No fewer than 171
Nigerians voluntarily returned from Libya on Tuesday aboard a chartered
Nouvelair aircraft with registration number TS-1NB. The aircraft landed about 4.18pm at the Murtala Muhammed
International Airport, Lagos. Another batch comprising
161 Nigerians, had earlier on Feb. 14 also voluntarily returned from the
North African country where they had been stranded enroute Europe.
The new set of returnees were brought back by the
International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the Nigerian Embassy in
Libya.
They were received at the Hajj Camp area of the airport by
officers of the Nigerian Immigration Service (NIS) , the National Agency for
the Protection of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) and the Police.
Also on ground to receive them were officials of the
National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the Federal Airports Authority
of Nigeria (FAAN).
Air Commodore Salisu Mohammed, Director, Search and Rescue, NEMA, who gave a breakdown
of the returnees, said they were made up of of 49 males, 109 females, seven
children and six infants.
Addressing newsmen, the Senior Special Assistant to the
President on Foreign Affairs and Diaspora, Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa, commended
the IOM for facilitating the return of the Nigerians.
She said, “Like I told them, they are not criminals.These
are people that have gone in search for greener pastures. However, it turned
out to be a terrible experience for them.
“They shouldn’t be ashamed of themselves. Now they are back
home and Mr President has personally conveyed his greetings to them and to let
them know that they are back in Nigeria and there is no better time than now.
“Times are tough, things are difficult but your country is
the best place to be. ”
According to her, the Federal Government, IOM and some
states have put up programmes in place to rehabilitate Nigerians who
volunteered to return from Libya in order to reintegrate them into the society.
“The question is, how long are we going to keep evacuating
them? So there is going to be another evacuation and a final one when we will
tell Nigerians who are stranded in Libya to come back home.
“After that it will be difficult getting IOM to do the
evacuation.
“A lot of them don’t know where they are going to. There is
a lot of ignorance here. Some of them are trafficked and they get there with
nothing.
“The message here is that illegal migration is not worth it
because as tough as the country is today, you are better off here than being in
those places,” Dabiri-Erewa said .
She reiterated the government’s committment to the welfare
of Nigerians all over the world, stressing that it was currently addressing the
issue of xenophobic attacks on Nigerians living in South Africa.
The senior special assistant described the attacks as
shameful, noting that it was wrong to generalise Nigerians in the country as
criminals.
One of the returnees, Miss Gift Peters said she got to Libya
11 months ago after being deceived that she was being taken to Germany.
“When I got to Libya, it was not in my mind to continue with
the journey. So I asked the person that took me to return me to Nigeria but he
started maltreating me and sold me to someone who has a connection house in
Libya where we were maltreated daily.
“If we don’t want to work, they will start maltreating us.
They will do you something that you will wish to die.
“Those who they sold us to, sometimes, use iron and start
burning us. At times, they will instruct our fellow ladies to urinate for us to
drink,” the Delta State indigene said amidst tears.
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