Date:
04 Sep 2010



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-- Africans in Ireland | Africans in the UK | Africans on the Continent | Africa in the News | African Businesses
:: Europe by desert: Tears of African migrants
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By our reporter

IT IS a long-distance suicide, yet most travellers realize it only when it is too late. Just as they say in eastern Nigeria, the road to hell is hardly narrow. It was difficult to say how many times a day this proverb rang in the head of the old woman as she emerged with uncertain steps out of her house.

Bus breaks down in Burkina Faso

For a minute she hesitated; not just to measure the visitor but to squint at the midday sun as though imploring it not to be too harsh on her. Looking grief-stricken, though with a gait that betrayed genteel elegance, she muttered a few apologies to no one in particular and said something about malaria. But everyone knew the problem was much more. Indeed, life had never been the same since news reached Madam Emeagwu that her daughter was on death row in Libya.
Since July 2009, Nigerians were still reeling from the aftershock of the news that twenty Nigerians, including one Juliet Okoro, were awaiting the hangman in Libyan prisons. Three women, including Glory Paul-Amanze and Juliet Okoro were among the twenty Nigerians sentenced to death in the North Africa country for offences ranging from murder, drug, armed robbery and immigration offences. Every year, thousands of sub-Saharan migrants, mostly Nigerians, set out on an often perilous journey across the desert to Libya from where they hope to slip into Europe for greener pasture. But if Nigerians were not unfamiliar with reports of migrants drowning in makeshift boats in the Mediterranean or of ugly footages of human cargoes deposited at airports in yet another mass deportation, tales of execution in transit countries were a totally new dimension to the horrifying migrant story. Juliet Okoro was reported to have been convicted of murder.
"Tell me, who did my daughter kill? What is the name of the man?" Madam Emeagwu asked, again to no one in particular. She took a seat under a guava tree outside her house. Someone had gone in to announce the presence of the visitor. At first the woman had relayed her disposition not to see any guest. Told that the visitor had come all the way from Lagos to the village, Isieke in Anambra State, she had no doubt what had brought him. Almost immediately, she wanted to know if the visitor was a government official and if there was anything he could do to help her daughter.
It was heartbreaking having no words to comfort her. For years she had believed her daughter was in Europe, possibly in America. She had never heard of a country called Libya. Her teenage nephew, who by now had abandoned the cassava chips he was preparing for lunch, had explained she had been in bed sick ever since the family received the bad news. The last time anyone heard from Juliet was in 2000.

Choosing his words carefully, this reporter announced that he was a journalist travelling to the country where Juliet was being held in prison. The journalist also told Madam Emegwu that the Libyan government had suspended the executions of more Nigerians on death row pending the final determination of a case against Libya by a Non-Governmental Organisation, Social Economic Rights and Accountability Project (SERAP), before the African Commission on Human and People's Rights in Banjul, The Gambia.

The woman appeared to digest this piece of information. Her eyes blurred, yet tears failed her. "They said there was no murder..." Her voice trailed off. The encounter was coming to an emotional end, unexpectedly infecting the reporter's companion and interpreter. By this time, two other women had joined the gathering. They come almost every evening to join Madam Emegwu in prayers. A Nigerian deportee from Libya, Angus Emenike, who spent eleven months in Jawazat detention centre in Tripoli in 2007, had told this reporter about Juliet Okoro and where he could find her family. Finally pulling herself together, the old woman pleaded to write a letter to a daughter she had not seen in ten years and whose Ibo name was Obianuju. The interpreter did the writing, a family photograph was attached and the envelope handed over to the reporter.

Computer fraud academy
On November 16, about 10.30 A.M, an Opel salon car eased out of the Mile-2 Motor park on its way to the Seme border. From this dusty motor park infested with touts and money doublers, thousands of Nigerians had commenced their long and uncertain journey to Europe with a lucky few returning home to show off their success. Among the passengers were this reporter and two other male travelers on the first stretch of their journey to Libya. Ugoh I had already met; the other I would find out was 24-year-old Irabor Monday.
Five months ago, Ugoh and I had been introduced to each other at a meeting with a human trafficker who paraded himself as a travel agent.

For some reasons everyone called him Rajah, his name it was gathered was Lawrence Eyohomi. The first meeting between reporter and trafficker was inside the Mr. Biggs fast-food outlet on Ago Palace Way, in Okota, Lagos. Subsequent meetings were at Matenby Hotel close to Akpata Memorial Secondary School; however the session with Ugoh was held inside the premises of St. Mary's Catholic Church, in Isolo, Lagos. Inside the fast food, Rajah had assured this prospective migrant that he could procure a visa to any part of Europe, America, Asia, Canada and South Africa. Wasting little time in marketing the reputation of his amorphous agency, the man in his early forties insisted that as a rule he would not accept any money until every travel papers had been delivered. He would provide the running cost.

For the client to assure him of prompt and full payment, he said the way out was to open a joint account, using the agreed visa fee at a bank of the reporter's choice, with the two parties as signatories. Once the embassy had issued the visa, the transaction is ended in the banking hall with the two signatories pulling the money out of the account. Should the procurement suffer a hitch, the transaction would still end in the banking hall with the client going home with his money. Most often however, such transactions were known to have ended in hide and seek. It was either a wrong and cheap visa was procured to such places as Ukraine and Syria or that the money disappeared with the second consenting signature forged. For further effect, Rajah threw in that for difficult visas, to the US and UK, he could equip a determined traveler with Botswana passport or resort to what is known in the industry parlance as transplant.

The reporter pleaded unemployment and inability to pay N450,000 visa fee, to say nothing yet of air ticket. It met with a frown. For the next ten minutes or so, Rajah poked here and there, but having finally exhausted all hopes of getting a fat fee out of this reporter, he had proceeded to sell another travel package. It was the cheapest his agency could contrive; it was called the desert option. Not for once did he mention the risk factor.
Having settled on this plan, the trafficker subjected the reporter to what was a routine interrogation: "Have you ever travelled out of the country? Were you ever deported? Do you have any brother in Europe? Any friends? Can you use your hands? What work can you do? Can you work as a barber? Electrician? Do you know anything about welding? Carpentry? But you need such skills to survive and make it fast in Libya so you can quickly cross into Europe. What is your level of education?"

