The United Nations is calling for more support in the refugee and immigration crisis in America
In Texas, USA, a woman hugged her four-year-old daughter after a dangerous journey through the Darien Strait between Colombia and Panama.
Raising
concerns on Friday about a new ban on migrants and refugees following the
United States' lifting of the COVID-19 pandemic framework known as Title 42,
the United Nations agency has called for made great strides in many ways to
organize movement on the continent. The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and the
International Organization for Migration (IOM) have called for joint efforts to
respond effectively to the expected changes in the southern United States.
"The
challenges facing Americans require strong, innovative and ethical cooperation
among all stakeholders," the agency said. Such a strategy must be
supported by international law and good solidarity to promote protection and
solutions for refugees and migrants, and be consistent with the framework set
by the Global Compact on Refugees, the Global Compact for Protection , on
regularization and migration, and the Los Angeles Declaration on Migration and
Security.
New US
restrictions
Accepting
positive moves to expand manufacturing and other regular ways in the region,
companies are still concerned about new restrictions on access to asylum
following the "long-term" lifting of the release of the 42 titles of
the United States. Since the beginning of the epidemic in 2020, US immigration
officials have used 42 subjects about 2.5 million people at the southern
border, sending people back to Mexico or their country, without assessing the
risks they face due to their return . .
Barriers
that prevent people from applying their human rights to seek asylum are
unacceptable and against the international obligations of the state, they said,
adding that the new US government law restricts the access of asylum seekers to
the soon after they moved to a foreign country that did not agree with this.
principles of international refugee law. Although the number of people
approaching the US border has increased in recent years, the agency said the
majority of American migrants are still being welcomed by Latin American
countries.
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