‘Migration cannot end by beating up people’October 30th, 2009 - 4:28 pm ICT
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 Panaji, Oct 30 (IANS) Migration is a global reality which needs to be
handled with maturity and not by beating up migrants, state commissioner for
Non-Resident Indian (NRI) Affairs Eduardo Faleiro said.
Pressing for an academic approach to the issue of migration within the
country and abroad, Faleiro also took a dig at Raj Thackeray’s Maharashra
Navanirman Sena (MNS) for its migrant-oriented partisan politics.

“The migrant issue is a problem in Mumbai. But the best way out of it is not
to beat up people. No one has the right to beat migrants, because they also
benefit the host city,” Faleiro told reporters Friday.

Faleiro was pushing for a centre of diaspora studies in Goa, a state which
has seen out-migration to Britain, Africa and especially to the Gulf
countries.

“Goa was the second state in the country after Kerala to carry out a
scientific study on migration. But it has to be a continuous process,”
Faleiro said.

The former union minister of state for external affairs said he had
discussed the issue of setting up a centre of diaspora studies in Goa, with
the union Minister for Human Resource Development Kapil Sibal.

“The Indian diaspora has significant communities worldwide, but none of our
universities have facilities for focused research or teaching in this area,”
Faleiro said.

“Goa is an ideal location since over centuries a major chunk of our
population migrated to other parts of India and abroad, also there
in-migration into our state from other parts of the country,” he said.

To back up his argument, Faleiro said the United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) in its 2009 human development report has identified
migration as a prominent feature of domestic and international debate.

“This year’s UNDP report, called Overcoming barriers: Human mobility and
development, deals exclusively with migration,” Faleiro said.

The veteran Congressman also called for a head count of the Goan and Indian
diaspora abroad, stating that without a system in place, it was virtually
impossible to figure out how many Indians had migrated abroad for sake of
employment


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