For the second time, the reporter declared he was an unemployed graduate. The trafficker paused a few seconds, and then spoke in utter reproach. "With your education, I expect your level of education to be high. How do you hope to make it big in Europe when you are not a woman? Brother, you have to use your brains..."
The trafficker revealed with pride that some of the migrants he had helped in the past were now "big boys" in Spain, Germany, Holland and other places. Then he revealed something else: he runs a class where registered prospective migrants are coached on credit card fraud, internet fraud, ATM fraud, Red Mecury Scam, Identity Theft, Share Certificate fraud and the notorious Advance Fee Fraud, better known as 419.

At first it appeared like a petty crook struggling to make an impression but after this reporter had met in Rajah's hotel room, a Germany returnee who had successfully switched from stealing and exporting exotic cars to Nigeria to stealing and exporting generators, it did not take further goading to sign up for the computer class, paying N70,000 for three months. The training was mostly at night, at an innocuous-looking cybercafé inside an uncompleted three-storey building directly opposite the Isolo Public Library along Holy Saviour College Road. The first two floors are coated in green while the top remains unpainted and without windows. Ugoh was also a student of the computer fraud academy. Looking at him in faded jean trouser and a cotton shirt, it was difficult to imagine Europe was his destination.

We arrived the Seme border. Border formalities were expectedly easy and lasted as long as it took a commercial motorbike to meander through one of the illegal bush paths between Nigeria and Benin Republic. Any truncheon-wielding Immigration official encountered along the way received N100 for the trouble. That was for non-passport-carrying travellers going into Benin to buy anything from tomato puree to second-hand textiles, frozen chicken to fairly-used automobiles. Because our passports needed to be stamped, there was no escaping one of the most brazen display of red tape along the West Coast. On the Nigerian side, officials at the first Immigration desk demanded and received N1000 for Yellow Fever Immunization certificate. At the next desk, another N1000 was demanded because the reporter was carrying a "virgin" passport. Travellers who had crossed that border at least once were surprisingly asked to pay half of the illegal fee. At the third and final desk, N500 was paid to squint at the stamped page. The story was more or less the same on the benin side; just that instead of three desks, there were two.

I, Ugoh and Monday converged at Krake, the Benin side of the border. Here we changed our Naira into CFA, haggling for a good rate with the predominantly women black market dealers.
We boarded a Peugeot Station Wagon from an adjacent motor park and in a little less than an hour we were in Cotonou, precisely at the Dan Tokpa market. Ugoh put a call through and after about twenty-five minutes Rajah met us under a pedestrian bridge near the market. I had not seen him since three weeks ago when he handed me my passport. Because my original passport showed that I was a journalist and had travelled to Italy, France, South Africa and a few other overseas countries, it had become necessary to procure another passport not to blow my cover.

We were taken to a building in the Jonquet area of Cotonou. Seven of us, including four young women that had arrived before us, were kept in a back room, adjacent to another crammed with empty crates of alcoholic beverages. Rajah left and returned hours later with three more travellers, all females. Two more young women, oddly chaperoned by a scrawny-looking male character, were ushered in at dusk, swelling the ranks to thirteen.
About 7.20 p.m, a large woman waddled in; behind her Rajah. Some of the travelers appeared to have met her. She called them by names, greeted everyone warmly and requested to know what we would like for dinner. Her eyes swept the room as she conducted possibly a mental headcount. Rajah said he was still expecting one more person.

In the interest of all newcomers, the large woman proceeded to give a pep talk. She reminded everyone they were in a foreign land where the people spoke no English and warned that the Beninese gendarmes were unpredictable. She emphasized that if she were any of us, she would rather not wander around. Any request should be channeled to her or Rajah or indeed the scrawny character whose name was given as Esan. From conversations among the girls and from noises, particularly loudspeakers blaring ragga music, it finally registered we were in some back rooms in a red light neighbourhood. The little building itself was without a number but this reporter noted it was the fourth house from Hotel Gold & Base, located at C|115-116 Jonquet. Some hundred metres opposite this building was a Sonacop Filling Station and in-between them was a mini motor park with an open-air sleeping floor.

That last person Rajah had been expecting did not arrive until much after midday the following day. By this time there was already a problem in the house. One of the first four girls we had met in the room had been sobbing. No one seemed to understand what the problem was or rather everyone was too careful to be inquisitive. But if the reporter was puzzled by the tears of the young woman whose age was about 17, he would be completely bewildered when it was revealed that the guest who had just arrived was a spiritualist imported from Edo State in Nigeria. His identity did not just tumble out.

The large woman, with a suspicious identity herself, though addressed as Aunty Queen, had introduced the guest as a prophet. True, the man perfectly played the role of a prophet, leading us in marathon prayer sessions, designed to commit the travelers and the long journey ahead into the hands of the Almighty. However, the rituals that followed afterwards were nothing else but voodoo.

One after the other, save for the weeping girl, all the travelers were taken inside the crate-stacked room for a fetish oath. When this reporter was called in, the spiritualist, under the watchful eyes of Rajah and Aunty Queen, explained almost apologetic, that the exercise was a spiritual help to forestall possible arrest and repatriation from Europe and to administer an oath od secrecy and loyalty.

For a moment, the spectacle was disarming. On the floor was a magical circle outlined with native chalk. Inside it were patches of animal skin, a small three-pronged spear, a gourd and other fetish articles. The spiritualist had shed his well-embroidered white Kaftan. Over his trouser brocade and across his waist, he had tied a red-coloured skirt with a set of beads stitched to it in the shape of the human eye. Basically, the witchdoctor recited some incantations in Bini language, and then requested the traveller to repeat some lines after him.

