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AU supports 5,200 migrants return from Libya – IOM

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NEMA receives another 164 stranded Nigerians from Libya

The African Union (AU) has supported 5,200 migrants to return home safely from Libya since November 2017, the International Organisation for Migration’s (IOM) Mission in Libya, has said.

Mr Othman Belbeisi, Chief of IOM Mission in Libya, said thousands of migrants had also returned home safely from the war-ravaged country since 2017 through a UN-supported programme.

Belbeisi said: “We are continuing to assist migrants inside Libyan detention centres, while increasing efforts to reach stranded migrants outside of detention.

“Since the expansion of our Voluntary Humanitarian Return (VHR) operation, the number of migrants in official detention centres have dropped from an estimated 20,000 people in October 2017 to 4,000 people today, a five-fold decrease”.

He said since January 2017, some 23,302 migrants had repatriated through the VHR programme, which consists of the European Union (EU), AU and Libyan Government.

He said IOM in Libya was also working with the authorities to register migrants, provide lifesaving assistance in the form of health care and essential aid items, psychosocial support, improve consular services and projects promoting community stabilisation.

He said nearly half of voluntary returns executed by IOM from Libya were part of the larger EU-IOM Joint Initiative on Migrant Protection and Reintegration initiative that supported reintegration for returnees in countries of origin.

According to him, the initiative is active in Libya as well as 26 countries in North Africa, the Sahel and the Lake Chad region, and the Horn of Africa.

IOM Regional Director for the EU, Eugenio Ambrosi, said the VHR operation’s scale of protection needs and number of returns had overtaken initial planning and pose challenges for countries of origin.

Ambrosi said: “We are embarking on a completely new approach to reintegration and we believe in it.

“It will take some time to build, and in cooperation with authorities in countries of origin and the local communities, we are already seeing promising developments.”

He said with partners, IOM had been scaling up activities to meet the surge in returnees and ensure assistance upon their arrival, and in the longer-term – to readjust to their communities.

Ambrosi said the programme also offered reintegration assistance for those returning from EU States.

He added that the new, reintegration approach aimed to mitigate tensions by involving local communities at home in the process and raising awareness to address return stigmas.

According to him, that is why capacity building, social, psychosocial, and community-based aspects are being built into the programme.

Ambrosi said: “The initiatives we are undertaking with the EU and our African partners represent a new chapter in migration cooperation.

“It is the first time that substantial funding has been invested to support the priorities and capacity of partner countries to manage return and reintegration and to make migration itself a safer and informed process”.

IOM Regional Director for West Africa, Richard Danziger said: “The Joint Initiative, in partnership with the governments of countries of origin and the African Union, aims to make sure that the migration process is safer.

“It is also to make sure that returning migrants can get back to their countries of origin safely and re-establish their lives without the feeling that they are a burden for their communities and families.”

However, he cautioned that as many returnees from Libya are traumatised after having suffered unspeakable abuses, saying their immediate medical and psychosocial needs have taken priority.

Nan

NEWSVERGE, published by The Verge Communications is an online community of international news portal and social advocates dedicated to bringing you commentaries, features, news reports from a Nigerian-African perspective. A unique organization, founded in the spirit of Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, comprising of ordinary people with an overriding commitment to seeking the truth and publishing it without fear or favour. The Verge Communications is fully registered with the Corporate Affairs Commission of the Federal Republic of Nigeria as a corporate organization.

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