Preamble
Recalling that one of the
objectives of the
International Labour Organisation, as stated in its
Constitution, is the
protection of the
interests of workers when employed in
countries other than their own, and bearing in
mind the
expertise and
experience of that
organization in matters related to
migrant workers and
members of their
families,
Recognizing also the
progress made by certain
States on a
regional or
bilateral basis towards the
protection of the
rights of
migrant workers and
members of their
families, as well as the importance and usefulness of
bilateral and
multilateral agreements in this
field,
Realizing the importance and
extent of the
migration phenomenon, which involves
millions of
people and
affects a large
number of
States in the
international community,
Considering the
situation of
vulnerability in which
migrant workers and
members of their
families frequently-
find themselves owing, among other things, to their
absence from their
State of origin and to the difficulties they may encounter arising from their
presence in the
State of employment,
Convinced that the
rights of
migrant workers and
members of their
families have not been sufficiently recognized
everywhere and therefore require appropriate
international protection,
Taking into
account the
fact that
migration is often the cause of
serious problems for the
members of the
families of
migrant workers as well as for the workers themselves, in particular because of the scattering of the
family,
Bearing in
mind that the
human problems involved in
migration are even more
serious in the
case of
irregular migration and convinced therefore that appropriate
action should be
encouraged in
order to
prevent and
eliminate clandestine movements and trafficking in
migrant workers, while at the same
time assuring the
protection of their
fundamental human rights,
Considering that workers who are non-
documented or in an
irregular situation are frequently employed under less
favourable conditions of work than other workers and that certain
employers find this an inducement to
seek such
labour in
order to reap the
benefits of unfair
competition,
Considering also that
recourse to the
employment of
migrant workers who are in an
irregular situation will be discouraged if the
fundamental human rights of all
migrant workers are more widely recognized and, moreover, that granting certain additional
rights to
migrant workers and
members of their
families in a
regular situation will
encourage all
migrants and
employers to
respect and comply with the
laws and
procedures established by the
States concerned,
Convinced, therefore, of the need to bring about the
international protection of the
rights of all
migrant workers and
members of their
families,
reaffirming and
establishing basic
norms in a comprehensive
convention which could be applied universally,