Publications /
Opinion

Back
Migration in the Post-Cotonou Agreement’s Negotiations: Lessons and Future Perspectives
Authors
Amal El Ouassif
January 23, 2020

In the upcoming months, European Union (EU) member states and African, Caribbean and Pacific countries (ACP) are expected to adopt a new agreement that will replace the existing Cotonou framework due to expire by February 2020. The ACP Group and the EU respectively adopted the mandates of negotiations in May and June 2018. The beginning of negotiations was scheduled one year earlier but was delayed due to diverging positions on the matter of migration. Consequently, the formal adoption of the successor agreement is likely to witness delays.

in fact, it is not surprising to see divergences emerge around the matter of migration in the post-Cotonou agreement’s negotiations. The context in which the current EU-ACP framework was adopted has changed. Migration indeed positioned itself as a high priority issue for the EU and for several African countries, a trend that is not acutely observed for the Caribbean and Pacific countries. Hence, the negotiators agreed on the necessity to adopt an umbrella agreement that outlines the general principals of the partnership, but that will be divided into three regional pillars (Africa, the Caribbean and the Pacific) taking into account the priority fields of cooperation for each of the aforementioned regions.

Reaching the compromise

Late 2017 the European Commission submitted a proposal to the parliament and the Council for setting the ground of negotiations with ACP countries. Unsurprisingly, the protocol of negotiations with African countries lists migration management as a high priority area, to which an entire article is dedicated. In fact, the reference to migration is not a novelty, since Article 13 of the existing agreement already provides for the promotion of legal migration and commitment in favour of the readmission of both ACP and EU nationals illegally residing in the EU and ACP countries. However, the point of discord was primarily within EU member states, as to the acceptable formulation of the chapter on migration. As expected, the proposal submitted by the Commission reflected largely the existing EU policy, aligning the eradication of the root causes of migration and the necessity to improve readmission policies and border control. In line with the co-decision principal, the mandate is submitted to approval to the parliament and the Council. The European parliament approved the proposal; however, the Council blocked it following the opposition of Hungary. The latter sought that the chapter on migration should include direct reference to security and emphasis on the legal requirement for ACP countries to readmit their nationals. In fact, the Hungarian government questions the whole argument of positive migration, as described in the text of the Commission. Following months of blockage, the first round of official negotiations begun on September 2018 and the compromised mandate contained minor changes to Article 13 of the existing agreement. The most interesting change is noticed in the used terminology, referring to “shared responsibility” and “orderly and regular migration and mobility”. On the question of irregular migration, the text refers to “legal obligation to readmission” as opposed to “accept readmission” in article 13 of the current Cotonou agreement. However, the most controversial third nationals and stateless readmission clause is absent in the negotiation’s directives of the Commission. On the side of the ACP group, migration is cited under the political dialogue section, and the priorities are: voluntary readmission, no linkages between development aid and border control and the ease of diaspora’s remittances transfers.

Evolving context and priorities

The final formulation of chapter VI in the negotiations directives is not only the result of the EU’s compromise policy. In fact, even if Hungary succeeded in imposing the legally binding readmission clause and African countries of the ACP group accepted it, there were only minor chances; this would translate into significant results on the ground. First, although the ACP group counts 48 sub-Saharan African states, big players in the area of migration like Morocco, Tunisia, Libya and Algeria are not part of the group and hence absent in the negotiations table. Second, African countries recently have put in place several attempts to adopt a common agenda on migration. Being rushed into a continental deal with the EU under the auspice of the post Cotonou agreement, might carry the risk to smother these attempts. For the first time an in-depth reflexion on African migration has emerged in the 28th summit of the African Union in Addis-Ababa, under the leadership of Morocco which was designated as the AU’s coordinator on migration and that hosts the headquarters of the African Observatory for Migration. After decades of linear policy making, it is time for African governments to take more initiative in the matter. Finally, one of the biggest hinders to an effective management of migration between the EU and Africa, is the multitude of frameworks and mechanisms that are often confusing for partner countries. Adding the post Cotonou agreement to the list will certainly have adverse effects. To name only the biggest frameworks, we count The European Agenda on Migration, the Valetta Summit, the Emergency Trust for Africa, and before that the Global Approach to Migration and Mobility (GAMM) and the Common Agenda for Migration and Mobility (CAMM). While it could be understandable that each of these instruments serve a particular interest, it is nonetheless worth considering a centralisation of all the existing instruments under one policy framework. The latter can be then subdivided to the widely agreed upon axis of tackling the root causes of migration, curbing illegal migration and improving legal mobility. This would create a better understanding by partner countries and avoid miss-understandings. Ad-hoc measure for crisis situations can be included in a separate framework.

