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IOM.int: Joint Initiative: More Support for Stranded Migrants in The Horn of Africa

Posted by: Berhane.Habtemariam59@web.de

Date: Tuesday, 26 March 2019

Posted: 03/26/19
Themes: Migrant Assistance

Addis Ababa — The EU-IOM Joint Initiative for Migrant Protection and Reintegration is celebrating its second anniversary in the Horn of Africa (HoA). 

Two years might not seem a long time, but look at what was accomplished in just one year: 

In 2018 alone, more than 2,500 Ethiopian migrants were assisted to return home from various countries. Reintegration assistance was provided for more than 2,300 returnees, while 1,672 returnees received psychosocial support at the migrants’ transit centre in Addis Ababa.  

More than 2,000 returning migrants were provided with post arrival medical assistance and others received educational support. But the programme is not just about numbers. There are also the personal stories, told by those whose lives have been touched by the initiative, commonly known as the “Joint Initiative”. 

Take Tigist, for example. Financial reasons forced this young Ethiopian woman to heed her friends’ advice and migrate to Sudan, where she was promptly hired as a house maid. Unfortunately, things started to change. Her employer would not pay her the promised wage. Eventually, Tigist – now mother to a baby boy in need of medical attention – decided to return home, becoming one of a large number of migrants who needed assistance to head back to their countries of origin. 

The Joint Initiative covers and has been set up in close cooperation with 26 African countries in the Sahel and Lake Chad, the Horn of Africa, and North Africa regions. Its inauguration followed the launch of the EU Emergency Fund for Africa at the Valletta Summit on Migration in November 2015.  

In the HoA, the Joint Initiative assists migrants in four priority countries: Djibouti, Somalia, Sudan and Ethiopia; Ethiopia is the country with the largest movements in the HoA. 

The programme offers tailor-made reintegration assistance for returning migrants seeking to restart their lives in their home countries. This includes medical assistance, psychosocial support, links to employment opportunities, and training in entrepreneurship. Another service offered is family tracing and reunification for migrant children, in close collaboration with the Ministry for Women, Children and Youth Affairs.  

In Ethiopia last year, entrepreneurship training was conducted for close to 700 returnees, of whom many established small businesses, such as cafeterias, retail shops, carpentry workshops, even cattle fattening and dairy enterprises. So far this year, more than 140 returnees received economic reintegration assistance to open small businesses in Oromia and Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples’ Regional (SNNPR) States – two regions prone to irregular migration. 

Among them is Tigist, who opened a retail shop to support her family after returning to Ethiopia. In addition, her son is receiving medical treatment through the programme, as he had to undergo heart surgery. “Of all the support I have received, the medical support for my son made the most impact in my life,” Tigist says. 

Working through state and non-state actors, the Joint Initiative complements the efforts of the Government of Ethiopia in the reception and reintegration of thousands of vulnerable migrants stranded in different countries. 

According to IOM’s Senior Regional Programme Coordinator Julia Hartlieb: “The programme advocates for safe migration while offering return assistance to those who might need it. It does not seek to influence migrants on their decision on whether or not to emigrate.” 

For more information please contact Helina Mengistu at IOM Ethiopia, Tel: +251 910 22 04 14, Email: hmengistu@iom.int 

 

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