rescue have been chronicled by SWAN, a network of volunteers who banded together very quickly in the early days of the lockdown to help thousands of migrant workers in distress. The network has released reports with information and data that could prove valuable in shaping labour policies.

When Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced a janata curfew on March 22 in a bid to curb the spread of COVID-19 infections, there was a hint that the country would soon have to enter a complete lockdown. However, the announcement shockingly came just three days later and the authorities gave a four-hour deadline to begin a complete shutdown.

It is well documented that millions of people were left confused. The working class was, and continues to be, among those worst affected by the lockdown. The country was witness to heart-wrenching images of men, women and children walking long distances to reach their villages, seeking food and shelter, with some dying en route.

At the time, the unfolding migrant worker tragedy had no impact on the Centre or the State governments. Until early May, little help was given. The failure of the state was so glaring that it was left to civil society organisations, trade unions and ordinary citizens to provide immediate help, even if it was something as minimal as giving just Rs.200 to buy groceries.

On March 27, under the banner of SWAN, a group of academics, social workers, students, union members and concerned citizens spread across the country and began helping workers from various States who were stranded, hungry and shelterless and in need of money to return to their villages.

Over two months, SWAN used an extensive web of humanitarian organisations, trade unions and social workers to help 35,000 migrant workers reach home. This was a drop in the ocean no doubt, given that lakhs of migrant workers were stranded all over the country.

But the point is not about numbers and how many lives were saved but how a group of empathetic and knowledgeable people came together to deploy an effective solution at a time when the government, with all its resources, did not get its act together and even refused to acknowledge the existence of such a crisis.

Furthermore, SWANs efforts were not limited to helping the migrant workers reach home. The data collected and analysed by a division of volunteers have been published as three comprehensive reports, which were released at intervals during the lockdown.

Each one is a substantial resource that provides moving accounts by migrants, insights into the crisis, and statistical and data analysis. The reports also include recommendations on handling such a crisis.

A disclaimer says that the exercise was never meant to be a research project but was only aimed at providing immediate help to those badly in need of it.

Yet, because the scale of the tragedy was staggering, the reports findings went a step beyond being just a record of the initial days of the lockdown.

The reports were deliberately published during the lockdown so that policy makers could take cognisance of the plight of migrant workers. Unfortunaley, they were not given much consideration.

Speaking to Frontline about SWANs genesis and its future plans, Bengaluru-based Rajendran Narayanan, one of the main convenors of SWAN and assistant professor at Azim Premji University, said that the entire operation was a collaborative effort by several organisations, collectives, students and even a few committed bureaucrats.

According to him, SWAN as an entity grew organically for a specific purpose for a specific period of time. Its journey began when Sanjay Sahni, a social worker with the Samaj Parivartan Shakti Sangathan (SPSS) in Muzaffarpur, Bihar, received distress calls during the early days of the lockdown from a group of 50 migrant workers from Bihar who were stranded in Mangaluru, Karnataka.

Sahni, who had worked with Narayanan, contacted him and sought his help.

A few well-wishers sent money to the workers so they could just subsistbuy food, medicines, recharge phones, etc. Word probably got around and soon calls were coming from various sources in different States. Sahni realised the scale was huge and very quickly a group of us realised we had to put together a system to address the crisis, said Narayanan.

According to him, the system was built on the concept of providing assistance by primarily linking stranded workers with local organisations.

Volunteers set up a helpline that took details of the callers problems. These would be verified by the local link, which would then provide help such as food and government facilities for shelter and later, journey home.

Each callers information was put on a spread sheet so that the network could track the person and ensure they were safe.

By March 30-April 1 we had a system in place. A team was looking into finances, another manning helplines, teams [were looking] into verification of information, logistics, technology, social media, etc. Volunteers worked on a shift system so that someone was available at all hours. It was a mind-numbing and emotional experience, said Narayanan.

He added: All of it was done purely on a voluntary basis. I tapped into the Azim Premji University alumni [network] for help and the response was amazing. SWAN had approximately 120 volunteers during the peak of the crisis.

Explaining the operation, Narayanan said that there were people working with SWAN in every troubled State. As the crisis grew, teams were responsible for zones across the country.

