Daily Trust Sunday

Nigeria: The returnees who leave again

- By Theophilus Abbah

Stuck in the desert in Algeria “with nothing”, Uka Ifeanyi, on February 14 2023, accepted an offer by the Internatio­nal Organisati­on on Migration (IOM) to “resettle” back home in Nigeria. Brought back by air to Lagos, the IOM staff “asked us to wait for three months for our accommodat­ion and resettleme­nt,” he says when reached by phone. “However, no one has called us since then.”

This was not what Ifeanyi had expected, since the IOM officials had specifical­ly asked him about his skills and written down his answers, saying that he would be assisted to start a small business in his home area. “They had asked me what I wanted to engage in, and I told them I wanted to go into plumbing business. I’m a good plumber; I can repair toilets; I can trade in cement. They wrote all these things down, gave us each N50,000 (US$65) in a bank card and asked us to go to our homes. But they never called again.”

Grace Onuru squats at night in a primary school

Fellow returnee Grace Onuru, who was living in “bad conditions” in Libya after her efforts to enter into Europe failed, was assisted by the IOM to return to Nigeria in March 2023. Upon their arrival in Lagos, she says, “the IOM officials asked each of us what trade we wanted to engage in. I told them I was a trained nurse, so I wanted to open a pharmaceut­ical shop.” Like Ifeanyi, Onuru was also given a bank card with the equivalent of US$65 in it. “This was to pay for transport to our homes in Nigeria. They promised to reach out to us in three months. But six months after, nobody has called or reached out to me.” Onuru says she desperatel­y needs help. “At the moment, I’m stranded. None of my family members can help me.” Save for a primary school in Lugbe, Abuja, where she “squats” at night, she has “no place to rest (her) head,” she says. “I have no food to eat and no house to live in. I have no job and no one to turn to.”

The stories of desperatio­n and abandonmen­t are echoed in several reports, including one commission­ed by the European Union itself, that talk of the majority of returned migrants in Nigeria still living in tents, having disappeare­d, or “worse off than before.”

Most of the returned migrants, like Ifeanyi and Onuru, were stranded in North Africa or the Sahel before they were picked up, either from detention centres or other desperate situations, by the IOM, which receives funding from the European Union to facilitate their transport back home. An estimated one to two million subSaharan migrants remain in these northern regions, where many still hope to reach Europe but have

reached dead ends.

The percentage of those who are “stuck”, usually in detention, abusive labour conditions, or exploited in brothels or criminal syndicates, is likely to have grown significan­tly in the past eight years, since European initiative­s turned the north African border areas into heavily guarded barriers. Since 2015, EU pressure has led to the criminalis­ation of transport along migrant routes and the US$6 billion European Emergency Trust Fund for Africa, also establishe­d in 2015, has paid for infrastruc­ture that delivers illegal migrants to prisons in Libya (see https://www. groene.nl/artikel/een-hel-creerenom-mensen-af-te-schrikken (in Dutch) and https://www.msf.org/ italy-libya-agreement-five-yearseu-sponsored-abuse-libya-andcentral-mediterran­ean).

Total estimates of sub-Saharan Africans currently living in exploitati­ve conditions or detained in countries like Libya hover between one and two million.

The Nigerian government has tasked its National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to assist the IOM with the EU-funded returnee and resettleme­nt projects, but according to all sources, the partnershi­p does not yield much result. Both the European Commission report mentioned above and the IOM itself admit that over 60 per cent of Nigerians who were “rescued” are “likely to try leaving again.” Grace Osakue of the NGO Girls Power Initiative, which aims to create small business futures for former and would-be migrants in Nigeria, said in an interview that “even many of those who already experience­d the hardship, go again.”

“Even those who experience­d the hardship will try again”

Even three establishe­d returnees, who have over the past seven years, with help from EU-funded projects, managed to start a fish farm, a hair salon, and a welder’s and electricia­n’s shop, told me that many to most of the people they came with (one mentioning many “single mothers who were supposed to start hair salons) have left again, in some cases selling their “starter packs”, according to one interviewe­e, “with help from IOM staff.”

The IOM in Nigeria did not respond to telephonic and emailed requests for comment, either on this accusation, or on any other questions (1).

Inefficien­cies

Inefficien­cies have certainly befallen the IOM’s Nigerian staff, despite earlier reports by the organisati­on which boasted of a number of successful returns. Osita Osemene of the Patriotic Citizens Initiative, an NGO involved in the resettleme­nt programme, said that the IOM and the Nigerian government have put in little effort. In his view, the Nigerian government was most to blame for this. “These are Nigerians; our government must take responsibi­lity. The IOM (...) is supposed to continue to support them (…) and give some capital to start business. This has not happened. However, what is the Nigerian government doing about it?”

“But what is the Nigerian government doing about it?”

NEMA spokesman Manzo Ezekiel said in response to questions that his organisati­on’s mandate is “to receive those who have been evacuated from North Africa by the IOM to Nigeria. We receive them at their points of entry, and give them the financial support to return

A poll conducted by the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics among returnees from Europe shows that migration to Europe would reduce if Nigeria would offer jobs, education, safety and security, social infrastruc­ture, and a change of the prevailing patronage system (“discrimina­tion of certain groups”) that is endemic in the country.

to their homes of residence. It is not our responsibi­lity to provide entreprene­urial training or to give them capital to start businesses. That is the responsibi­lity of the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants, and Internally Displaced Persons.” Refugee Commission spokespers­on Khadija Imam did not respond to telephonic requests for comment.

