The Columbus Dispatch

Algeria expelling thousands of migrants into desert’s clutches

- By Lori Hinnant

ASSAMAKA, Niger — Algeria has abandoned more than 13,000 people in the Sahara Desert over the past 14 months, including pregnant women and children, expelling them without food or water and forcing them to walk to another country, sometimes at gunpoint, under a blistering sun. Some never make it out alive.

The expelled migrants can be seen coming over the horizon by the hundreds, appearing at first as specks in the distance under temperatur­es of up to 118 degrees Fahrenheit.

In Niger, where the majority head, the lucky ones limp across a desolate 15-kilometer no-man’sland to the border village of Assamaka. Others wander for days before a U.N. rescue squad can find them. Untold numbers perish; nearly all of the more than two dozen survivors interviewe­d by The Associated Press told of people in their groups who simply vanished into the Sahara.

“Women were lying dead, men. … Other people got missing in the desert because they didn’t know the way,” said Janet Kamara, who was pregnant at the time. “Everybody was just on their own.”In a voice almost devoid of feeling, she recalled at least two nights Migrants expelled from Algeria rest in a truck headed toward the Niger border at Point Zero, from which they must walk into the Sahara Desert toward the Nigerien border post of Assamaka, 10 miles south.

in the open before her group was rescued, but she said she lost track of time.

“I lost my son, my child,” said Kamara, who is Liberian.

Another woman in her early 20s went into labor and lost her baby, she said.

Algeria’s mass expulsions have picked up since October 2017, as the European Union renewed pressure on North African countries to head off migrants going north to Europe via the Mediterran­ean Sea or the barrier fences with Spain.

A European Union spokespers­on said the EU is aware of what Algeria is doing, but that “sovereign countries” can expel migrants as long as they comply with internatio­nal

law. Unlike Niger, Algeria takes none of the EU money intended to help with the migration crisis, although it did receive $111.3 million in aid from Europe between 2014 and 2017.

Algeria provides no figures for its involuntar­y expulsions. But the number of people crossing on foot to Niger has been increasing since IOM started counting in May 2017, when 135 people were dropped, to as high as 2,888 in April 2018. In all, according to the IOM, a total of 11,276 men, women and children survived the march.

At least another 2,500 were forced on a similar trek into neighborin­g Mali, with an unknown number succumbing along the way.

The migrants AP talked to described being rounded up hundreds at a time, crammed into trucks for hours to what is known as Point Zero, then dropped in the desert and pointed toward Niger. They walk, sometimes at gunpoint.

“There were people who couldn’t take it. They sat down and we left them. They were suffering too much,” said 18-year-old Aliou Kande, from Senegal.

Kande said nearly a dozen people gave up, collapsing in the sand. His group of 1,000 wandered from 8 a.m. until 7 p.m., he said. He never saw the missing people again.

The migrants’ accounts are confirmed by videos collected by the AP over months, which show hundreds of people stumbling away from lines of trucks and buses, spreading wider and wider through the desert. Two migrants told AP gendarmes fired on them, and multiple videos seen by AP showed armed, uniformed men standing guard.

Liberian Ju Dennis filmed his deportatio­n with a phone he kept hidden on his body. It shows people crammed on the floor of an open truck, vainly trying to shade their bodies from the sun and hide from the gendarmes.

“You’re facing deportatio­n in Algeria — there is no mercy,” he said. “I want to expose them now ... We are here, and we saw what they did. And we got proof.”

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