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  3. The First Planned Migration of an Entire Country Is Underway

The First Planned Migration of an Entire Country Is Underway

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  • alyaza@beehaw.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
    alyaza@beehaw.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
    [email protected]
    wrote last edited by
    #1

    archive.is link

    In the face of this existential threat, an unprecedented climate visa program has begun. In 2023, Tuvalu and Australia signed the Falepili Union Treaty, an agreement that provides for a migration scheme that will allow 280 Tuvaluans per year to settle in Australia as permanent residents.

    The visas will be allocated through a ballot system and will grant beneficiaries the same health, education, housing, and employment rights enjoyed by Australian citizens. In addition, Tuvaluans will retain the ability to return to their home country if conditions permit.

    The first stage of applications was open from June 16 to July 18. “We received extremely high levels of interest in the ballot with 8,750 registrations, which includes family members of primary registrants,” the Australian High Commission in Tuvalu said in a statement on July 23. The first cohort of 280 people will be drawn via a ballot on July 25, the high commission says.

    “When combined with other Pacific pathways to Australia and New Zealand, nearly 4 percent of the population could migrate each year,” says Jane McAdam, a fellow at the Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at UNSW Sydney, writing in the Conversation. “Within a decade, close to 40 percent of the population could have moved—although some people may return home or go backwards and forwards.”

    a_norny_mousse@feddit.orgA 1 Reply Last reply
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    • alyaza@beehaw.orgA [email protected]

      archive.is link

      In the face of this existential threat, an unprecedented climate visa program has begun. In 2023, Tuvalu and Australia signed the Falepili Union Treaty, an agreement that provides for a migration scheme that will allow 280 Tuvaluans per year to settle in Australia as permanent residents.

      The visas will be allocated through a ballot system and will grant beneficiaries the same health, education, housing, and employment rights enjoyed by Australian citizens. In addition, Tuvaluans will retain the ability to return to their home country if conditions permit.

      The first stage of applications was open from June 16 to July 18. “We received extremely high levels of interest in the ballot with 8,750 registrations, which includes family members of primary registrants,” the Australian High Commission in Tuvalu said in a statement on July 23. The first cohort of 280 people will be drawn via a ballot on July 25, the high commission says.

      “When combined with other Pacific pathways to Australia and New Zealand, nearly 4 percent of the population could migrate each year,” says Jane McAdam, a fellow at the Kaldor Centre for International Refugee Law at UNSW Sydney, writing in the Conversation. “Within a decade, close to 40 percent of the population could have moved—although some people may return home or go backwards and forwards.”

      a_norny_mousse@feddit.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
      a_norny_mousse@feddit.orgA This user is from outside of this forum
      [email protected]
      wrote last edited by [email protected]
      #2

      This is no doubt interesting, but why does it have to be "an entire country"? This once again pushes the actual catastrophe to a point in the future for the reader - when it is already happening right now.

      Islands in Bangladesh IIRC (and no doubt other places), have already become uninhabitable. Oh, but the residents don't need visa, they just go to the mainland. That's OK then I guess?

      Sorry, I easily anger wrt climate catastrophe articles.

      theneverfox@pawb.socialT 1 Reply Last reply
      2
      • a_norny_mousse@feddit.orgA [email protected]

        This is no doubt interesting, but why does it have to be "an entire country"? This once again pushes the actual catastrophe to a point in the future for the reader - when it is already happening right now.

        Islands in Bangladesh IIRC (and no doubt other places), have already become uninhabitable. Oh, but the residents don't need visa, they just go to the mainland. That's OK then I guess?

        Sorry, I easily anger wrt climate catastrophe articles.

        theneverfox@pawb.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
        theneverfox@pawb.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        Yeah, this is kind of like "well, we poisoned the water, but we've decided to give out water bottles for free". And they spin it as a triumph of the human spirit or something

        That's not a positive, that's just like... The bare minimum to avoid mass death, and it's not even a real fix

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