The Columbus Dispatch

Rwanda offers to host stranded thousands

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AFRICA

In an unusual gesture that could partly reverse a more familiar northward odyssey toward Europe, Rwanda offered Thursday to house or help repatriate some of the thousands of African migrants being held in Libya and reportedly auctioned there as slaves.

A statement from the country’s Foreign Ministry said Rwanda was “horrified” that “African men, women and children who were on the road to exile have been held and turned into slaves.”

“Given Rwanda’s political philosophy and our own history, we cannot remain silent when human beings are being mistreated and auctioned off like cattle,” the statement said.

The evocation of Rwanda’s history apparently referred to bloodletti­ng in 1994 when more than 800,000 people perished in an ethnically driven genocide.

“We may not be able to welcome everyone, but our door is wide open,” the Foreign Ministry said.

The statement did not say how many people might be taken in by Rwanda, a small, landlocked country of 12 million in east- central Africa that ranks as one of the continent’s most densely populated.

But Moussa Faki Mahamat, the newly appointed head of the African Union, the continent’s biggest representa­tive body, said on Twitter that Rwanda had offered to resettle as many as 30,000 migrants.

Mahamat said he was “deeply appreciati­ve” of the offer.

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