Next, the traveller was made to pick a gourd, hit it three times on his forehead and another three times on his chest saying that he is a beneficiary of the traffickers' kindness and that with his own mouth and soul he hereby invites the deity Osunene to visit him with its most potent venom, sickness, misfortune and death should he under any circumstances divulge secret information or snitch on the traffickers before the police, Immigration or some other authorities. Also, that the traveller invites Osunene to visit him with its wrath should he fails to remit to the last dollar, the amount specified in the contract paper as soon as he begins to earn money along the way and or at the final destination. Before Rajah, this reporter had been introduced to another trafficker by name Ikechukwu but fondly called Thank God. At the first and only meeting in Lagos, this handsome, light-complexioned man wasted no time in saying he only took women to Libya and Europe.
No amount of money offered by this reporter to take him along made any sense to ThankGod. He pointed out that before he took them along, each of his girls were made to take an oath in agreement to pay him $25,000 for taking them to a land of opportunities before they can start working for themselves. He emphasized that no man would be able to pay him such an amount whatever the ambition of doing two or three jobs. This trafficker's international telephone number, obtained by this reporter, is +218928523513 +218928523513 .
Something happened that the reporter never bargained for. Picking a razor blade, the spiritualist ordered the reporter to stretch out his hands. The reporter retreated, clinging on the excuse that a used blade cannot be permitted on account of HIV/AIDS. From some junks in a corner, Rajah produced a new blade. The witchdoctor proceeded to make three incisions on each of the reporter's knuckles. He wiped the blood with his own fingers and dipped same into the gourd with a liquid content. With the same blade, he scrapped some strands off the nape of the reporter's neck, throwing the hairs into the gourd. He shook the content and ordered the reporter to drink from it. The nature of the ritual concoction was hard to say; however, encouraged by the unmistakable whiff of local gin, this reporter did as he was told.
For the rest of the evening everyone was moody; the 17-year-old was hysterical. She was the only one that refused to take the oath. From snatches of conversations, it was gathered that the girls had been subjected to more abusive rituals. In addition to the incisions, the witchdoctor had, at Anty Queen's insistence, collected cuttings of their fingernails, pubic hairs and panties; the very ones worn to the ritual.

Beginning to get paranoid, one of the girls complained she couldn't stop feeling a part of her soul had left her. An older girl, Uhreva, dismissed the feeling with a laugh. About 24-year-old, Uhreva said it was her second blood oath. With the assistance of a human trafficker, known in the business as sponsor, she had made it to Italy in 2005 only to be deported 18 months later. Ever since, she had felt like a fish out of water. Insisting that she left Torino without a pin, Uhreva catalogued some of the possessions and nice male friends she left behind. For her, it made sense to find a way back even though her first trip had been by air and far more dignifying. With her stay in Torino not long enough to pay off her sponsor, she still had some debt hanging over her head.

Yet, she was optimistic she could use the second chance she was getting to pay off both her first and second Madame and still have enough to build a house in her village, own cars, a fat bank account, a boutique or beauty salon.
Like cows, we were herded by scrawny Esan to a nearby canteen where we could eat Nigerian foods. The 17-year-old Omosan refused to go anywhere. It was not clear if she had eaten anything all day. By the time we all returned, Aunty Queen had exploded, pouring expletives on Omosan:

"I've had enough of your rubbish. I treat you like my own daughter but you want to use your "ogbanje" to mess with my business. Your parents begged me to take you along. There were other girls to pick from. All the girls you came here with have since moved on and you are here acting like a child."
Rajah barged in. He too was spitting fire. He held out a cell phone towards Omosan: "Your father wants to speak with you. Take the phone..."

Omosan was not crying, but she was not saying anything either. Rajah barked again and pulled out a designer belt from his jean trouser. He stepped forward, threatening to hit Omosan with it. "Take the phone. I say take it, because your father has said we should make you do what every other girl is doing..."

Herded to Togo
Like a full moon that started out a crescent, Rajah's lawless mind was getting more robust by the day. Like cows again, we were herded to a park to begin our journey to Togo. Eight new girls had appeared from nowhere with their bags in the morning. There was no prize for guessing where they had come from after eight girls in the room were moved out to start a new life in Jonquet brothels. These traffickers, besides freighting human cargoes to Libya and Europe, also feed the trans-Saharan sex market, guaranteeing a steady supply of fresh young women to brothels.

Uhreva was left to stay in our group. Omosan told uhreva that she would love to go to Europe but added that she would die first before submitting to a blood oath. She gave no indication that she understood the nature of the jobs lined up for girls in Europe. Reports had it that in Europe, some of the trafficked women are subjected by male clients to sexual abuses, forced into pornography and perversions like sleeping with dogs.
Rajah was yet to decide what to do with Omosan when Aunty Queen herded 13 of us, nine girls and four men, to Togo. Disguised as a devout Muslim, she was dressed in an orange boubou, her head and shoulders covered with a flowing headscarf. We journey through Quidah, Dohi, Agatogbo, Gadome, Come, Grand Popo and finally Lome.

At the Benin-Togo border popularly called Hilla Condji was a replay of what was witnessed at Seme. Again, the extortion by border officials was a mockery of the spirit and letters of the ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) Protocol which proclaims free movement of people and goods across member states. At this border, this reporter encountered a Beninoise by name Dossou Gilles-Carlos Yaovi. Son of a UN diplomat whose father is currently servinh in Haiti, he was on his way to Ghana. Dossou, whose father once worked in Immigration, said that most of the officials he knew had built big houses just a few years serving at Hilla Condji.
At Lome, we were quartered in a compound of two small houses and a courtyard in a dusty street off an even more dusty Boulevard du Haho.

This compound was clearly a family home occupied by poor and courteous Togolese whose young children happily dedicated themselves to the service of Aunty Queen - a trafficker who it turned out could speak fluent English, French, Bini, Yoruba and a smattering of Arabic. The children, three girls and a boy of about nine, ran errands fetching water and going to the stores throughout the three days their parents hosted the visitors. It was difficult to say how Queen had made the acquaintance of this poor family in the first place. Most of the houses in this poor neighbourhood were without numbers; however some of the unforgettable landmarks included the Africa Bar and the Englise Neo-Apostolique church.

