Rescuers
have found the bodies of 92 migrants, most of them women and children,
strewn across the Sahara desert in northern Niger after their vehicles
broke down and they died of thirst, authorities said.
Rescue
worker Almoustapha Alhacen said the bodies – 52 children, 33 women and
seven men from Niger – were found on the route from the northern mining
town of Arlit to the Algerian border.
Many were in an advanced state of decomposition and had been partly devoured by animals, probably jackals, he said.
Northern
Niger lies on a major corridor for illegal migration and
people-trafficking from sub-Saharan African into north Africa and across
the Mediterranean into Europe.
Most
of those who make the perilous journey on ancient opentopped trucks are
young African men in search of work. Rescuers said the doomed convoy of
women and children was puzzling.
“It’s
the first time I’ve seen anything like it,” Alhacen told Reuters by
telephone from Arlit. “It is hard to understand what these women and
children were doing there.”
Rescuers
found many writing slates in the luggage, suggesting the children may
have been students in a Qu’ranic school being taken to Algeria, perhaps
to beg, Alhacen said.
Alhacen
said 19 of the group had reached Algeria by foot and were repatriated
to Niger by authorities there. Two survived after walking dozens of
kilometers (miles) across the burning desert back to Arlit.
The bodies of 87 of the victims were buried on Wednesday in accordance with Islamic custom, he said.
The
migrants had set off in two trucks from Arlit towards Tamanrasset in
Algeria sometime between late September and mid-October, officials and
rescue workers said.
After one truck broke down, the second turned back to look for help but was stranded and the passengers tried to return by foot.
“The search is still going on,” the mayor of Arlit, Maouli Abdouramane, said by telephone.
Many
people flee poverty in Niger, ranked by the United Nations as the least
developed country on earth. Some work in neighbouring Libya and Algeria
to save money before returning home.
The
networks which send trucks across the desert also attract migrants from
across West Africa who dream of a more prosperous life in Europe.
More than 32,000 people have arrived in southern Europe from Africa so far this year.
A
crackdown by Spanish authorities has largely closed a route from the
West African coast to the Canary Islands which drew tens of thousands of
migrants in the mid-2000s.
Instead,
most now try to make the Mediterranean crossing from north Africa to
southern Europe, many losing their lives when their rickety boats are
wrecked.
More than 500 people are believed to have died in two shipwrecks off southern Italy this month.
Source: Nationalmirroronline
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