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161 Nigerian migrants were relocated by Libyan authorities as part of a UN-supported voluntary return program as irregular migration spike. Image by flickr.com

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Libyan authorities relocate 161 Nigerian migrants after donation

161 Nigerian migrants were relocated by Libyan authorities as part of a UN-supported voluntary return program as irregular migration spike.

22-08-23 10:00
migrants
161 Nigerian migrants were relocated by Libyan authorities as part of a UN-supported voluntary return program as irregular migration spike. Image by flickr.com

Libyan authorities on Monday 21 August 2023 repatriated 161 Nigerian migrants, officials said, part of a UN-backed voluntary return scheme as some North African countries see a spike in irregular migration.

The group, including 75 women and six children, received food and drinks from International Organization for Migration staff at Mitiga airport in Tripoli before boarding the plane, AFP correspondents said.

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MIGRANTS MET WITH THE INTERIOR MINISTER

Interior Minister Imed Trabelsi, of the UN-recognised government based in the war-torn country’s west, met the Nigerians before their departure. “We cannot bear the burden of clandestine migration alone” without international support, he told reporters at the airport.

He said that out of the group, “102 were intercepted at the border as they were trying to” cross between Libya and Tunisia.

ALSO READ: African migrants plead for rescue in Libya-Tunisia border

The North African neighbours on August 10 agreed to share responsibility for providing shelter for hundreds of migrants stranded at their border, ending a month-long crisis triggered by mass expulsions of migrants by Tunis.

Some 2,000 migrants, primarily from sub-Saharan African countries, had been driven to the remote desert area of Ras Jedir by Tunisian authorities and left there to fend for themselves, according to witnesses, rights groups and UN agencies.

ALSO READ: Human rights group calls for support for rescued Libyan migrants

Since the start of July, at least 27 have been found dead in the border area, and another 73 were missing, a humanitarian source told AFP earlier this month.

THE GROUP WAS NOT FORCED BACK HOME

An official with Nigeria’s embassy in Tripoli said the group of 161 was “not forced back” home. “We spoke to (them) and explained that migration is not bad… but you have to follow due process,” said embassy adviser Samuel Okeri.

ALSO READ: Libya rescues migrants abandoned by Tunisian authorities in desert

“They are going back willingly. And as you can see, they are not sad but happy to go back to Nigeria. There is no place like home.” A group of 165 Nigerians, including 90 women and nine children, was repatriated on June 20 under the same scheme.

Libya is a major gateway for migrants and asylum seekers attempting perilous sea voyages in often rickety boats in the hope of a better life in Europe.

ALSO READ: Libya detains dozens of traffickers over migrants killings

An estimated 600,000 migrants live in the war-scarred country, which has seen 12 years of stop-start conflict since the 2011 NATO-backed revolt that toppled strongman Moamer Kadhafi.

Libyan authorities have come under sharp criticism from the United Nations and rights groups over reported violence against migrants.