The first group of 75 men and 10 women gathered on Thursday in downtown Tripoli to board buses with metal grills towards the capital’s Mitiga airport while others were set to depart from other migrant detention centres.
Libyan authorities have concluded plans to repatriate 135 Nigerian migrants, including women and children, who had made failed attempts to cross the Mediterranean to Europe.
“We are organising the voluntary repatriation of 135 clandestine Nigerian migrants who were rescued offshore by the coastguard,” said Hosni Abu Ayanah of the Libyan government agency tackling illegal migration.
Libyan authorities have coordinated with the International Organization for Migration to run special flights to repatriate migrants, mostly from sub-Saharan Africa.
Ever since the rule of late Lybian ruler, Moamer Kadhafi, thousands of people have crossed Libya’s 5,000-kilometre (3,000-mile) southern border to make perilous bids to reach Europe in often unseaworthy boats.
However, following the 2011 NATO-backed revolt that toppled and killed Kadhafi, traffickers have exploited the chaos rocking Libya to transport more migrants towards Italy which is 300 kilometres away.
No comments:
Post a Comment