The International Organization for Migration (IOM) was founded in 1951 in response to the large number of internally displaced persons and war refugees in Europe after theSecond World War. The IOM was initially a logistics agency that organized the transport of nearly one million migrants in the 1950s and has undergone several name changes since its inception. The transition from the Provisional Intergovernmental Committee for the Movement of Migrants from Europe (PICMME) in 1951 to the Intergovernmental Committee for European Migration (ICEM) in 1952, to the Intergovernmental Committee for Migration (ICM) in 1980, and finally to the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in 1989 reflects the evolution of the IOM's mandate over its existence, becoming the leading intergovernmental organization in the field of migration.[3]
Integration into the United Nations and the present (1990 to date)
In 1992, it was granted observer status at the United Nations General Assembly (GA resolution A/RES/47/4).[3] In September 2016, the United Nations (UN) Member States, through the General Assembly, unanimously adopted a resolution approving the agreement to transform IOM into an affiliated organization of the UN. This agreement has strengthened the relationship between IOM and the UN and improved its ability to fulfill its respective mandates in the interests of migrants and Member States.[4]
The IOM supported the creation of theGlobal Compact for Migration, the first-ever intergovernmental agreement on international migration which was adopted inMarrakech, Morocco, in December 2018.[5] To support the implementation, follow-up and review of the Global Compact on Migration, the UN secretary-generalAntónio Guterres established the UN Network on Migration in 2019. IOM coordinates the United Nations Network on Migration which includesUNHCR,WFP andUNDP, among others.[6] While the IOM's history tracks the man-made and natural disasters of the past half century, includingKosovo andTimor 1999, and theAsian tsunami, the2003 invasion of Iraq, thePakistan earthquake of 2004/2005, the2010 Haiti earthquake, and theEuropean migrant crisis—its credo that humane and orderly migration benefits migrants and society has steadily gained more international acceptance.[4]
International Organization for Migration headquarters in Geneva
The organization is headquartered in Geneva, with liaison offices inNew York City andAddis Ababa. The Global Migration Data Analysis Centre (GMDAC) is based inBerlin.[7] In 2020, the organization reported that it had over 15,311 employees, with 168 nationalities represented.[7] The highest decision-making body of the IOM is the council, in which all member states are represented. It has rules of procedure and meets at regular intervals to adopt the annual budget and determine the organization's programmatic objectives. The official languages areEnglish,French andSpanish. According to its own figures, the organization's budget in 2020 was around two billion US dollars. This is made up of voluntary contributions from the member states and donations.[7]
The Director General of the organization is elected by the delegates of the IOM member states for a five-year term. The following table lists the previous directors of the IOM and its predecessor organization, the ICEM.[8] The current Director General is Amy Pope from theUnited States of America, withUgochi Daniels fromNigeria serving as Deputy Directors General.[8]
The organization's global mandate includes assistance to migrants, including migrant workers, refugees and internally displaced persons. This broad mandate of the organization has earned it praise for flexibility in crisis situations,[4] but also criticism for legal accountability in protection issues.[9] Due to complementary mandates, IOM often cooperates with theUNHCR.[10]
According to theUnited Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), IOM is one of the central actors in humanitarian aid within the UN system, especially in the context of displacement.[11] IOM's main aid measures include shelter, protection, the provision of basic medical and sanitary care, life safety, coordination, telecommunications and logistics. On the instructions of theUN Emergency Relief Coordinator, IOM, together with UNHCR, is primarily responsible for camp coordination and management in humanitarian emergencies.[12] The organization is also active in stabilization, peacebuilding and development[13] in the context of migration.
Internally displaced people receive humanitarian aid after an earthquake inPort-au-Prince,Haiti.
US Secretary of State Blinken during an IOM mission inObock, Djibouti.
In 2003, bothAmnesty International andHuman Rights Watch were critical of the IOM's role in the Australian government's "Pacific Solution" of transferring asylum seekers to offshore detention centres.[15][16] Human Rights Watch criticized the IOM for operatingManus Regional Processing Centre and the processing centre onNauru despite not having a refugee protection mandate.[15] Human Rights Watch criticized the IOM for being part of "arbitrary detention" and for denying asylum seekers access to legal advice.[15] Human Rights Watch urged the IOM to cease operation the process centres, which it stated were "detention centres" and to hand management of the centres to theUnited Nations High Commissioner for Refugees.[15]
Amnesty International expressed concern that the IOM undertook actions on behalf of governments that negatively impacted the human rights of asylum seekers, refugees and migrants.[16] Amnesty International cited an example of fourteen Kurds in Indonesia who were expelled from Australian waters by Australian authorities and relocated to Indonesia.[16] Amnesty International requested an assurance that the IOM will abide by the principle ofnon-refoulement.[17]
In 2022, the role that the IOM played in housing refugees in Indonesia was described by theRefugee Council of Australia as presenting a "humanitarian veneer while carrying out rights-violating activities on behalf of Western nations” by researchers Asher Hirsch and Cameron Doig inThe Globe and Mail.[18]
The community housing that the IOM operated, using Australian government funding, was described by the Refugee Council of Australia "inhumane conditions, solitary confinement, lack of basic essentials and medical care, physical and sexual abuse, and severe overcrowding".[18] Rohingya John Joniad described the housing as an "open prison".[18]
Andrijasevic, Rutvica; Walters, William (2010): The International Organization for Migration and the international government of borders. In Environment and Planning D: Society and Space 28 (6), pp. 977–999.
Georgi, Fabian; Schatral, Susanne (2017): Towards a Critical Theory of Migration Control. The Case of the International Organization for Migration (IOM). In Martin Geiger, Antoine Pécoud (Eds.): International organisations and the politics of migration: Routledge, pp. 193–221.
Koch, Anne (2014): The Politics and Discourse of Migrant Return: The Role of UNHCR and IOM in the Governance of Return. In Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 40 (6), pp. 905–923.doi:10.1080/1369183X.2013.855073.
^Bast, Jürgen (2019). "Der Global Compact for Migration und das internationale Migrationsregime".Zeitschrift für Ausländerrecht und Ausländerpolitik (3):96–99.