Tag Archives: WSF

FSM 2013: L’assemblée de convergence sur les questions liées aux migrations

Compte Rendu offert par Secours Catholique sur l’assemblée de convergence sur les questions liées aux migrations pendant le Forum Social Mondial a Tunis.

Par Geneviève Colas, Secours Catholique – Caritas France

Dans un processus participatif, les divers ateliers touchant aux questions de migrations se sont réunis vendredi après-midi. Des représentants de l’atelier Migration et Développement organisé par Caritas Internationalis et ses membres y ont participé.

Un premier temps a permis de rappeler l’intérêt d’un travail en réseaux afin que la société civile ait un impact sur les choix politiques concernant les migrants. Identifier collectivement les causes permet d’interpeller les institutions pour protéger les migrants, de faire respecter les droits des personnes. Créer des lieux d’échange, se rencontrer pour discuter, construire des revendications, des actions, des plaidoyers est un gage d’efficacité pour défendre la cause des migrants. Continue reading

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Filed under Caritas news, World Social Forum 2013, WSF 2013

World Social Forum voices

World Social Forum: No electricity, many talents and an old friend

All photos Elodie Perriot/Secours Catholique

By Martina Liebsch, Caritas Internationalis

The WSF, as I perceived it during the two days I was there, was a “Happy festival”, as praised by Tunisian newspapers and by the taxi-driver from the airport. A time of relaxation after tensions lived during the revolutionary period and a pride to receive the world in Tunis. And it seemed to be very well organised on the campus of the El-Manara University, with a lot of space, places to meet, to observe people and to listen to shouting, singing and intense discussions. And above all the Palestine flag all over the place.

Well organised until this morning when we had our Caritas seminar on Migration and Development. Mysteriously the electricity was not functioning, so no microphone, no PowerPoint and no translation were possible. Moreover, the promised interpreters had mysteriously disappeared. Stress and anxiety could be felt in the room for the many participants from Caritas who had prepared before at home for this moment. Continue reading

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Filed under Female Face of Migration, Migration and Trafficking, World Social Forum 2013, WSF 2013

WSF: “dignified welcome for child migrants in Mali”

Available in French
On 9 February at the WSF in Dakar, Secours Catholique and its partners held a workshop called “Migrants: give them a dignified welcome!” Bagayoko Seckna, coordinator of the Malian branch of the international NGO Environment and Development Action in the Third World (ENDA-TM), raised the issue of child migrants and their difficult living conditions.

Who are the children that migrate in Mali?

These children are primarily unaccompanied minors. Hundreds of them migrate on their own in Mali. According to our statistics, 150 child migrants were assisted by ENDA-TM in 2010. They come from Senegal, Burkina Faso, Ivory Coast, Guinea Conakry and Niger. All the children we help are separated from their families, and their ages range from 9 to 18. Continue reading

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Filed under Economic Justice, Français, Migration and Trafficking, World Social Forum 2013

WSF: Exploring migration

By Clémence Richard

Available in French

On Tuesday 8 February, Secours Catholique (Caritas France), together with the Association des cités du Secours Catholique (ACSC), ran a workshop on the lack of free movement of persons. The participants recreated migrants’ journeys via a board game, and were able to communicate with immigrants in Paris via videoconferencing. Continue reading

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Filed under Economic Justice, Français, Migration and Trafficking, World Social Forum 2013

Caritas workshop at World Social Forum

By Christine Campeau

This was my first time at the World Social Forum and I must admit, I had no idea what to expect from this event. However, I didn’t expect it would have been this disorganised.

The Universite du Chiekh AntaDiop that housed the event was still filled with students writing exams. The daily programmes were not posted until midday, well after half of the workshops should have already taken place. Plus, once the workshop locations were announced, most of the classrooms were still full of students writing their exams.

As rumour has it, there were so many strikes by both students and teachers that the exam season was still in full swing. The government tried to force the university to clear the rooms but students protested that they should be able to write their exams (rightly so). So while the university and the government battled it out, students protested and the WSF participants presented their workshops in hallways and free corners of the campuses.

It was a real shame to have this many participants walking around in circles desperately looking for daily programmes that were yet to be printed.

But where there’s a will, there’s a way. The Caritas workshop on Climate Change and Forced Migration was planned for the morning of Tuesday 8 February. Eight speakers had prepared excellent presentations and we weren’t about to let disorganisation stand in the way of information sharing.

Abbé Tine and I met at the WSF early in the morning to get any sense of where our workshop would take place. After 30 minutes and no response from the president of the WSF, we decided to take matters into our own hands and convert the Caritas tent into an auditorium.

Within one hour, we had 60 chairs from the Caritas office, a projector, tables, a translator booth with two interpreters, microphones and headsets all ready to go. I can’t describe what a feat this was and how happy I was to see it all come together. Despite the late start, our Caritas workshop filled the tent with an audience of 80-100 people, all eager and willing to contribute to the discussion.

The workshop introduced case studies from Niger, Bangladesh, and Senegal, and models for addressing the problem from Cambodia and Zambia.

It really was a perfect example of how things can be accomplished when people believe in something; all in line with the spirit of the WSF.

Caritas members continued to pull together their efforts throughout the week and were living proof of what we’d chanted during the opening march: “Another world is possible” as long as we are dedicated to making it happen.

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Filed under Economic Justice, World Social Forum 2013