The Council of Europe Development Bank (CEB) and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) signed three grant agreements, in the total value of €900 000, to continue providing essential assistance to migrants and refugees in Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia.
In both Bosnia and Herzegovina and North Macedonia, the funding will support Covid-19 prevention and response measures, including specific efforts aimed at integrating migrants and refugees in the local vaccination campaigns. Distinctly, in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the grant will finance the provision of essential food and non-food items to migrants and refugees located in the Una Sana Canton, and the running of the Lipa provisional camp and new temporary reception center. In North Macedonia, the grant will also support the identification of and assistance to actual and potential victims of human trafficking.
The activities associated with the three grants will build on the IOM’s previous efforts, supported by more than €13.7 million in grant contributions from the CEB’s Migrant and Refugee Fund (MRF), to ensure an adequate response to migration on the Balkan route.
“The CEB would like to thank the IOM, and in particular to all staff working on the Balkan route, for joining the CEB’s and its donors’ efforts to assist our member countries in timely responding to the challenges posed by the refugee crisis. As we look ahead, in light of the fact that migration seems to be no longer an exception but a permanent phenomenon, our institutions commit to further enhancing the countries’ capacity and ownership of their response to migration flows so that human rights are upheld and the host communities’ social cohesion is strengthened,” Rolf Wenzel, Governor of the CEB, said.
“The IOM has been supported by the CEB, through its Migrant and Refugee Fund, since the beginning of the arrival of migrants in the Western Balkans, therefore, supporting the countries to cope with the situation. We are thankful that the CEB recognized IOM as the most proactive partner in the field, strategically present to be ready when the need emerges to provide immediate support to the migrants in need. The newly allocated funds will help the IOM to continue providing capacity building to the authorities, improve access to information and advocacy for migrants’ inclusion into Covid-19 vaccine strategies but also provide support and raise awareness regarding issues of trafficking and smuggling of migrants,” Laura Lungarotti, the IOM Sub-Regional Coordinator for the Western Balkans and IOM Chief of Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina, said.