Yet, the reality was that cash in hand was the need of the hour. Reaching out to friends, work associates, anyone who would help, SWAN was able to collect funds that were distributed among stranded migrant workers, he said.

Responding to word-of-mouth appeals, people donated small and large amounts. The finance team provided directions to the donor on where to send the money; most of the time it was directly to the person in distress.

There were cases where the bank would charge a penalty as the account did not have the minimum balance; to reactivate it, an automatic debit would take place.

Over two months, we disbursed approximately Rs.50 lakh, which is a reasonable amount, said Narayanan.

SWANs reports include several letters to the Ministry of Home Affairs and the State governments of Maharashtra, Gujarat, Bihar, Tamil Nadu, and Uttar Pradesh, indicating its efforts to bring the crisis to the notice of the authorities. Other than Karnataka, the response from the States was poor. In fact, the Maharashtra government was particularly hostile, said Narayanan.

Narayanan, who is actively involved in the Right to Food and Right to Work campaigns, said that the lack of social protection measures and safety nets was glaring.

Interestingly, he said, poorer States such as Bihar and Odisha helped their people, while richer States such as Maharashtra and Gujarat shut their doors on those who kept their economies alive.

There are an estimated 10 crore migrant workers in the country, according to available data, although migrant workers do not enjoy formal recognition.

Also, the warehouses of the Food Corporation of India now have 2.5 times the buffer stock norms, and there is no reason why rations should not be universalised, Narayanan said.

According to him, it was a good time to empower the panchayat and form a federation at that level. They are the only ones who know how many members of the village have left and where the workers have gone. Unfortunately, the Central government has reduced federalism to monopolising decisions and socialising losses.

Anoushka Kale, a graduate from Azim Premji University and SWAN volunteer based in Pune, said that the experience was an eye-opener. She was fielding 30-40 calls a day in the early days of the crisis. The conversations were mostlyabout securing food. But I felt speaking to a person in distress humanised them. They may have been desperate but they spoke with dignity and respect.

The SWAN reports are small repositories of data and a documentation of the migrant crisis. Each one also provides a set of recommendations, including creating a safety net for migrant workers and specifics such as depositing Rs.7,000 into each workers accounts until they gain employment again.

The network released its first report, titled 21 Days and Counting: COVID-19 Lockdown, Migrant Workers, and the Inadequacy of Welfare Measures in India, on April 15.

In the introduction, the report said: The first three weeks of the lockdown have been utterly distressing for stranded workers and goes far beyond mere pareshaani as the PM put it. Despite the immense hardships that millions of stranded workers continue to endure, there was still no announcement on economic relief measures for them. Unless a combination of universal rations and money transfers are implemented in letter and spirit, India is staring at alarming levels of destitution and despair.

The first report deals largely with immediate problems such food and starvation issues. Here are some glimpses of data tabulated from the distress calls in the first report: 50 per cent of workers had rations left for less than one day; 96 per cent had not received rations from the government and 70 per cent had not received any cooked food; and 89 per cent had not been paid by their employers at all during the lockdown.

The numbers are alarming both in absolute and in relative terms. Half of those who have reached us would not be able to eat the next day without immediate intervention, the report said.

With 78 million tonnes of grains in FCI warehouses, its a now-or-never situation. Governments have had two weeks to ensure a robust ration supply network, doorstep delivery, etc., to reduce hunger. However, figures indicate very few have benefited even in the third week of lockdown.

The second report, titled 32 days and counting, is an extension of the first and was released on May 1. By then, SWAN had helped 16,863 people. The report describes the various appeals made to the establishment to release support, including a petition filed by SWAN in the Supreme Court. The petition was dismissed on the grounds that the Central governments programmes were adequately covering migrant distress.

The chapters titled Rate of hunger and distress exceeding the rate of ReliefOverview and Neither one nation nor one ration card, migrants fall between contain relevant and topical matter within the pandemic context.

Statistics in the second report showed that 32 days after the lockdown began, four out of five workers who reached out did not have access to government rations while 68 per cent did not have access to cooked food.