The following morning Queen took the eight girls away and returned late afternoon with another set of girls. Everyone was to depart Togo the next day but that plan was thwarted after Queen bitterly discovered there would be no transport to our next stop, Burkina Faso until two days later. Out of boredom or perhaps genuinely seeking the face of God, Queen suggested we attend a church service. Not one person saw it as a bad idea. We all walked to a pentecoastal church headed by a Nigerian pastor. Written on the wall were "House of Excellence Church" and the same name in French: Eglise Maison D'Excellence.

This church, with service conducted in English, is one of about a dozen that cater to the spiritual needs of Nigerians living in Lome. Half way through the service, thinking for the umpteenth time about Omosan and what may have happened to her, this reporter left the church, found a telephone service and put a call to Godefroy Nacaire Chabi, a Beninoise journalist based in Cotonou.

Transport to Burkina Faso from Lome was pretty irregular and depended largely on traders from landlocked Burkina returning home from Lome markets. We journeyed from Lome to Sogode to Kara to the Togolese border town Bitou and on to Burkina's frontier town Sekanze to Koupella to Ougadougou and to Bobo-Dioulasso. Against all expectations, the journey took three days. Several times the bus broke down on the way, traveling day and night; and at one point in the middle of nowhere, hungry passengers resorted to buying fruits, boiled potatoes and sundry farm produce off a long line of peasants trekking to a distant market. At a town called Koupella, the bus with registration number 10 KK 8533 BF, completely broke down. We camped outside a tea seller til the following morning. This reporter was directed to a facility within a mosque complex where for CFA100, he brushed his teeth, had a bath and washed his shirt, all inside a cubicle housing a pit latrine.

By the time we arrived Ouagadougou, Rajah was waiting. Queen got out with the girls. The men were told to continue to Bobo-Dioulasso. On arrival, without any arrangements for a sleeping place, everyone loitered at the motor park and waited. There were an appreciable number of migrants in Burkina Faso; some having arrived from Ghana, Nigeria and Cote d'Ivoire and all waiting to connect to Niger Republic, specifically Niamey. Here, this reporter met a Nigerian by name Kenneth Akwekwe. He said he was on his way to Bangkok but he must first get to Senegal where his travel documents awaited him. We slept at the motor park, smudged with red earth. Almost all night, a loudspeaker blared the music of Alpha Blondie, Jerusalem.

When Queen turned up the following day, she had eleven girls behind her. It was gathered that most of the émigrés in Burkina Faso were Nigerians, predominantly of the Yoruba and Ibo tribes. A Burkina youth, trying to sell satchet water to this reporter insisted that the English word for water was nmiri. From Urheva, it was gathered that the new girls had been fetched from a part of the capital called Ouaga Due Mil, better known as Ouaga 2000. This place is said to be one of the transit camps for female victims of human trafficking. Ouaga is said to be the Jonquet of Cotonou with its fair share of brothels. It is estimated that about 250 young women, mostly Nigerians and Ghanaians, are involved in Ouaga's sex industry.

Condemned to the same transport company, Fasowcar, we departed for Mali. Something happened that almost blew this reporter's cover. It happened at the Burkina-Mali border. The reporter's passport had been stamped and CFA3000 demanded when one of the officials spotted a camera in the inner pocket of the reporter's jacket. A search of his bag revealed the reporter's notebook. Questions after questions about identity, destination and mission.

The reporter was dragged before one Urbain Gnoumou, a Police Nationale who had a pistol in his waist and a portrait of President Blaise Campore glowering over his desk. In a mixture of English and French, this reporter explained he was a schoolteacher on his way to Mali to visit a sick Nigerian. Gnoumou barked that any journalist visiting or passing through his country must have first obtained a written permission stating his mission. The reporter tried his best to stick to his story which nobody seemed to be buying. Exhausted, Gnoumou decided to transfer the puzzle to officials at the Malian side of the border. Fortunately, at Hedamakonu, the Malians did not even bat an eyelid. From Hedamakonu, we journeyed to Sikazou, Boogoni and finally Bamako.

Dreams die first
We arrived Bamako about 4A.M. The spectacle at Sediankoro motorpark spoke volumes of the fate of African migrants along that route. There were over forty homeless young men sleeping in awkward positions inside the park. It was gathered that every one of them was a migrant that has come to a dead end in Mali. Again, the majority was Nigerians. Out of cash and unable to move on, they had resorted to touting, while waiting for new arrivals to fleece. Later, this reporter found more of them at Gekoroni, Zebenikoro and Dabanani Merche. Meanwhile, their female counterparts could be found as sex workers at Yamakoro, Hotel Kokoti, Amadina, Domino, Kaye and Mani Bar; all with a high concentration of young Nigerian girls. It is estimated that about 1400 Nigerian girls live in Mali. Everyone of them had left home with Europe as dream destination. One Camara Kaba, a Guinean with Rastafarian hairstyle took this reporter around town. A resident of Bamako, his telephone number is +223-76139168 +223-76139168 .

It was gathered that it is often in Mali that the scale begins to fall off the eyes of many migrants. A 27-year old Nigerian, Azeez Abiola , told this reporter that when he left home in 2007, the human trafficker had told him they would board a plane to Spain once they arrive Bamako. He had paid N600,000 for the journey only for the trafficker to do a disappearing act as soon as they had arrived Mali, abandoning him and four others to their fate. Azeez said most of the girls found in Mali were fed the same story before they set out. A furniture maker by profession, Azeez regretted throwing away a stable life in Ifo, Ogun State, only to come to Bamako to live as a motorpark tout. His daily bread depended on the number of passengers he was able to attract to a transport company.

Like Azeez, this reporter appeared abandoned. He spent three days at the motor park together with Ugoh and Irabor Monday. Aunty Queen was again gone with the girls. After the incident with the Burkina border police she had become wary. Not once did she ask any questions. Since Ouagadougou, no one had seen Rajah to whom this reporter had paid N200,000 to cover expenses.

