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Migrant as Messenger: All the Roads Leading to Agadez and Italy are Dangerous

El Adama Diallo took an alternative, dangerous route from Senegal to Europe, without regular migration papers and he barely survived it.
El Adama Diallo took an alternative, dangerous route from Senegal to Europe, without regular migration papers and he barely survived it.
migrant as messenger  all the roads leading to agadez and italy are dangerous
Migrants as Messengers (MaM) is a peer-to-peer messaging campaign that trains returning migrants to share their stories of the danger, trauma and abuse that they experienced while attempting irregular migration. Credit: Flickr
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Dakar: El Adama Diallo left his home in Senegal on October 28, 2016, with dreams of reaching Europe in his heart and a steely determination that made him take an alternative, dangerous route to get there despite the absence of regular migration papers in his pocket.

It was a journey that took him from West Africa – through Mali then to Agadez in Niger and across the Sahara desert – to a southern oasis town in Libya.

It was a route populated with heavily-armed human traffickers, bandits and the still-alive bodies of migrants like him, emaciated and weak from lack of water and food who had been left behind to die under the blazing North African sun.

Diallo survived it. Barely.

“All the roads leading to Agadez, and eventually to Libya and Italy are dangerous,” he told IPS on the sidelines of a live broadcast on Radio Afia FM on Monday, September 3, from the station’s base in the bustling township of Grand Yoff, in the Senegalese capital Dakar.

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For me, the dream of reaching Europe irregularly is over, and I call on all who are considering irregular migration to stop it now, 32-year-old Diallo said.

Diallo has much to say about his experience. He finally was able to return to Senegal on December 5, 2017 with the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), which has been working in coordination with the United Nations Refugee Agency and the Libyan government to assist migrants who want to return home.

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He now wants to inform others about his experience. Diallo has become a volunteer in an innovative awareness-raising campaign by IOM called Migrants as Messengers (MaM). MaM is a peer-to-peer messaging campaign that trains returning migrants to share their stories of the danger, trauma and abuse that they experienced while attempting irregular migration. The stories are candid and emotional testimonials.

As is Diallo’s own story.

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Kidnapped and inhumane detention conditions

Diallo arrived in Sabha, southwestern Libya and found “almost the whole of Africa was there; Malians, Gambians, Ivorians, Nigerians and others". From there he hoped to go to Tripoli to catch a boat to Italy. But he was immediately kidnapped by gangs posing as human traffickers.

“They demanded a ransom of [about USD800] for my freedom, which was paid a week later by my family back in Senegal,” he said.

Being caught by human traffickers showed him that race or nationality did not mean solidarity when it came to making a profit.

This article went live on September eleventh, two thousand eighteen, at thirty minutes past eight in the morning.

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