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Diaspora
dialogues
International
Organisation for Migration (IOM)
Circa August 2007
http://www.iom.int/jahia/Jahia/cache/offonce/pid/1674?entryId=14916
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Diaspora: refers to any
people or ethnic population forced or induced to leave their traditional
and ethnic homelands and the ensuing developments in their dispersal
and culture. The word originally referred to a scattering or sowing
of seeds. The good thing about seeds is that they grow. The better
thing yet is that they spread. And the best is that once spread
they grow again. The Fertile Crescent's seeds allowed humanity to
grow, develop and expand.
This statement is even
truer in the context of the brain drain, depriving Africa of its
most precious human resources, its most fertile seeds. With 70 million
migrant workers and their families both inside and outside the continent,
the potential for African growth is exponential. Much the same can
be said of the scattered seeds of the diaspora. They are constantly
tapped for their money. The remittances, private fund transfers
that account for more money than all international development aid
put together.
Indeed, they are of great
worth, but they come at a price, experts know it as the remittance
burden, migrant workers who are caught up supporting themselves
abroad and their families at home on small salaries in their host
countries, unable to explain to their families that they are nowhere
near as wealthy as they seem.
It comes at the price
of making receiving countries dependent upon these private funds
to maintain their nation's precarious stability. And, in focusing
on the product, on the temporary aspects, we forget the biggest
wealth found in the diaspora, its human potential, its ability to
plant seeds that will grow where they are most needed: in their
home counties.
There are numerous Africans
in the diaspora community working towards their home country development.
Associations of diaspora members are bringing back home the skills
and knowledge they have gained abroad, promoting education at home;
allowing their fellow nationals to benefit from their experience
and exposure.
Against this background
and the already existing partnerships between developing and developed
countries, and following upon the Migration for Development in Africa
(MIDA) programme leading to transfers of skills and diaspora resources
to Africa, IOM has suggested creating Dialogues. These are meetings
between Africa's active diasporas and their counterparts in governments
at home as a basis for long-term development projects, providing
self sustainable solutions and long-lasting partnerships between
diaspora associations, their home country and their host country
governments.
By way of videoconferences,
IOM has connected African governments with their most qualified
and dynamic nationals abroad. These dialogues build upon the diaspora's
immense potential, the private development projects they have initiated
in their home countries and their government's openness and dedication
to strengthening their country's structure.
This publication covers
the first five dialogues initiated by IOM. The first meeting in
London with Africa Recruit on the topic of health in Africa, the
Dialogues with the health-profession diaspora from the Congo and
Sudan, respectively, from Brussels and London, the Dialogue concerning
the increasingly dire ecological situation in the Sahel between
Paris, Geneva and Senegal, the development of the private sector
through the Tanzanian diaspora in the US and, finally, the means
to ensure a solid education system in Africa to stem the brain drain
by investing diaspora resources in home country capacity building
among Geneva, Paris, Dakar and Princeton University in New Jersey.
The Dialogues and their
outcomes demonstrate how, if properly channelled and focused, the
diaspora can indeed live up to its definition cited at the outset
of this paper. It requires efforts on both sides of the migrant
equation: work by the diaspora and, just as importantly, on the
governmental side. After all, you reap what you sow . . .
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