A/75/183
I. Introduction
1.
The present report is submitted to the General Assembly by the Special
Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, Felipe González Morales, pursuant to
Assembly resolution 74/148 and Human Rights Council resolution 43/6.
II. Activities1
2.
On 22 May 2020, the Special Rapporteur participated in a webinar about the
impact of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) on migration in Latin America,
organized by the Max Planck Institute on International and Comparative Public Law.
3.
On 26 May, the Special Rapporteur, along with the Committee on the Protection
of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families, issued a joint
guidance note on the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the human rights of
migrants.
4.
Also on 26 May, he participated in a webinar about the response of international
organizations to the challenges presented by COVID-19 to human mobility, convened
by the Organization of American States and the American University Washington
College of Law.
5.
On 27 May, the Special Rapporteur was a panellist at a webinar on the
regularization of migrants during the pandemic and beyond, organized by the Global
Coalition on Migration.
6.
On 3 June, at the invitation of the Law School of the University of Luxembo urg,
he gave a lecture entitled “The development of multilateralism in migration and the
Global Compact for Migration”.
7.
On 11 June, he was a panellist at a webinar organized by Amnesty
International’s Colombia Section about the situation of Venezuelan migrants in
several countries of South America and the Caribbean in the context of the pandemic.
8.
On 19 June, at the invitation of the Supreme Court of Mexico, he gave a lecture
about the criminalization and decriminalization of migration.
9.
On 26 June, the Special Rapporteur participated in the launching of a guide on
monitoring migratory detention, published by a coalition of civil society
organizations from Mexico, for which he contributed the prologue.
10. On 30 June, he gave a presentation at a webinar about the human rights of
migrants and the COVID-19 pandemic, organized by the Pontifical Catholic
University of Peru.
III. End immigration detention of children and provide
adequate care and reception for them and their families
A.
Introduction
11. Migration is a fact of life in a globalized world, as well as an essential and
overwhelmingly positive human phenomenon (see A/70/59). Children throughout
recorded history have been and continue to be on the move for various reasons,
including because their fundamental rights are threatened, to re unite with their family
members or because they are in search of safety or a better life. Some children travel
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20-09734
For activities between August 2019 and April 2020, see A/HRC/44/42.
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