Each new day brought new arrivals to Sediankoro. One of them was Diawara Boh from Guinea who was once captured and conscripted by rebels to fight in the Liberian war, In the past ten years, this 29-year-old had sojourned all over West Africa in search of a better life. He had been to Cote d'Ivoire, Ghana and Sierre Leone. In Nigeria he worked as a truck driver, hauling giant generators for a Lebanese company called Mikano. Hard as he worked, he could barely feed himself on a monthly salary of N22,000 after spending half of the money on transportation.

Narrating his life experience, Diawara told this reporter: " I have been going up and down and have not seen my parents in 10 years. I worked as a slave for the Lebanese. If you cough you get a surcharge,; if you are sick and cannot work, they will not pay you and if you sustain any injury the hospital bill is from your salary. Life in Nigeria was bad, but not as bad as Liberia where they gave me a gun. The rebel captured me. When they saw I could speak their language, they said come and join us. I am from Gegedou in Guinea and we share border with Liberia and Sierre Leone, I carried gun for two months but one day I escaped, following a river that leads to Guinea."

Among the hordes of young Africans this reporter met on the way were the duo of Petros Massageloi and Sesay Koni. Both were Sierre Leoneans refugees trying to pick up the pieces of their life after so many years at the Oru Camp in Nigeria. During the war, he witnessed the killing of women and the amputating of children. He would never forget how ropes were put round the necks of Nigerians only for the other end to be tied to a moving car; yet he risked his own life to save one Emmanuel Chinedu Eke, a Nigerian married to his sister. After some rebels launched a Rocket Propelled Grenade at his aunt, he escaped to Nigeria where he was able to finish school. But the certificate has not been of much use to him. Unable to get a job he had resorted to selling dye. The last straw was when the much-awaited UNHCR resettlement package came and officials in Lagos handed refugees N70,000 to start a new life instead of the anticipated N350,000.

Our next destination was Agadez in northern Niger. When Queen finally showed up, she announced we would depart the following day. Then she added the group would split in two for easier coordination. Sticking to the ritual of going to a church before going on the road, we followed her to the Chapelle des Vainqueurs International even without taking our bath. On our last night at the motor park, this reporter found out about the activities of a document syndicate who for a fee provide forged travel papers to migrants. Patterned after the infamous Oluwole in Lagos, the forgery networks provide services to migrants and human traffickers alike, selling anything from fake passport to fake immunisation certificate.

There was no way of knowing how many new girls Queen picked up in Bamako. They were traveling on a different bus. Esan made our travel arrangements for four men and two girls. This reporter paid CFA80,000 as fare to Agadez. We were to go first to Gao from where we would be transferred onto another vehicle. It sounded simple enough, besides someone would be waiting in Gao to facilitate the transfer. His name was on the back of the ticket. Just as well, the agent in Bamako called him to speak with us. About 10 A.M we were conveyed on motorbikes from the park to the bus terminal of Sonef Transport Voyageurs. The agent had paid for the Sonef ticket which turned out to be CFA15,000 to Gao.

However, the agent whose name was Aoaily with telephone 00223-75113609 00223-75113609 encouraged the traveller to pay additional CFA10,000 to the Sonef bus conductor to smoothen passages at checkpoints. We journeyed from Bamako to Fana to Segou to Bla to Mopti to Sevare to Douanza to Gossi and finally Gao. It took two days and by the time we arrived, every passenger was covered in dust.

(Source: http://www.sunnewsonline.com)
Ethiopian exile not surprised by death sentence

 

By James Butty

Exiled Ethiopian opposition leader Dr. Berhanu Nega is an associate professor of economics at Bucknell University in Pennsylvania

One of the men sentenced to death Tuesday by an Ethiopian court said the sentence is an attempt by Prime Minister Meles Zenawi's government to continue to terrorize the Ethiopian people.

 

Berhanu Nega (pictured above), founder of the Ginbot Seven and former leader of the Coalition for Unity and Democracy, said he was not surprised by the death sentence.

"This is a government that is lashing out at everyone. As you have heard recently (Prime Minister) Meles himself called the American ambassador an idiot&hellipbut in the mean really the target is the Ethiopian population; it is an attempt to terrorize the population," he said.
Nega was elected mayor of Addis Ababa in the 2005 election, but never took office. Instead he was among opposition leaders jailed for inciting the post-election violence.

With national elections coming up in 2010, Nega said the Ethiopian government is using terror because it is fearful of losing the election like in 2005.

"More than anything else, what they are worried about and what they are afraid of is that what has transpired in 2005 that the public does not want this government at all&hellipand that's what they want to send a message to the public and the opposition that you challenge us in any meaningful way you die," Nega said.

He denied being part of any plot to assassinate government officials and overthrow the government.

"We have made it very clear from the beginning that there is no truth to this. Not only that, the people who have supposedly spoken in court have very clearly said that they have been tortured to admit to what they haven't committed. In fact some of these people have been found in court bruised and beaten," he said.

Nega dismissed Justice Ministry spokesman Mekonnen Bezabeih's claim that the court presented a preponderance of evidence against the accused.

"You really have to know what the judicial system is in order to understand what is going on. In one case, when we were arrested last time, they accused me and another person of destroying a house on a day that we were already in prison two days before that. So that's what evidence is for them. Evidence is what the government says," Nega said.

While saying that he could not speak for all those convicted and sentenced, Nega said he does not think he and the others will appeal their sentences.

"I can tell you that appeal is something that assumes that there is a judiciary. There is no way we will appeal to anything. This is a court that has decided on the basis of no evidence," Nega said.

He said Ethiopians have known for a long time that there are no independent courts in their country only a government that is committed to staying in power by any means necessary.

(Source: VOA News)
Cameroon still ranked first in football in Africa


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Cameroon International Samuel Eto'o 

CAMEROON still ranked first in football in Africa as the Indomitable Lions maintained their 11th position in the world, according to FIFA's December rating.

Cote d'Ivoire joins the Central Africans as the continent's two countries among the top 20 in the world.
Cote d'Ivoire is 16th in the world.

Nigeria maintained its 22nd position of last month and third in Africa while Egypt is two steps below at 24th in the world and fourth in Africa.

