Irregular migration is suicide, IOM sensitizes Nigerians
A campaign is presently ongoing
by the International Organization for Migration that’s bluntly letting
Nigerians know that irregular migration, travelling by road and sea to Europe,
is just akin to committing suicide.
“Don’t assume if you attempt the
journey your fortune will change for the better,” a woman says over the public
address system in the crowded Uselu Market in Benin City the capital of
Nigeria’s Edo State. “Many embarked on the journey and never made it. Many
people are dying in the Sahara Desert.”
She was speaking of a journey
that many here in this West African nation have sought to go on in the hope of
making a better life for themselves and their families. But it entails
embarking on a route of irregular migration reportedly fraught with danger,
trauma and abuse.
Unsurprisingly therefore, many
young Nigerians who have attempted the irregular travel to Europe, through the
Sahara Desert and across the Mediterranean sea, are back home and campaigning
against it.
Known as Volunteer Field Officers,
VFOs, a group of 15 returnee migrants are working with the International
Organization for Migration (IOM), under its Migrants as Messengers (MaM) programme
in Nigeria.
These VFOs were among the
Nigerian migrants the IOM brought home from Libya and other transit countries
under the European Union-IOM Joint Initiative For Migrant Protection and
Reintegration. Since the beginning of the project in April 2017, more than
11,500 migrants have been returned home after their failed attempt to reach
Europe.
Marshall Patsanza of the IOM
described it as a peer to peer advocacy programme under which “migrants who
embarked on the journey to Europe through Libya are sharing their experiences,
thus informing others of its dangers.”
It includes a series of messages
and videos posted on social media, interviews on community radio stations, and
community screenings of a movie on irregular migration.
The campaign has also taken place
in the media, at schools and in public places like on busy highways and
markets.
The Uselu campaign starts with
the female VFO addressing traders and customers in the market over a public
address system.
She tells her audience that
irregular migration through the desert to Libya and then over the Mediterranean
Sea to Europe is highly dangerous and no one should undertake it, irrespective
of the hardships they face at home.
But the market turns rowdy when
she criticises the widespread practice in Edo State where poor mothers
encourage their children to embark on the dangerous journey, hoping that they
will earn a lot of money abroad to lift their families out of poverty.
Edo is the Nigerian state with
the highest incidence of irregular migration.
Data gathered from the IOM under
the EU-IOM Joint Initiative shows that about 50 percent of migrants returned
from Libya under the initiative since April 2017 are from Edo State.
It is here that the VFOs are most
active, many times going the extra mile to ensure a successful campaign. And it
is what they do now in Uselu Market.
“Many of our mothers here, some
of them have sent their children to the Libyan route, it is bad, you should
advise yourselves because there is nothing in the Libya route,” the female
returnee migrant says.
But angry women shout her down
and engage the VFO team in a war of words. They insist that irregular migration
has become inevitable in the face of the economic situation in the country
which has left many families extremely poor. In 2017, the country began
recovering from the worst economic recession in a quarter of a century. But
rising inflation and a slowdown in the oil sector are among the contributors to
a sluggish growth.
“Many of the good houses in Benin
[City] were built with money sent home by those who went abroad through Libya,”
one woman says. Another argues that it’s unfair to ask people not to travel to
Europe through the desert and the sea when they are not allowed to travel by
air.
Such deep support for irregular
migration from parents account for its widespread practice in Edo.
This and the long history of
irregular migration in the state, which started in the 80s following a downturn
in Nigeria’s economy, makes the work of the VFOs challenging at times.
But the personal stories of the
VFOs remain an effective tool in their campaigns. They are also armed with
posters and handbills that illustrate their near-death experiences when they
attempted the journey to Europe.
VFO Jude Ikuenobe says when
confronted with a situation similar to the one faced at Uselu Market, he always
tells people about his imprisonment in Libya. He supports this by showing
people photos, taken shortly after his return from Libya, of how emaciated he
was due to his imprisonment.
He also tells people how his
friends died while crossing the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea.
Because traditionally people from
Edo are buried near their loved ones, Ikuenobe often tells people how sad it is
to die in a place like Libya or how tragic it is to have their bodies thrown
away in the desert, rather than being buried by their loved ones at home. He
says when people hear his first-hand experience and see his photographs they
often become discouraged to attempt irregular migration.
The VFOs use their new
communications skills with good result at the Uselu Market. Tensions soon calm
down after people see the photographs, posters and handbills.
Some people in the market even
feel safe enough to share their own stories. One lady admits her young,
beautiful friend drowned at sea as she attempted to cross from Libya to Europe.
One man, Chinedu Adimon, says two
of his friends also drowned making the same crossing. “One of them had two
young daughters,” he recalls.
Many in the market whose
relatives have embarked on irregular migration, and whom they have not heard
from since, are sobered by the reality of the dangers. They wonder what could
have happened to their loved ones.
Pius Igede bursts into tears.
He says his daughter recently
made the irregular journey to Europe and he does not know her whereabouts.
“She only made a phone call that
she is out of the country. I don’t even know where she is now, whether it is
Libya or any other place I don’t know,” he explains.
He adds that he suspects some of
his other children are planning to travel to Europe as well.
And for him, the VFO’s posters
and handbills may be the saving grace to convince them to remain at home.
“I want to collect the posters to
show my children to discourage them from going to Libya,” he says. “I got
scared when I saw the posters. I am frightened [that] my children will secretly
travel without my knowledge.”
Osita Osemene of the Patriotic
Citizen Initiatives, a non-governmental organisation campaigning against
irregular migration, says the VFOs were able to convince people in the market
about the dangers of irregular migration because they have first-hand
experience.
“It would have been very
difficult to convince anyone in the market if the VFOs were just ordinary
people who had no experience of irregular travels,” says Osemene, who is
himself a returnee migrant.
He explains that lack of
information about the true impact of irregular migration is a serious problem
as many people assume those who attempt the dangerous journey to Europe
actually arrive there and attain success.
“They were surprised when we
showed them some of the things people go through, how people cross the sea in
boats that can easily sink,” he says.
Ikuenobe says as VFOs they are
working to close a vital information gap.
“So many mothers are not
educated, so many mothers are desperate to see their children succeed, but we
have to make them understand that irregular migration would not bring success,”
Ikuenobe says.
For Patsanza the performance of
the VFOs at Uselu Market shows how effective they can be in the fight against
irregular migration.
Ikuenobe says the campaign is
being conducted continuously in order to educate as many people as possible.
“The message is that even if
things are bad at home, that is no justification for people to go and commit
suicide. It is like going to kill yourself when you attempt to travel to Europe
through the desert and sea.”
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