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"Migrant
money buoys the economy. Migrant departures split parents
from children" Over lunch "lofty talk of opportunity
abroad mixes with accounts of false travel documents and sham
marriages" to bag a visa.
One
out of every eight Filipinos today works abroad. Remittances
from overseas workers
last year topped $12 billion. And anecdotal evidence indicates
family abandonment cases are surging. So, the paragraph above
is about the Philippines, right?
Wrong.
This is a New York Times quote on migration ripping West Africa's
Cape Verde.
The
article offers a glimpse into how over 200 million migrants
worldwide recast societies in a planet "where borders
are closing." Cape Verde's searing experience "makes
this barren archipelago the Galapagos of migration,"
writes Jason De Parle.
Isolas
de Galapagos, ("Islands of the Tortoises") are desolate
Pacific islands, 600 miles west of Ecuador. Studying its plant
and wildlife led the naturalist Charles Darwin, in 1835, to
conclude that different species, over time, adapt to their
environment. At certain times of year, fog blankets the Galapagos.
Thus, 17th-century sailors claimed the "enchanted islands"
were "mere shadows."
"Is
the Philippines the "Galapagos of migration" in
Asia? One asked after reading De Parle's earlier NYTimes Magazine
cover story on Filipino OFWs. "A Good Provider Is One
Who Leaves" tracked three generations of a Pasay City
swimming pool cleaner's family who became an OFW. "In
no other sizeable country do remittances loom as large as
14 percent of the national GDP. But no country ever broke
free from penury just by remittances."
Of
$127 billion migrants sent home in 2004, Asians accounted
for $53 billion. The total now exceeds $300 billion last year,
World Bank estimates that's almost triple the world's foreign
aid budgets combined. The money renovates tattered houses,
buy subdivision plots, pays for medicine and tuition, seed
small businesses - plus cell phones, fancy clothing and, in
some instances, mistresses, karaokes and booze. Sapagkat kami
ay tao lamang.
Cash
shoved migration up policy agenda of "receiving nations,"
like the US or Canada, and "sending" countries like
the Philippines, Indonesia, Sri Lanka - and yes, even Britain.
The
British Broadcasting Corporation reports that 3,200, out of
8,000 UK nurses flew to Australia, due to National Health
Service budget cuts. Over 165,000 Malaysians cross the Johore
bridge daily to jobs in Singapore.
Nearly
half the migrants from poor nations move to other poor nations,
De Parle observes. Chinese shopkeepers chase markets on Cape
Verde. African peddlers fleeing homelands torn by war and
worse poverty. As Zimbabawe crumbles from the Marcos-style
governance of Robert Mugabe, thousands flee next door.
Migration
is a universal phenomenon and that involves survival. Thus,
an unspoken global migrant's creed has emerged: "If a
place is no good, change it." That is inevitable in what
one academic calls: "The Age of Migration."
But
"this is also the age of migration alarm," De Parle
notes. Even before September 11, hurdles were growing, like
the "3-S Strategy," Asian Development Bank noted.
Entry visas are good only for "skilled workers for short-term
employment in specific sectors."
Language
skills are tested and visa processing is longer, costlier.
"European
ships patrol African coasts to intercept human smugglers and
new fences are planned along the Rio Grande" between
the US and Mexico," he notes. "Countries that want
migrant muscle and brains also want more border control and
fear bonfires of religious and cultural conflict."
Migration
today is at record levels. More women are migrating.
Marlou
Schrover of Leiden University notes that in migration history,
men, as well as the poor, the desperate, and the exceptional
have attracted more attention than other migrants. And the
"death of distance" due to the jet, Internet, telephone
- have made cultural differences smaller.
As
migration grows, the desire to experience its economic rewards
grows even faster.
Less
obvious but more worrisome is the frustration of people desperate
to migrate but who cannot. "What characterizes the world
today is also the feeling of involuntary immobility,"
says Dr. R. Carling of Oslo's International Peace Research
Institute.
Migration
supply rich economies with brawn and brains of migrants. Remittances
feed and shelter the poor, underscoring family devotion. But
constant emphasis on departures strains family bonds and erodes
marriages. It also increases inequalities between migrants
and those who can't leave.
A
country that can not hold on to its best and brightest compromises
its future. Such countries find they must reinvent themselves
as nations beyond borders. Migration drains the Philippines
of essential skills, ADB cautions spoon feeding individuals
and governments puts off tough reforms. "Relying on remittances
- and the prospect of going abroad one day - can alienate,"
De Parle notes.
That
alienation finds its expression in song. In Cape Verde, the
song "Sodade" conveys "longing, longing, longing
for my island." And De Parle remembers Filipino migrants
in Dhubai belting out "It's So Painful, Big Brother Eddie,"
a 1980s Tagalog classic "that immortalizes every Filipino
migrant's fears." - since we never got our act, at home,
together.
(E-mail: juan_mercado@boholchronicle.com) |