Kuwait Times

Senegal villages empty for dreams of Europe

No country for young men

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Slumped on a bench in a village in southeast Senegal - which is lifeless but for the occasional bleating of goats and splutter of old motorcycle­s - Aliou Thiam has only one thing on his mind. The 28year-old is preparing to leave behind his wife, two children and the only life he has known in the pursuit of a goal shared by many young men across Senegal: Reaching Europe. “I don’t have anything here. That is why I want to go, why I need to go,” he said, glancing at several men lying nearby in the shade, snoozing through the still, sweltering afternoon. “The only thing we know is migration,” Thiam told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “Migration equals success.”

Thousands of Senegalese men set off for Europe each year, risking their lives on treacherou­s journeys through the Sahara desert and across the Mediterran­ean sea. Most fail. Many die. Senegal is among the top 10 countries of origin for migrants arriving in Italy this year, the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration (IOM) says, along with countries like Eritrea, Mali and Nigeria, beset by conflict or concerns over rights abuses.

But Senegal’s young men are not fleeing war. Deemed economic migrants, they are seeking a better life for themselves and their families, and see Europe as the only gateway to success. It is a belief entrenched over decades as generation­s of Senegalese moved to Europe - in particular to France, the former colonial master - and sent money home. But more and more young men are now trying their luck with discontent over joblessnes­s and the slow pace of developmen­t simmering in the West African nation.

Despite being one of Africa’s most stable and fastest-growing democracie­s, Senegal’s average monthly income is less than $100, and around one in eight people are unemployed. The surge in migrants has sparked debate globally about whether economic migrants should be treated differentl­y to refugees fleeing conflict, and fuelled fears poverty will worsen and national stability come under threat if remittance­s dry up.

Uneducated, untrained and unemployed, Thiam and his peers in southeaste­rn Tambacound­a, one of Senegal’s poorest regions, say they have been abandoned by the government - citing undevelope­d land, few jobs, and a lack of vocational training schemes. “All over Senegal, but especially outside of Dakar, there is a view that you can’t make it here, but can make it in Europe,” said Jo-Lind Roberts, chief of mission for the IOM in Senegal. “There is a lack of hope about life in Senegal.” No Jobs, No Future

Tambacound­a is one of Senegal’s main points of departure for the thousands of young men who have headed for Europe via Libya since the North African country’s 2011 uprising led to a vacuum of state authority. Two-thirds of Tambacound­a’s population of 700,000 live in poverty, compared to less than half on average across the nation of 15 million, according to data from Senegal’s 2013 census. One in three people in Tambacound­a, where the average age is 20, have no job to go to. “All these young people are lying around doing nothing,” said El Hadji Sao, secretary general of Goudiry, one of Tambacound­a’s four department­s. “It is enough to cause revolt.”

In the heart of Goudiry, young men work tirelessly in wooden shacks, repairing motorbikes, welding steel and sewing clothes. Yet very few jobs exist outside of the centre of Goudiry, with vast expanses of arid, unused land interrupte­d only by withered baobab trees and isolated villages. “To have a job with a salary here in Goudiry is impossible,” said 35-year-old Yaya Diallo, who sees migrating to Europe as the only way to feed his wife and children. “I have to go.”

Amid thatch-roof huts and mud-brick homes, the few newly-built health centres and schools, and the odd concrete house - some crowned with solar panels and satellite TV dishes - are a testament to the importance of remittance­s across the region. “Everything you see is from those who have migrated ... all the projects are financed by them,” said Moussa Kebe, who returned to Senegal after almost two years in Libya and set up an associatio­n to appeal for developmen­t in the area. “If anyone is sick ... or needs clothes or food ... we have to call on the migrants. When someone passes away, or has to name a baby, we call the migrants they are always solicited.”

Relying on Remittance­s

Senegalese migrants sent home at least 930 billion CFA francs ($1.6 billion) in 2015, eclipsing internatio­nal aid for Senegal and accounting for more than 10 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP), World Bank data shows. This figure may be far higher as it does not account for the cash-stuffed suitcases brought home by migrants, experts say. Yet remittance­s to Senegal could shrink as European nations tighten their borders and work becomes harder to find, said Marta Foresti of the UK-based Overseas Developmen­t Institute.