With no cash relief, 64 per cent of the migrant workers had less than Rs.100 left with them. With no change since April 14, about 78 per cent of people have Rs.300 or less left with them. As on April 26, only about 6 per cent of all those who have reached out to us have received their full wages during the lockdown. About 78 per cent have not been paid at all. More than 99 per cent of the self-employed have had no earnings during this period. These include street vendors and rickshaw pullers.

The third report, titled To leave or not to leave? Lockdown, migrant workers and their journeys home, looks at the fourth phase of the lockdown and gives detailed accounts of workers trying to get home.

The report said that 67 per cent (of 1,963) migrants were still in the same place when the lockdown was announced; only 33 per cent had left. Some 44 per cent of those who left took buses and 39 per cent managed to get on a Shramik Special train. About 11 per cent travelled by trucks, lorries and other such modes of transport, while 6 per cent made the perilous journey on foot.

The first-person accounts and case studies in this report are gripping. The stories speak of starvation, police brutality, physical abuse and government apathy, revealing the colossal tragedy of the migrant exodus.

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The SWAN reports: Records of heroism by migrant workers - Frontline

ICC, IOM Launch COVID-19 Guidance for the Protection of Migrants – World – ReliefWeb

Geneva/ Paris - The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) this week are releasing employer guidance for measures to protect migrants during COVID-19.

Migrant workers are a crucial part of the global workforce, accounting for 3.5% of the worlds population, according to IOM. Worldwide, micro-, small-, and medium-sized enterprises (MSMEs), rely upon migrant workers, including sectors providing essential commodities and services, as well as industries hard-hit by COVID-19.

As the economic and human consequences of COVID-19 continue to shape local communities, businesses can play a decisive role in addressing the unique challenges faced by migrant workers.

Migrant workers are susceptible to job loss, salary cuts, and various health and safety concerns. Unlike local populations, migrant workers often are far from family support networks. They face language and/or cultural barriers and often lack social protection. Many suffer from discrimination. Meanwhile, overseas economies that rely on financial contributions from migrant workersespecially low- and middle-income countriesface a steep decline in cross-border remittances.

In response, ICC and IOM have published a set of guidelines for employers highlighting the private sectors role in addressing the specific challenges of migrant workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. The guidance includes a set of general principles for employerssuch as treating all workers with equality, dignity, and respectnotwithstanding their gender or migratory status. This guidance is presented in five categories: physical and mental health, living and working conditions, economic support, ethical recruitment and supply chain transparency.

COVID-19 has exposed and heightened existing inequalities within our global economic system, including the daily challenges faced by migrant workers around the world, said ICC Secretary General John W.H. Denton.

By establishing inclusive policy responses, businesses can assure the health, well-being, and safety of all employees, while at the same time, lay the foundations for a more resilient economic recovery, he added.

The ICC-IOM guidance document has been adapted from theIOMs COVID-19 guidance for employers and businesses to enhance migrant worker protection during the current health crisis and complements other ICC recommendations on health and safety measures for employees.

Migrant workers continue to be on the front lines of our collective response to the COVID-19 pandemic: not only as doctors, nurses and other health care professionals, but as the agricultural, transport and retail workers that keep our cities and towns functioning, said Marina Manke, Head of IOM Labour Mobility and Human Development Division.

Employers are in a unique position to ensure full protection for these workers both at the workplace and in their communities of operation and supply chains. We hope this guide will serve them well, she explained

ICC and its network of national committees are working with IOM to raise awareness of the specific needs and support measures for migrant workers during COVID19 among businesses in different regions. Most recently, IOM and ICC along with its regional offices in Argentina, Colombia, Guatemala, and Mexico hosted a webinar directed at employers in Latin America in Spanish.

Download the ICC-IOM Guidance on Protection for Migrant Workers during the COVID-19 Pandemic.

For more information, please contact:

IOM:Safa MsehliSpokespersonEmail: smsehli@iom.int Tel: +41794035526

ICC:Timothy ConleyGlobal Communications OfficerEmail: timothy.conley@iccwbo.org Tel: +336451282Daphne Yong d'HervDirector, Peace and Prosperity

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ICC, IOM Launch COVID-19 Guidance for the Protection of Migrants - World - ReliefWeb