ICMPD around the Globe: Contribution to the SHADE MED Forum 2-2017
Article published on ICMPD website on 11/24/2017
Upon the invitation of EUNAVFOR MED Op. SOPHIA, ICMPD DG Michael Spindelegger delivered a keynote speech at the fifth Shared Awareness and De-confliction in the Mediterranean (SHADE MED) Forum, which took place in Rome on 23-24 November 2017.
The Forum, chaired by the Italian Navy, focused on “Situational Awareness, Information Exchange and Capacity Building: fundamental pillars of Maritime Security in the Mediterranean Sea” and brought together representatives from nations and organizations with an interest in irregular migration in the Mediterranean, to meet and share situational awareness and assessment of the evolution, trends and best practices.
During the first day of the Forum, ICMPD DG Michael Spindelegger presented his view on pathways for addressing Irregular Migration in the Mediterranean. “When we look at the main drivers of migration – conflict, demography, socio-economic development and prosperity gaps – we can only conclude that their potential impacts in the Mediterranean region will increase and not decrease in the years to come. This will have serious implications for how we have to respond to the large movements of people,” said ICMPD DG. “Real change can only come when we manage to address the root causes for migration and displacement much better than in the past. This is the only way to make migration a matter of choice rather than of necessity and to build up confidence that migration can be managed in a beneficial way.”
Read the speech by ICMPD DG Michael Spindelegger
Related Articles
A record number of internally displaced
05/11/2007. Conflict, violence and disasters internally displaced 27.8 million people in 2015, subjecting a record number of men, women and children to the trauma and upheaval of being forcibly displaced within their own country.
Council of Despair? The Fragmentation of UN Diplomacy
04/30/2019. To overcome dysfunction and retain credibility, the council’s members should prioritise the few cases where international cooperation is still possible.
7 ways business can be agents for peace
05/28/2019. Recent research by the UN and the World Bank points to an urgent need for the international community to refocus on building peaceful societies and preventing violent conflict, which they calculate could save between $5 billion and $70 billion per year.