International
Organization for Migration (IOM) Libya, assisted 162 stranded Nigerians
migrants, including 28 women and 3 children, to return home to Nigeria from
Libya. They arrived Murtala International Airport, Lagos, on Thursday June 16.
The repatriation, in close co-operation with the Libyan
authorities, the Nigerian Embassy in Tripoli and the IOM mission in Nigeria,
was on board a
chartered flight that departed Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport and
arrived in Abuja the same afternoon. The repatriated migrants were received by
IOM Nigeria at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport and were provided
with cash grants upon arrival. Of the group, 20 will be provided with some
reintegration support.
Before departure all
migrants were provided with hygiene kits, clothes and shoes. A mobile patrol
from the Libyan Directorate of Combating Illegal Migration (DCIM) escorted the
buses to Mitiga airport.
The circumstances of
this group were similar to the other migrants who were previously repatriated
by IOM from Libya. Almost all the migrants traveling on this charter were
detained after they were intercepted at sea, trying to get to Europe.
Some of the migrants who
spoke to IOM explained why they felt compelled to embark on these perilous
journeys.
Omar, a 19-year-old,
tearfully told IOM of his ordeal. "I made it to Libya six months ago, and
I settled in Garaboli city, 60 km east of Tripoli, with the intention of
travelling to Italy, where I was arrested by a militia member together
with other migrants. He threatened to send us to prison if we refused to work
for him. We worked at his farm, for no money at all. When we tried to escape he
asked us to pay 500 dinars (USD 360) for our release. Then he put us in a room
and shot at us with his gun. I was shot in the leg. He then threw gasoline on
us and set us on fire. I was severely burned. I managed to escape from the farm
and I was eventually taken to the hospital by police who found me lying on the
side of the road."
Adama, a 38-year-old
father of three, living with his mother, borrowed USD 5,000 –"“price of
salvation trip", he called it. He arrived in Libya five months ago and
spent three months in the detention center. "It does not matter which
country, any country in Europe is a paradise for me and worthy of any risk to
reach, even if the price is my life," he said.
Abdul, a 25-year-old
paraplegic, said his physical condition did not prevent him from working as an
auto mechanic in Nigeria, after dropping out of school, to help his parents and
his brothers. However, he lost his job and struggled to survive. His
frustration meant that he was easily convinced when his friends in Italy
persuaded him that there would be plenty of opportunities for him under Italian
disability laws. His journey was much harder than other migrants anyone else
because of his condition. When he arrived in Libya, he was forced to work for
two months in an electronic repair shop owned by a brother of one of the
smugglers in Sabha (South Libya) to pay for his passage to Tripoli. Upon his
arrival in Tripoli last February, he tried to find work to raise money for his
passage on the boat.
He was however, arrested
just two weeks after he arrived. "I chose the humanitarian repatriation
although I’m sure that the situation at home is much worse. I have to face my
family with empty hands after all that they spent to get me here in the first
place. I hope the organization (IOM) will help in securing income same as it
helped me to secure my return to my country," said Abdul.
Aicha, a 39-year-old
mother of two, arrived in Libya five months ago via the desert. She had left
her two children with her husband in search of a better life. She told IOM,
"It was a long and hard trip where my life was threatened twice when I
fell down from the truck between Agadez (Niger) and Al Qatrun (Libya) because
of the huge number of migrants that were on the back of the truck. After my
arrival in Tripoli, I found work as a maid in one of the connection houses –
which is more like houses of prostitution. Eventually, I had to escape and
began to think seriously about the return. Luckily I heard from a friend that
IOM organizes voluntary repatriation so I registered with the embassy."
Despite their journeys
of hope ending in detention centres, these migrants consider themselves lucky
to have escaped death trying to cross the Mediterranean, which this year has
claimed the lives of 2,438 migrants and refugees on the central Mediterranean
route.
The fund for this
charter was provided by the Swiss Secretariat of Migration, under the project
"Provision of Humanitarian Repatriation and Reintegration for Stranded
Migrants in Libya".
Source: IOM
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