Algeria, who shares the 26th position with Israel in the world ranking, is fifth in Africa. The Algerians qualified for the 2010 World Cup after their last appearance in 1982.

Ghana's Black Stars are 34th in the world and sixth in Africa.

Other African countries among the top 50 in the world are Mali, Gabon and Burkina Faso. While the Malians are 47th, the Gabonese and Burkinabes are 48th and 49th respectively.

There was no big change at the top of the ladder, where Spain retained the number one spot and earned FIFA's tag of "Team of the Year".

The European champions have a total of 1,627 points and are followed by the South American champions Brazil in second place with 1,568 points.

The Netherlands, who are third with 1,288 points, are followed by World Cup holders Italy in number four with 1209 points.

Portugal, Germany, France and Argentina are fifth, sixth, seventh and eighth respectively.

England and Croatia are ninth and tenth respectively. Cameroon, Russia and Greece are 11th, 12th and 13th respectively.

The Greeks are among the Super Eagles' first round opponents at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa. The others are Argentina and South Korea.

The Koreans are 52nd in the world.

There will be changes in the positions of the African teams after the Nations Cup next month when the next rankings are released on Feb. 3, 2010.

(Source: www.chinaview.cn)
African migrants and their desperate ploy for a better life
AfricaImmigrant-baby.jpg(Robin Hammond for The Sunday Times Magazine) Fatoumata Balajo with her son Nyima. Her husband, Alouma, and his three brothers were aboard the overcrowded fishing boat the Nazar

 

