including the withdrawal month. They can be cashed by special procedures but are accrued to the
agreement, the Sudanese are entitled to freedom of movement, work, residence and property
without the intervention of the governments. These informal agreements concerned
managing flows of migrants to such countries. With the Arab countries, there is also the
Agreement of the Council of Arab Economic Unity of 1965 whose objective was to
achieve the economic integration of the region within the framework of economic and
social development. The agreement was meant to provide for freedom of movement,
employment and residence, and to abolish some restrictions on movement within the
region. It was ratified by Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Libya, Mauritania, Somalia, Sudan,
Syria, Yemen and Palestine. As a follow-up to this, the Arab Declaration of Principles on
the Movement of Manpower adopted in 1984 stressed the need to give preference to Arab
nationals and called for intra-regional cooperation (Roman, 2006).
Most of the current efforts undertaken by GOE have mainly focused on signing
international agreements, a trend that is declining. Whereas, in the past, bilateral
agreements were signed in increasing numbers, there has been a shift to stabilize and
reduce the signing of new bilateral agreements; these agreements with Europe are now
rare. In fact, there are only bilateral agreements with Italy and Greece. There is one, signed
in 1981 aimed at the regulation of migrant flows with Greece that has recently been
renewed and amended (Collyer, 2004). It focused on the status of seasonal employment,
especially fishermen. It tackled three aspects, namely, labour flows (in terms of the number
of Egyptian migrants who will be granted work permits), readmission and cooperation
among police authorities. There are ongoing negotiations with France and Cyprus to sign
similar agreements to those with Italy (France) and Greece (Cyprus), but they have, so far,
not materialized into something concrete (based on interviews). To date, only one
readmission agreement was signed with Italy in 2006, which was accompanied by an
agreement that regulates legal migrant flows to Italy, specifying a certain quota of
Egyptian labour to migrate on an annual basis, based on the demands of the Italian labour
market. The quota started in 2007 with 7,000 migrants, and was increased in 2008 to
8,000, and is expected to remain at this level or increase. Fulfilling the quota in 2007
proved difficult due to an inability to meet the demands of the Italians (absence of type of
skills required and job specification). It is worth noting that the Association Agreement
with the EU mentions the general aspects and framework of readmission agreements to be
signed with Egypt (see Annex 1.), whereas details are left to the bilateral agreements
between Egypt and individual EU members (as in the case of Greece and Italy).
However, the GOE was able to legalize the status of around 5,000 irregular Egyptian
migrants in Italy under this agreement (MME, 2008). This can be viewed as a
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