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labour, child marriage and child trafficking, as families are pushed into negative
coping mechanisms. 14
29. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), as of May
2021, in more than 53 countries, territories and zones, the most vulnerable did not
have actual access to COVID-19 vaccines. Migrants and their families face obstacles,
including the lack of access to information in a language they understand, costs and
legal, administrative and practical barriers, such as identity cards, residence permits
or pre-registration with the national insurance. In other cases, foreigners were not
being included in vaccination campaigns. 15 Some countries lack protocols to facilitate
equitable access to vaccination for undocumented migrants or the relevant procedures
are unclear or burdensome, and some others require information on migration status
as a requirement, often without effective firewall protection mechanisms. 16
Impact on employment and working conditions
30. The COVID-19 pandemic has shown how migrants, including migrant women,
provide a key contribution to local economies and societies and play a critical role in
essential sectors of society – such as health and personal care, agrofood processing,
transport, storage and delivery – enabling countries to continue to operate and provide
services during the crisis. The importance of remittances in countries of origin has
also showed the key role of migrants.
31. While essential, the sectors in which migrants work can also be deeply
precarious. Many migrants carry out temporary and informal work exposed to unjust,
unfavourable and unsafe working conditions, which are exacerbated by the
COVID-19, to the extent of risking their lives. 17 Owing to fear of layoffs and need of
income, many undocumented low-skilled and low-paid migrant workers have had to
continue in-person work without the social protections enjoyed by other workers.
32. As soon as COVID-19 restrictions were put in place, many migrants
experienced large-scale layoffs, withdrawal of wages and income losses. They were
also victims of differential treatment, often being the first to face layoffs, compared
with national workers. Loss of jobs and expiration of work permits have pushed many
migrants into irregular situations, creating the conditions for abuse, trafficking and
unscrupulous recruitment practices. 18
33. Migrant women have also been under great pressure to accept precarious
working conditions, increasing their risk of labour and human rights violatio ns,
including sexual harassment and violence at work. In 2020, owing to the pandemic,
8.5 million women migrant domestic workers on insecure contracts faced income loss
and much greater risks of abuse and exploitation, in particular those women who
could not return to their home country because of travel bans and border controls. 19
Within workplaces, including in informal and domestic settings, migrant women were
more likely to experience gender-based violence. 20 Migrant health-care workers, the
majority of whom are women, also faced serious risks during the COVID -19
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18
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21-10577
Submission by the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
See https://reliefweb.int/report/world/covid-19-l-oim-alerte-sur-les-difficult-s-d-acc-s-desmigrants-aux-vaccins.
Submissions by: Human Rights 360; Lawyers for Human Rights; PICUM.
International Labour Organization (ILO), “Protecting migrant workers during the COVID -19
pandemic” (April 2020). Available from www.ilo.org/global/topics/labour-migration/
publications/WCMS_743268/lang--en/index.htm.
ILO, “Ensuring fair recruitment during the COVID-19 pandemic” (June 2020). Available from
www.ilo.org/global/topics/labour-migration/publications/WCMS_748839/lang--en/index.htm.
Submission by UN-Women.
Forthcoming publication by ILO, entitled “Locked down and in li mbo: The global impact of
COVID-19 on migrant worker rights and recruitment”.
7/22