Aware of this, the government is working to create more jobs in agricultur­e, and educate migrants about the risks of migration, said foreign ministry official Serigne Gueye. “Migration is not the El Dorado people dream of - it is walking into the lion’s den,” he said in the capital Dakar. “We want migrants to understand that what interests us is not their lives abroad, but their successful return to Senegal.”

The state also backs the Program for Support for Solidarity Initiative­s for Developmen­t (PAISD), which helps migrants in France to pool their earnings and invest in projects back in Senegal, from solar power systems to mechanic training schools. “The migrants, with one foot in France and one foot in Senegal, are very important in terms of remittance­s - they are drivers of developmen­t,” said Raphael Renault of the PAISD. But informing people of the risks of migration to persuade them to stay, while relying on remittance­s to spur developmen­t, is an unsustaina­ble strategy, said the Roberts of the IOM. “Only 20-30 percent of remittance­s are invested in society, most go straight to families,” she said. “You can’t just trigger developmen­t over a few years - it doesn’t work like that.” Generation Gap

The success of Goudiry’s former migrants, who migrated to Europe several decades ago before returning home to retire, has inspired the younger generation­s to follow in their footsteps. Thousands of Senegalese headed to France in the 1960s and early 1970s when booming economic growth saw the country recruit workers from its former colonies for manual labor. Although France ended its labour migration policy in 1974, former migrants from Goudiry who entered the country illegally afterwards said their journeys were affordable and safe.

But these now elderly trailblaze­rs, most of whom found consistent work allowing them to club together money in order to finance schools, wells and water towers back home, fear that their achievemen­ts may have set a dangerous precedent. “Adventure is always difficult, but there were none of today’s problems in our time,” said 63-year-old Bocar Diallo, who went to Libya in the 1970s and flew to France, where he worked for Renault and an airport during his 33 years there.

But Goudiry’s young men are not listening. Armed with smartphone­s and television­s - paid for mainly by remittance­s - they are plugged into social media and TV shows offering a taste of life in Europe too tantalizin­g to resist. Samba Sidibe, a softly-spoken man in his twenties, said his friends from Goudiry who made it to Europe often phoned him to boast about their new lives in France, Germany and Italy. “One friend would phone me, telling me that Europe is a thousand times better than Africa,” Sidibe said. “I looked on Facebook, I saw the nice pictures - it drove me to go.”

Sidibe is one of hundreds of young men in Goudiry who burned through their families’ savings to reach Europe, but failed. More than 1,000 men have left Goudiry for Europe since 2013, said Kebe’s Associatio­n of Repatriate­s from Libya. While half succeeded, at least 100 died on the journey and some 350 have been flown home by the IOM and government­s of Senegal and Libya. Repatriate­d from Libya last year, Sidibe now finds himself worse off than he could have ever imagined. “I cannot sit here empty-handed,” he said glumly, staring at the floor. “I must replace the money (some $2,000) to help my parents get out of this ordeal. If I don’t find work, I will be forced to migrate - to try my luck one last time.”

Desert of Death

Starting from a bus station in Tambacound­a, Goudiry’s aspiring migrants take buses, mini-vans and cars through Mali and Burkina Faso to reach Niger’s desert town of Agadez - the main transit point in the Sahara for those dreaming of Europe. For Senegal’s young men, among the 300,000 migrants expected by the IOM to pass through Agadez this year, there begins the hellish 1,200 km journey to Sabha in southern Libya - a route prowled by bandits and baked by the fierce desert sun.

“The desert is much, much worse than the Mediterran­ean or Libya, because it is a place where you have no hope,” said Ousmane Thiam, 24, who like Kebe, spent some two years in Libya and is spokesman for the Associatio­n of Repatriate­s from Libya. While images of dead migrants on European shores have caused a global outcry, Africans heading for Europe may be dying in greater numbers in the Sahara than the thousands who have died in the Mediterran­ean, according to migration tracking group 4mi.

Thiam and other men from Goudiry who crossed the Sahara recalled being wedged into cars with 20 other migrants, having so little water that they had to drink their urine, burying dead bodies along the way, and being beaten and robbed at gunpoint. “But I didn’t have a choice,” Thiam said. “If I had gone home, people would say I was scared - that I was not a man.” Despite having endured the gruelling month-long journey from Senegal to Libya, the nightmare had just begun for Samba Thiam.—Reuters

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