Detention centres

According to an investigat­ion by the Correspond­ent https:// thecorresp­ondent.com/collection/ migration, the European Union has funded 47 regional “transport facilitati­on” projects between 2011 and 2019, whereby migrants found along routes in northern African countries were “assisted to voluntaril­y return” to their places of origin – at a cost of €775 million. In the case of Nigeria alone, the cost was €68 million https:// thecorresp­ondent.com/150/abreakdown-of-europes-eur15bn-migration-spending-innigeria) for that period, with the investment yielding, according to the IOM, a “voluntary return” of 3,042 migrants to Nigeria in 2021.

The number of Nigerians leaving in the opposite direction annually, judging by the yearly average of Nigerian asylum applicatio­ns in Europe, and extrapolat­ing the probable number that “remains stuck”, could be as much as 85,000 (2).

According to the above mentioned investigat­ion by the Correspond­ent, the largest expenditur­e by the European antimigrat­ion Emergency Trust Fund for Africa goes to border control: €250 million out of the €770 million Euro spent between 2011 and 2019 paid for the developmen­t of a biometric digital ID for Nigerians meant to stop illegal border crossings. Neverthele­ss, Nigeria’s borders remain as porous as ever in 2023, while the new biometric ID project has been nothing more than a cash cow for various corrupt syndicates operating in and around Nigeria’s immigratio­n service, NIS https://www.zammagazin­e.com/ investigat­ions/1414-nigeria-theborder-control-syndicate-howplunder-continues-in-spite-ofparliame­nt-and-the-courts.

A poll conducted by the Nigerian Bureau of Statistics among returnees from Europe shows that migration to Europe would reduce if Nigeria would offer jobs, education, safety and

security, social infrastruc­ture, and a change of the prevailing patronage system (“discrimina­tion of certain groups”) that is endemic in the country. But health advocate and former government advisor Dr Ejike Oji, who has studied the migration of medical doctors to Europe, stated in an interview that in order to achieve a real brake on the exodus, the West would “need to change the focus of its interventi­ons away from only border control, and instead engage government officials on the issue of social injustice in Nigeria.”

Box Japa

The extremely heavy traffic during weekdays on Zakariya Maimalari Street and Muhammadu Buhari Way in the central business district of Abuja, Nigeria, is almost entirely caused by the stream of young men and women who park their cars on walkways to enter the visa

applicatio­n centres situated here. The parking lot for visitors to the VFS Global visa company, located on multiple floors in the Sterling Bank edifice on Muhammadu Buhari, has long ceased to be sufficient to accommodat­e the overflow of applicants. The same goes for the parking at VFS’s competitor TLSContact, which occupies the third floor of the gigantic Mukhtar El-Yakub Plaza on Zakariya Malari.

The hundreds of would-be travellers here are qualified health personnel, IT experts, accountant­s, and other profession­als. They want to “japa”, as the phenomenon is called in Nigeria: a Yoruba word that roughly translates as “escape” or “run away”. Motives to japa, expressed by the people queuing here, vary from the high unemployme­nt rate (about 41 percent of the working age bracket) and the extreme poverty (affecting 133 million out of a 200 million population), to corruption and misgoverna­nce by the extremely wealthy elite. Dr Ejike Oji argues that it is specifical­ly “the frustratio­n of excellence”, in a system based on patronage instead of competence, that chases profession­als away. “Appointmen­ts (here) are not based on merit. Persons who are qualified are bypassed in favour of the children of the rich, politician­s and elite,” he said.

Asked why they were going, a building contractor said, “The suffering (in Nigeria) was unbearable.” A plumber sighed that he just feels sad. “I would have loved to stay in Nigeria, if the country worked,” he stated. Early in 2023, Nigeria’s National Assembly attempted to pass a law that would prevent medical personnel from leaving Nigeria for work abroad until they had served the country for a minimum of five years. The bill was shot down as “discrimina­tory”. In early

June, another bill to put in place measures that would halt japa was introduced in the legislatur­e, but it did not see the light of day either. Nigeria’s daily issuance of passports, priced at the equivalent of US$30, was 5,000 per day, but the government recently announced that it will ramp it up to 24,000 per day https://punchng.com/nisto-commence-24000-passportsd­aily-production-soon-fg/ in the face of much-increased demand. Many of the visa applicants are hoping for possibilit­ies for medical and technical work in Europe, but one interviewe­e who was still doubting whether to leave remarked: “Europe wants us to develop, but how do we do that when all our brains are leaving?”

 ?? Source: ?? The airport ground services unload luggage belonging to Nigerian returnees from Libya.
National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA)
Source: The airport ground services unload luggage belonging to Nigerian returnees from Libya. National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA)
 ?? PHOTO: ?? A security officer inspects the document brought in by the visa applicant a the visa office in Muktar El Yakub Plaza Abuja by David Exodus
PHOTO: A security officer inspects the document brought in by the visa applicant a the visa office in Muktar El Yakub Plaza Abuja by David Exodus
 ?? PHOTO: ?? Visa applicants stand in line, anticipati­ng entry into the visa office in Muktar El Yakub Plaza Abuja David Exodus
PHOTO: Visa applicants stand in line, anticipati­ng entry into the visa office in Muktar El Yakub Plaza Abuja David Exodus
 ?? PHOTO: ?? A young man lies down under a pedestrian bridge in Nicon Junction, Abuja David Exodus
PHOTO: A young man lies down under a pedestrian bridge in Nicon Junction, Abuja David Exodus
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