A/76/257
initiatives and assisted migrants, including returning migrants, regardless of their
migration status. 95
VI. Conclusions
79. The COVID-19 pandemic has strongly affected all orders of life, but in
particular the health, social and economic fabric of societies, unveiling systemic
inequalities, severe human rights gaps and governance deficits. Migrants, in
particular those in a vulnerable situation, have been disproportionally affected
by the pandemic, including by the restrictive measures taken to counter it and
the discrimination and abuses stemming from private actors. Several of their
rights have been particularly affected, including the right to liberty of
movement, the right to liberty and security of person, the right to health and an
equitable access to health services, the right to work and to just and favourable
conditions of work, and the right to an adequate standard of living and freedom
from discrimination.
80. The public emergency provoked by the pandemic has led to restrictions of
several rights, including liberty of movement. The closure of borders and other
emergency measures at international borders from countries of origin, transit
and destination have led to migrants in some countries being stranded; others
have been forced to return to their countries of origin, and a number of asylum
seekers have not been able to gain effective access to asylum procedures.
81. Ensuring equitable access to health services for all became most relevant in
the collective efforts to contain the pandemic. However, migrants, in particular
those who are undocumented or in an irregular situation, face difficulties in
gaining access to health services, due to, inter alia, legal and policy barriers,
including strict requirements for documentation, fees, lack of accessible
information and lack of effective protection firewalls that would help to
overcome concerns about and fear of migrants. Migrants who are deprived of
their liberty or in other settings characterized by confinement, overcrowding,
unsanitary conditions and lack of sanitation protocols and their implementation,
are at a heightened risk of infection in the case of an outbreak.
82. Migrant workers, including those who are undocumented or in an irregular
situation, contribute robustly to the health-care sector, the agrofood industry, the
delivery sector and other essential sectors that have been critical during the
pandemic. However, the pandemic has further exposed their vulnerabilities, the
fragility of their status in society and the economy and the neglect for their
human rights and entitlements, such as unsafe working conditions, lack of social
protections, withdrawal of wages, discrimination, etc.
83. One and a half years since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, while
uncertainty remains owing to the evolution of the virus, positive signs of recovery
exist in a number of countries, associated with progress made in vaccination
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21-10577
See www.ilo.org/asia/publications/issue-briefs/WCMS_746979/lang--en/index.htm; ILO,
“COVID-19: Impact on Cambodian migrant workers”; ILO, “Impact of COVID-19 on Bangladesh
Overseas Migrant Workers”, available from www.ilo.org/dhaka/Whatwedo/Projects/WCMS_
762473/lang--en/index.htm; ILO, The impact of COVID-19 on labour migration governance,
recruitment practices and migrant workers (2020), available at www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/
public/---ed_protect/---protrav/---migrant/documents/publication/wcms_780964.pdf; ILO,
“COVID-19: Impact on migrant workers and country response in Thailand”, available from
www.ilo.org/asia/publications/issue-briefs/WCMS_741920/lang--en/index.htm; submissions by:
Migration Forum Asia; Center for Migration, Gender, and Justice; CARE Ecuador; Instituto de
Democracia y Derechos Humanos; Europe Must Act.
19/22