By Dan Macdougall

THE dawn prayer had begun prematurely in the cold darkness some time after 3am. Clinging to the upturned hull of the Nazar, the fishing boat that had carried the migrants out into the black waters off Tripoli, the survivors had dreamt they were floating west and, by Allah's divine grace, had come upon the distant green lights of Malta.
For two days they had clung to the oily hull of the ship. Again and again they had slipped backwards into the watery Mediterranean tomb that surrounded them. Each time they had somehow made it back onto the rotten wooden carcass of the boat, using the floating corpses of other would-be migrants to help them climb back.
"Dear God, how many can there be?" whispered the captain of the Libyan coastguard vessel to his deckhand, repeating the words in Berber and Arabic as the high beam on the starboard of the Libyan navy rescue ship drew closer and lit up the remains of the vessel.
Even for experienced mariners, the sight was unforgettable. Pregnant women from Somalia, Nigerian schoolchildren and young Gambian men, dozens of them, bloated and scattered across the sea. On the upturned hull were no more than 10 survivors, all hysterical and weeping, grasping one another for dear life.
By daybreak it emerged that three boats had gone down. The survivors from the Nazar would speak of a blood-red sandstorm at sea and of hundreds slipping from the packed decks into the roaring depths around them. How many were there on each ship, their interrogators enquired.
"Too many," one survivor claimed. "The boats were so low in the water we had to bail from the shore. At least a hundred crammed cheek to cheek on each vessel, dozens of screaming infants among our number." Where were they from? "Everywhere. Lagos. Accra. Addis Ababa. Nairobi. Yaounde. Banjul. Dakar." Where were they heading? "Lampedusa and then Milan, Paris, London. Who knows? To a better life."
On dry land the individual stories of the living were even more devastating. "A breastfeeding mother next to me dropped her screaming newborn into the blackness as she was trampled on by the other migrants in the panic as the storm set in," said an Eritrean.
The only Gambian to survive related: "In desperation the boatmen threw the weakest overboard as the water came up to our knees. The children were the first to go, tossed into the water as the boat listed. A fight broke out and it was everyone for themselves." The same man told the Libyan authorities: "I held onto my brother's hand in the water, hours after he had died of exposure. I couldn't let him go."
In London, Paris and Rome, the sinking of three illegal vessels in a storm off Libya, and the deaths of perhaps 300 people - one of the worst maritime disasters in modern Mediterranean history - barely made down-page headlines in the broadsheet newspapers. In the past decade alone as many as 20,000 nameless "clandestini", as the Italians call them, may have drowned en route to the Italian island of Lampedusa, and the Canary Islands to the west. As they have gone, so they have left behind thousands of destitute families.
Emigration, both legal and illegal, has become the defining factor in the modern lives of sub-Saharan Africans, with an estimated 20m of them living in European countries alone. Over one in nine of all people living in the UK were born abroad, and increasingly the country has come to depend on a vast secret army of illegal immigrants, many of them from sub-Saharan Africa, to fill low-paid jobs. The Somalian minicab driver taking you to Manchester Airport, the middle-aged Ghanaian woman cleaning the toilet in your Edinburgh hotel room, the Malawian teenager smiling at you across the London supermarket check-out may be among those who have come to Britain the hard way.
The secretive nature of this type of immigration means that it is impossible to accurately chart the number of African migrants arriving in Europe in this way. The Migration Policy Institute believes there are between 7m and 8m irregular African immigrants in the EU. About two-thirds of Africans in Europe are from North Africa, but an increasing number - as many as 50% - are travelling from sub-Saharan Africa, particularly from west Africa - Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal. They look out from Libya across 660 miles to Sicily, and towards Italy's 7,600-kilometre coastline, the European Union's most porous frontier, before heading out into the unknown in vessels painted dark blue by smugglers to camouflage them in the glare of the authorities' searchlights.
The sums sent home to Africa from around the world amount to an estimated $40 billion a year. In the past, Africans have gone primarily to France, where a forged carte de séjour still costs more than £5,000, or to the UK, where asylum was traditionally believed to be easiest to secure, and to Spain or, more recently, Italy. The routes they take are many and varied. From west Africa, migrants trek through the pitiless Sahara to Libya, from there to brave the Mediterranean - or, more perilous yet, strike out for the Canary Islands in fragile canoes known as "pirogues". If they then cross to the Spanish mainland they will probably do so in tiny, open Spanish fishing boats.
An estimated one in every eight migrants who try to travel across the ocean to Europe don't make it, their bodies carried out into the cold Atlantic. Those who perish are identified only by chance, their skeletons dredged from the sea by Italian and Spanish trawlers, or their bodies washed on to beaches used by holidaymakers. In the Gambia the impact of the drownings is felt more than in most countries.
On a ragged bank of the Gambia River, bored children pummel holes in the red earth with their bare fists. In front of drab mud-block homes their mothers sell miserable packages of dirt-coloured groundnut, barely looking up from their stalls. The fields of millet that once surrounded the villages have been eroded by saltwater flooding and neglect, with the young men long gone. Here, within a 10-kilometre radius, lived most of the young Gambian men who perished aboard the Nazar, within hours of leaving Libya's shore.
In the courtyard of his home in Bintang, a local civil servant, Doumbe Jaiteh, tells me he lost his only two sons on board the Nazar. The old man weeps as he clutches a copy of The Point, the main voice of opposition in the Gambia. Inside are the names of a few of the 27 young Gambian men who perished in the storm off Libya. Left behind by the deaths of Jaiteh's sons Bafoday, 30, and Forday, 27, are four wives, six children and a further 36 dependants - an entire extended family left destitute.
"What can I say to change this?" says Doumbe. "These boys went with our hopes and our blessings. I encouraged them to go. To change our lives and theirs. Not throw it away here on the rotten land like I did. We gave all of our money to them, the little we had. We borrowed from our neighbours. Bafoday and Forday were going to build us a home. My neighbour's son went to London five years ago. Their home is concrete."
A former British colony, the Gambia is the smallest country in mainland Africa, and one of the world's poorest, a tiny sliver of land, a bleakly flat nation of fewer than 1.5m people. Today it is a member of the Commonwealth, and a tourist destination for nearly 60,000 Britons a year. But to human-rights watchdogs it is also becoming a postage-stamp-sized scar on the map. It is the personal domain of the president His Excellency Sheikh Professor Al-Haji Dr Yahya AJJ Jammeh, the Gambia's increasingly erratic dictator, who is developing a personality cult based on fear and oppression. Jammeh's great hero is the Libyan leader, Colonel Gadaffi, and over the past decade he has set about building up a "special relationship" with Tripoli.
This, and the regime at home, has encouraged an exodus of young Gambian men such as the 27 who slipped helplessly from the deck of the sinking Nazar.
The final journey of Jaiteh's sons, Bafoday and Forday, had begun 400 kilometres north of their home, in Dakar, Senegal. For $500 each, a Mauritanian fixer had agreed to take 60 Gambians on the hard road across the Senegalese border to the Mauritanian capital, Nouakchott, and across the Sahara to Libya, where, for a further fee, they would get a boat to Europe. The "fare", funded by relatives and neighbours, was paid up front in full.
From Saint Louis in northern Senegal, the Gambians had boarded a flatbed Chinese truck and trundled north and then east across barren flatlands during endless chilly nights and sweltering days. Their destination, improbably, was Kufra, the oasis outpost in southern Libya over 1,700 kilometres away. Unable to absorb its own foreign population (in a country of just 5.5m, there are 2m immigrants), and hoping to pressure the European Union into lifting economic sanctions, Libya has continued to allow camps of would-be immigrants to flourish around Kufra.
Three days into the trip the truck broke down and the Gambians were left stranded in the desert. For Bafoday and Forday it would be their first glimpse of death. According to their father the boys had told them simply: "We will get a message to you within a month."
"A month passed and I had no word," Jaiteh told The Sunday Times. In fact, the young men were marooned for weeks. Woefully ill-prepared for life in the Sahara, where temperatures drop to near-freezing, four of their fellow migrants died of hypothermia in their first few days as they lay helplessly under the truck, while in the background the driver counted down the seconds of his own life as he pieced together the engine parts of his truck.
After finally getting back on the road and crossing Mali, the brothers somehow ended up in Dirkou in northern Niger, a town constantly on edge because of its combustible mix of soldiers, smugglers, migrants, rebels from neighbouring Chad and other shadowy desert dwellers. Here, in the past few years, the number of mud-brick houses has doubled; more are under construction. It has become the latest immigrant boomtown. Before making it here, most migrants pass through Agadez, about 560 kilometres to the southwest, a city that, like Timbuktu in neighbouring Mali, has served for centuries as a gateway between black Africa to the south and Arab Africa to the north.
At Dirkou, the Gambians' driver and his Chinese truck disappeared in the night as they waited to head further north. A further $100 bought them a week's lodging, lying low, in Dirkou; and, finally, a Jeep ride north to Benghazi, Libya's second-largest city, where they waited patiently for the green light to head out to sea.
Follow the Gambia River 10 kilometres downstream from Doumbe Jaiteh's mud-block home and you reach Sanyaang village. In a family compound on the outskirts of the community, cast out in mourning, are the widows of Ousman, Ebrima, Ensa and Alouma Bojan Sayang, four brothers who perished aboard the Nazar. "They slipped away in the night, like ghosts. We had so little warning," says Fatoumata Balajo, the wife of Alouma, breastfeeding her eight-month-old son, Nyima. "My husband said to me before he left that, as men, his brothers must pray as if they will die tomorrow and work as if they'll never die. He placed his fate and our future in God's hands."
All under 30, the Sayang brothers had taken the route east to Libya, through the Senegalese city of Touba, a sprawling hovel that spans the arid scrublands of central Senegal. Around Touba, north and south of the Senegal river valley, village after village has emptied in a double exodus. Young men and some women, braving desert and high seas to get to Europe and beyond, are gone. In their wake their families have flowed steadily into Touba, where Western Union exchanges are within reach.
Out of a population of 11m a staggering 1.6m Senegalese now live and work outside the country, most concentrated communities in France, Italy and Spain. The IMF estimates the money sent home by Senegalese migrants in 2008, through the formal banking system and licensed money-transfer agencies, was around £400m. On the wealthier backstreets of Touba the BMW or Mercedes of the "golden boys" who made it big abroad are in evidence.
According to their surviving eldest brother, Demba Bojang Sayang, a headmaster, the decision of Ousman, Ebrima, Ensa and Alouma to strike out for Europe had been backed by all 74 members of his extended family. He said: "In The Gambia young men and women no longer think of school. If you take the traditional route through education, as I did, you go up the stairs slowly, step by step. But if you leave for Europe through the desert or by the sea it is the equivalent of travelling on an elevator. I walk into one of my classrooms and ask the children, boys and girls, 12-year-olds, how many have brothers or sisters in Europe. They will all put their hands up.
I then ask them how many want to follow and I get the same reply. All the hands in the air. I am a headmaster yet I earn a monthly salary of 3,000 dalasi [about £67]. My neighbour's brother supports his entire family, 47 people, selling handbags and watches in a London market. He sends home £350 a month. Here that can support everyone. It can build a brick home. My home is mud-block - when the rains come there is nothing left of our floor." He added: "My four brothers sat here and looked at a map and they kept coming back to Libya, they kept tracing the route across the desert with their fingers. We all took part in the decision. When they left we knew the risks were high, but for four of them to die in one boat is too much to take. Now their widows float among us like the living dead, lost in their grief; their children's faces are a permanent reminder to us of what we have lost. Look around you. Our family is now destitute."
For the widows of the four men, life in the compound is no consolation for the death of their husbands. Their fate will probably involve being "adopted" by a member of their husband's family, taken on as a fourth or fifth wife. In the Gambia children of dead migrants have literally wasted away from malnutrition.
"Finding food is the hardest thing," says Fatou Cessay, the widow of Ebrima Sayang, clutching her three children. "We're reduced to beggars. We wait for everyone else to eat before we get what is left. I had no say in my husband's decision."
Two hours north from the Sayang compound the ominous sweep of the great river floods the valley basin near the village of Kachung. Suleman Conteh, 36, grew up here in Kachung, the river a constant in his life. With it flowed his dreams of escape. Five years ago he cheated death and somehow made it to Europe - or, rather, to a detention centre in Tenerife. He was eventually returned to the Gambia in disgrace, by Spanish military plane to Senegal. "My route was the sea from Dakar, by pirogue," says Suleman. "The journey to the Canary Islands should take eight days with a good wind. If you hit 10 days you are in trouble. There were 89 people on my boat. I counted them all as we sat in the darkness.
"The drinking water ran out about 48 hours into the voyage. The fee was supposed to include water and food. The traffickers ordered us to carry nothing. No papers, no personal belongings, no supplies. It happened quickly. Suddenly. It took everyone by surprise. Everything happened in slow motion. The boat's engine, wheezing and spluttering, cut out after three days. By day four, floating helplessly in the open sun, the women were no longer weeping; their tear ducts were cracked and withered. On day four I started to think about drinking my own urine. Some tried around me but vomited.
"I started having panic attacks. Others followed. I looked at the seawater and thought, ‘If I drink this I will survive.' So I started drinking. I scooped the water into my hands and it tasted bitter but it seemed to work. The others joined in and there was euphoria and relief across the boat. Within hours the stomach cramps started and the dying began. We floated for four more days, tipping the dead overboard; we counted 17 corpses in all. For those of us who survived to the final day, when we were picked up by a Spanish patrol boat, we might as well have been dead."
When Suleman returned to the Gambia last year, a broken man, the responsibility of getting to Europe fell to his brother, Jereh. Like the Sayang brothers, his journey would take him through Touba and eventually to the same safe house in Benghazi as the Jaiteh brothers. Unlike Suleman, Jereh was unable to cheat death. Sitting in the family compound Jereh Conteh's twin girls take turns on the breast of his widow, Janka. Alasuna and Awa Conteh were born five months ago as their father prepared to go to Europe. "My husband inherited the debts of his brother so had to go. He was terrified of the sea so went overland to Libya," said Janka, her sad eyes looking out towards the river. "His body was never found."
All routes from the Gambia lead to Senegal. At the border we pass into Francophile Africa and follow the only road north, the same route taken by the 27 young men who died aboard the Nazar. On the approaches to Mbour the ubiquitous Western Union signs illuminate the roads. "Gone are the adult men but here for ever are the yellow signs," our driver tells us in French.
The people along this stretch of coast south of Dakar traditionally enjoyed warm waters, a mild climate and an abundance of fruit and fish. But then the factory ships from Spain, Britain and latterly Japan came and emptied the seas. In the wake of the western boats the residents of Mbour and other towns along the coast found a new source of income: in the past decade an entire industry has sprung up around em