Future perspectives:

While both the EU and ACP countries managed to bypass the migration blockage in the pre-negotiation mandate, there are no guarantees the similar result will be achieved in the final negotiations. Hungary is not the only country that has voiced its scepticism to the migration chapter, Poland is also concerned, and Italy is in ongoing saga with humanitarian NGOs “illegally” accosting in its shores. The most desired outcome for these countries is that irregular migrants be systematically returned to their countries of origin. Hence, there will be certainly attempts to re-emphasize on the readmission mechanisms in the final post Cotonou agreement. From the side of the ACP group, readmission should be only done on voluntary basis and development aid should not be pending on how good a country is doing in terms of re-admission. The stakes of both parts seem to be on the opposing parts of the spectrum. The way out of the deadlock is to put into practice the long-praised principals of shared responsibility and commitments to the respect of the universally admitted principals of valuing human rights regardless of origin and ethnicity.

The opinions expressed in this article belong to the author.

RELATED CONTENT

  • March 18, 2022
    تم تقديم إطلاق مبادرة جماعية لتطوير شراكات جديدة من أجل انتقال عادل للطاقة في إفريقيا خلال القمة بين الاتحاد الأوروبي والاتحاد الإفريقي. فما هي المبادرات المبرمجة بين الاتحاد الأوروبي و إ ...
  • Authors
    March 16, 2022
    The 2021 German federal election brought about a historic reshuffle of the political parties’ hierarchy in Europe’s biggest economy. The Social Democratic Party are back in control of the Chancellery for the first time since 2005, as part of a three-party coalition at the federal level with the Greens and the Liberals, a first in Germany’s post-war history. Now, the federal government has turned its gaze towards its founding mission: more progress. The first 100 days of the three-pa ...
  • Authors
    Dominique Lecompte
    Thierry Vircoulon
    March 14, 2022
    Although it has largely gone unnoticed in France, the agreement signed on December 3, 2020 between the European Union (EU) and the Organisation of African, Caribbean and Pacific States (ACP) is a major shift in the long-standing relations between the EU and countries in the Global South. The EU established a development assistance policy as early as the Treaty of Rome in 1957, signed the first cooperation agreement in 1963, and nowadays is often the largest donor to these countries, ...
  • March 10, 2022
    Africafé est une émission du Policy Center for the New South qui décrypte l’actualité des organisations africaines et de l’Afrique. A travers de courtes interviews, l’émission tente de proposer d’aborder de manière pédagogique les enjeux des organisations africaines et l’actualité du co...
  • Authors
    March 2, 2022
    The White House  classified the speech as “remarks by President Obama to the People of Africa”, their representatives gathered at Mandela Hall, Addis Ababa,  Ethiopia, July 28, 2015. It was the first address by a US-President to the African Union. He was standing before the audience as “a proud American” and “the son of an African”. His father, Barack Hussein Obama, who grew up near a small village in Nyanza Province, Kenya, won a scholarship to study economics and made history- th ...
  • March 1, 2022
    يخصص مركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد حلقة برنامجه الأسبوعي "حديث الثلاثاء" لتقييم مخرجات القمة الاوروبية الافريقية ونموذج الشراكة الجديدة بين الطرفين، مع محمد لوليشكي، باحث بارز لدى مركز السياسات من أجل الجنوب الجديد. خلال القمة السادسة التي جمعت الاتحاديين في بروكسل وضع الاتحاد الأ...
  • February 28, 2022
    The Russian-Ukrainian war will have major economic and political repercussions. In this note, we focus on the war’s economic short and long term implications on the African economy. This conflict comes at very arduous context, where Africa is still struggling to set its economy on the recovery path, amid global inflationary pressures and highly uncertain context. While natural resources countries, especially energy exporters, are sensing opportunities from the crisis, other countrie ...
  • February 28, 2022
    La guerre russo-ukrainienne aura des répercussions économiques et politiques dans les années à venir. Dans cette note, nous nous intéressons aux implications économiques de la guerre sur l’économie africaine à court et à long terme. Le conflit survient alors que l’Afrique s’efforce de mettre son économie sur la voie de la reprise, dans un contexte de pressions inflationnistes mondiales et de volatilité des marchés financiers et des matières premières. Alors que les exportateurs d’én ...
  • Authors
    Patricia Ahanda
    February 23, 2022
    Le Sommet Union européenne (UE) - Union africaine (UA), qui s’est tenu à Bruxelles les 17 et 18 février 2022, entend marquer un tournant dans les relations entre les deux continents. L’agenda européen pour l’année 2022 met au centre de ses priorités les relations Europe - Afrique. Celles-ci sont aussi l'un des principaux axes défendus par la Présidence française du Conseil de l’Union européenne (PFUE) et le Président français Emmanuel Macron dans de son discours inaugur ...
  • February 22, 2022
    Le sommet afro-européen des 17 et 18 février 2022 à Bruxelles marque la sixième édition de la rencontre de haut niveau entre les deux continents. Ce sommet, organisé traditionnellement en alternance entre l’Afrique et l’Europe, intervient dans un contexte régional et international marqué par la perspective de sortie de la pandémie de la Covid-19, l’épreuve de force entre l’Occident et la Russie et les turbulences que connaissent certaines régions africaines. Face à une E ...