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| Some of the 50 migrants board a waiting bus as they leave the
immigration hall at Roissy-Charles de Gaulle airport on the outskirts of
Paris on July 5, 2018, after arriving on a flight from the
Mediterranean island of Malta.<br />France has granted asylum to
52 people rescued by the German charity boat Lifeline in June, which was
also stranded for days last month after picking up migrants in distress
off the Libyan coast. |
Thousands of irregular migrants from Africa are now considering the
Morocco to Spain route in an attempt to reach Europe by land, says the
Migrant Project.
The anti-irregular migration campaign group, in a press statement,
said due to the unrest and clampdown in Libya, many migrants are
avoiding the Libyan route which is deemed too risky, dangerous and
stressful, thereby using the borders in Morocco as the connecting point
into Europe.
According to the group, over 82,000 migrants and refugees entered
Europe by sea between January and September 2018, with over 36,600
entering Spain, making it the leading destination for irregular
migration into Europe this year.
“In July, more than 700 migrants from sub-Sahara Africa stormed the
border fence of the Spanish enclave Ceuta in Morocco with dozens injured
and several dead,” the group’s media officer, Tayo Elegbede said.
Elegbede further noted that the realities of irregular migration in
Nigeria and Africa continues to generate concerns for stakeholders due
to the inherent dangers of the journey which entraps, enslaves and
renders many migrants stranded, unsafe and even dead.
“Our observation of irregular migration trends in Nigeria has revealed quite a number of realities.
While the journeys are a really hard move to track, it is worrisome
to note that over 1,700 people have died this year in an attempt to
cross the Mediterranean Sea.
Similarly, thousands have lost their lives in attempts to use the
Moroccan-Spain route into Europe, This is outside of the cases of forced
labour, slave trade, human trafficking, organ harvesting and detention,
and other inhuman experiences,” Elegbede said.
He, however, enjoined Nigerians to explore home-based or legal alternatives to irregular.
“Apparently, irregular migration could be really costly to individuals, families, communities, nations and the world at large.
Hence, we advise people, particularly potential migrants, to know the
risks and realities of irregular migration and count the cost before
embarking on such journies.
It is safe to explore alternatives to irregular migration such as
legal and proper migration, foreign studies and scholarships, family
reunification, home-grown opportunities for business development,
entrepreneurship, job placement, and skills development.”
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