The October 6 Lima Ministerial Meeting on the Los Angeles Declaration convened endorsing countries to discuss successes, opportunities, and next steps in addressing the challenges posed by irregular migration in the Western Hemisphere. Endorsing countries identified concrete and ambitious commitments to maintain the momentum of the Los Angeles Declaration initiative, presented during the Ninth Summit of the Americas in June 2022.
During the October 6 Ministerial Meeting, the 21 endorsing countries agreed on priority areas for interventions to create conditions for safe, orderly, and humane migration. Partners agreed to work together to advance the pillars of the Los Angeles Declaration: 1) stability and assistance; 2) legal pathways; 3) humane migration management; and 4) emergency response. Participants identified key workstreams under the first three pillars of the Los Angeles Declaration that will develop shared lines of policy action. Countries volunteered to lead the various Action Package Committees, and each endorsing country will participate in at least one Action Package Committee to shape its commitments under the Los Angeles Declaration.
Pillar 1: Stability and Assistance for Communities 1. Integration and Support for Host Communities: Lead: Chile Participants: El Salvador, Honduras, Ecuador, Guyana 1. Temporary Protection and Regularization: Lead: Colombia Participants: Ecuador, El Salvador, Haiti 1. International Financing for Migrant Hosting Countries: Lead: Ecuador Participants: Chile, Colombia, Honduras, Guyana, Peru, United States Pillar 2: Regular Pathways for Migration and International Protection 1. Labor Mobility: Lead: Mexico Participants: Haiti, United States, El Salvador, Guatemala 1. Investing in Asylum: Lead: Canada Participants: Costa Rica, Haiti 1. Refugee Resettlement: Lead: Canada and Guyana Participants: Mexico, Uruguay, United States 1. Family Reunification and Alternative Migration Pathways: Lead: El Salvador Participants: Haiti, Mexico, Guatemala Pillar 3: Humane Migration Management 1. Countering Human Smuggling and Trafficking: Lead: United States Participants: Argentina, El Salvador, Colombia, Guatemala, Paraguay, Panama, Guyana 1. Return and Reintegration: Lead: Guatemala Participants: Haiti, El Salvador 1. Aligning Visa and travel Standards: Lead: Paraguay and Peru Participants: United States, Paraguay 1. Combatting Xenophobia: Lead: Peru Participants: Argentina, Mexico
Source: Office of the Spokesperson