 

 

 

 

 

Photo News

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Organisers Delphine Marques & Chrissa LaPorte (French-American Foundation) at Media Dialogue on immigration held in Miami, Florida May 2010. Photos; Clement Ogar   

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L-R Dr Yves Ekoue Amaizo and Dr Abel Ugba in intensive dialogue during the media conference in Miami, Florida

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Antoine Treuille (President, French-American Foundation) delivering his opening address at Covering Immigration; International Media Dialogue 7-9 May 2010 in Miami Florida  

Ann celebrating Isaac Boro's day in London 

Tinchy Stryder performs at Ghana Party in Park, London 2009

 

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From R-L Sierra Schaller, Chrissa LaPorte (French-American Foundation), Claire Frachon listening intently during dinner speech

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Dr Zsolt Nyiri (German Marshall Fund, US) on a tour of Fruteria in Little Havana, Miami 

 

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Corinna Moebius(left, tour guide) showing Sheila Davaney of Ford Foundation, 2nd left and the rest of the team around Little Havana. Photo: Clement Ogar

 

 

Ann Briggs and Ken Saro-Wiwa Jr at Boro Day 

Visitors enjoying music at Ghana party in the park

Visitors at Ghana Party in Park pose for photographs

 

More photographs at Copthall, London

Showing off designs at Ghana Party in Park, London

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

Cut Off My Tongue cast pose for photographs, photo:Clement Ogar.

Fashion parade at Ghana party in park, London

 

More fashion at Ghana party in park, London

 

 

Fire eaters performing at Ghana party in park

 

A performer on stage wooing the crowd 

    
    

Events

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Guests at Africa Dev. event (Docklands)

 

Rita Lutalo(right) at UgoNet event recently

 

 

 

 
   

 




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