As Kazakhstan prepares to take the Chair of the OSCE in January 2010, FIDH highlights the reforms urgently required to ensure that migrant workers and refugees receive the protection to which they are entitled under international law.
Opportunities for migrants to work legally in Kazakhstan under the quota system are highly restrictive and have become more so in 2009 when quotas were slashed in response to the financial crisis. Such restrictions force migrants into irregular situations and increase their vulnerability. One of the main problems is not addressed in the most recent draft of the law on migration, currently under discussion: work permits are still to be issued to employers with the result that migrants are in situations of dependency, unable to leave or change employers.
The FIDH report also documents cases of violations of the rights of migrants working in the agriculture and construction industries: long working hours, lack of rest days, confiscation of passports, non-payment of salaries and sale of migrant workers from one employer to another. Such violations are generally committed with complete impunity due to widespread corruption within the police, customs, and border officials.
FIDH found the situation of asylum seekers and refugees in Kazakhstan deeply concerning. For geo-political reasons, the Kazakh authorities do not grant refugee status to Uzbek, Uyghur, Chechen and Kyrgyz asylum seekers, whose only recourse is to the United Nations High Commission on Refugees (UNHCR). FIDH and KIBHR are concerned that the draft of the new law on refugees made publicly available does not conform to international law, in particular the provision that membership of religious organisations prohibited in the asylum seeker’s country of origin is a ground for refusing asylum. FIDH and KIBHR are also concerned that, under the draft shared with their organisations, refugees do not have access to permanent residence status and that there a requirement for refugee status to be renewed on a yearly basis [3].
Similar problems affecting migrant workers and refugees in other post-soviet countries and ways of protecting their rights were explored by FIDH’s members and partners from throughout the region in the seminar held in Almaty from 28-29 November. The participants elaborated a series of recommendations addressed to all states in the region.
Concerning Kazkahstan, FIDH and KIBHR make the following recommendations:
ensure that applications for asylum are dealt with by an independent body;
ensure that refugees have access to permanent residence status and that there is no requirement for refugee status to be renewed on a yearly basis;
ensure that refuses asylum status to membership of religious organisations that are prohibited in the individual’s country of origin is not a ground for refusing asylum;
abolish the distinction between political asylum seekers and refugees, which is contrary to international law.
Launch of a regional call for ratification of the UN migrant workers Convention
Finally, in the framework of FIDH’s Global Call for Ratification, launched in view of the upcoming 20th anniversary of the UN Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families in 2010, FIDH, KIBHR and their partner organisations from Eastern Europe and Central Asia and its members and partners issued a call to all governments in these regions to ratify the Convention, the key international instrument for the protection of this vulnerable population.









