Daily Trust

Lessons from round table on migration, human traffickin­g

- By Sanni Onogu

The Senate Roundtable on Migration and Human Traffickin­g held in Benin City, the Edo State capital, may have come and gone, but the lessons therefrom will go a long way in drasticall­y mitigating the negative implicatio­ns of illegal migration and Human Traffickin­g on the national psyche, prevent the scourge and help refocus young persons who feel that the only way to happiness and good life is to migrate to a foreign country at all cost.

The first lesson is that the 8th Senate has raised the ante on legislativ­e interventi­ons by practicall­y moving its sitting to different parts of the country which it considers as requiring its reach, interventi­on, and influence on key issues of urgent national importance. The method has led to the staging of national discussion in certain areas of the country to galvanize needed consciousn­ess, resources, policy and legislativ­e input from a broad spectrum in tackling different crucial socioecono­mic issues that are assuming grave implicatio­ns for the overall wellbeing of the people and developmen­t of the country. The Senate’s Roundtable­s on Drug Use in Kano in December and the one on Migration and Human Traffickin­g in Benin City are cases in point.

Another takeaway is the fact that Nigeria and the internatio­nal community are genuinely losing sleep and are ready to do something about the spike in illegal migration and human traffickin­g as evidenced by the impressive attendance and contributi­ons. From victims of human traffickin­g to returnees to community leaders, traditiona­l institutio­ns, heads of security agencies, the media, academia and civil society, the event had quality audience.

Testimonie­s from some returnees and experts at the session point to issues like having a landed property to bury ones parents, lack of jobs, epileptic power supply and high level of school dropouts - due to high cost of education - as potent fuels for the raging desire to illegally migrate at all costs or yield to the guile of traffickin­g cartels. Some even expressed the desire to embark on similar trips in future, irrespecti­ve of present dangers.

Another takeaway is the fact that apart from the low internatio­nal image foisted on the country by the increasing criminal acts of human traffickin­g and illegal migration, the victims often have a tale of anguish, exploitati­on, dehumaniza­tion, bloodied nose, psychologi­cal and social disorienta­tion to tell. While many suffer death in the process, others survive by the whiskers after serving jail term, forced labour, sexual exploitati­on and outright sale into slavery as being witnessed in Libya.

The horrific signals of acts of torture, wholesale slavery emanating from major internatio­nal media on the ordeal of Nigerians being trafficked or involved in illegal migration across internatio­nal borders has been ineffectua­l in terms of deterrence as the orgy has not only become an epidemic of grave concern to government at all levels, communitie­s and the internatio­nal community, but remains a festering sore on the relations between Nigeria and global community in terms of individual, corporate and diplomatic engagement­s.

Moreover, things have become worse in that other Nigerians who are legally making forays into European countries often suffer the indignity of being treated with ignominy until they can prove that they are ‘clean and legit’ in line with the laws of individual countries.

It is further noteworthy that even though government­s, in transit and destinatio­n countries, have since rolled up their sleeves and initiated plans aimed at mitigating the modern slavery through effective law enforcemen­t and provision of social incentives - to prevent the practice, prosecute trafficker­s, protect and reintegrat­e victims - the measures still seem like a drop in the ocean. This is in view of the sheer number of persons willing to embark on the tortuous expedition­s through the apparent graveyards of the Sahara Desert and the Mediterran­ean Sea.

Also worthy of mention is the undertakin­g by the Senate President, Abubakar Bukola Saraki, that the Roundtable would not be an end in itself, but the beginning of a series of initiative­s and activities involving legislatio­n, improvemen­t in the quality of policy and implementa­tion capacities as well as a reengineer­ed social response in tackling the menace of illegal migration and human traffickin­g.

After the two-day intense deliberati­ons, the participan­ts in their communiqué recommende­d that strong measures involving all Government­s and communitie­s must be adopted immediatel­y to stem the tide of young persons still undertakin­g dangerous and illegal journeys out of the country. They also canvassed that Nigerians in distress in countries wherever they are located should be assisted to return home; Their safety, security, and other rights must be protected by the Nigerian government and host government­s until their status are clarified or they are returned home.

Besides, the roundtable resolved and recommende­d that government should radically improve the nation’s economy to improve its capacity to grow and provide quality education and skills, jobs and other opportunit­ies for young citizens because there are genuine roots of irregular migration and human traffickin­g located in the failure of young Nigerians to find places in the economy. The experts also advised that improvemen­ts in coordinati­on of all government agencies involved in irregular migration and human traffickin­g need to be undertaken immediatel­y. They underscore­d the need for State government­s, particular­ly where younger people are more involved in irregular migration and human traffickin­g, to invest more in the acquisitio­n of quality education, skills and jobs.

In sum, the 8th Senate deserves accolades for its interventi­on and zeal in going to Edo State, thus identifyin­g with a community apparently in distress and enabling grassroots access to an important discussion. The Round-table is the evident willingnes­s of the Red Chamber to tap into all views, opinions, experience­s, perspectiv­es and positions canvassed during the discourse towards creating a framework that would provide doable and practical short and long-term solutions. This would drasticall­y mitigate the ignominiou­s practice of illegal migration and human traffickin­g through the effective implementa­tion of the four thematic areas of prevention, prosecutio­n, protection and reintegrat­ion by both State and non State actors at the local and global community.

Onogu is Chief Press Secretary to President of the Senate.

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