E/CN.4/2000/82
page 5
II. ACTIVITIES OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR
8.
The Special Rapporteur visited Geneva between 13 and 17 September 1999. During her
stay, she held consultations with staff members of the Office of the High Commissioner for
Human Rights and with the High Commissioner herself, as well as with members of
intergovernmental bodies and representatives of non-governmental organizations (NGOs),
and drew up a plan of activities for the three years of her mandate.
9.
The Special Rapporteur visited New York between 4 and 6 November and once again
met the High Commissioner, as well as special rapporteurs and NGOs. She was back in Geneva
between 25 November and 2 December to meet representatives of the permanent missions and
officials of intergovernmental, international and non-governmental organizations.
10.
On the latter occasion, she attended a meeting of the International Steering Committee of
the Global Campaign for Ratification of the International Convention on the Protection of the
Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families.
11.
As a first step, and in compliance with the provisions of paragraph 5 of Commission on
Human Rights resolution 1999/44, the Special Rapporteur sent out, on 27 September 1999, a
letter to Governments, the specialized agencies of the United Nations, the chairpersons of treaty
bodies, and NGOs, requesting information relevant to her mandate. She is especially interested
in receiving information on measures being taken in response to the questions raised by the issue
of the human rights of migrants, with a view to formulating suitable recommendations to the
Commission.
12.
The information provided in the replies to her letter is now being studied by the Special
Rapporteur and will be reflected in her oral presentation of this report to the Commission at its
fifty-sixth session.
III. BACKGROUND
13.
The international community’s growing interest in human rights issues has meant that
migrants’ rights have begun to receive special attention. In addition to the initiative taken by the
Commission and the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action adopted by the World
Conference on Human Rights in 1993 (part II, paras. 33-35), the Programme of Action of the
International Conference on Population and Development held at Cairo (chapter X), the
Programme of Action of the World Summit for Social Development, held at Copenhagen
(Programme of Action, chapter III), and the outcome of the Fourth World Conference on
Women, held in Beijing (Platform for Action, chapter IV, section D), devote special attention to
the issue of migrants’ human rights. The working group of intergovernmental experts on the
human rights of migrants has made a considerable contribution to our knowledge of this
phenomenon and to identifying the current obstacles to the full and effective exercise of their
human rights by that “vulnerable group”.1 Intergovernmental bodies have promoted a number of
initiatives to establish a dialogue between Governments in regions that have to deal with the