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Dozens of abandoned migrants rescued in Sahara

by Reuters
Tuesday, 8 September 2020 13:16 GMT

An IOM community mobilizer from Dirkou, Niger, helps some of the 83 abandoned migrants to board vehicles taking them to safety according to IOM, in this picture released on September 8, 2020. IOM/UN Migration/Handout via REUTERS

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Smugglers abandoned trucks carrying over 80 migrants from Nigeria, Togo, Mali and Ghana with no food or water in the Sahara desert

GENEVA, Sept 8 (Reuters) - More than 80 African migrants have been rescued from the Sahara desert after they were robbed and left to die by people they had paid to smuggle them to Libya, the U.N. migration agency said on Tuesday, citing survivors.

Drivers abandoned four trucks carrying the migrants from Nigeria, Togo, Mali and Ghana with no food or water about 230 km (143 miles) north of the Sahara crossroad town of Niger's Dirkou after spotting military vehicles.

Three days later, an IOM rescue team found the group, which included children, by chance on Sept. 3. Many were dehydrated, injured and in need of immediate medical assistance.

Spokesman Paul Dillon told Reuters it was not unusual for smugglers, who tend to take payment upfront from people desperate to reach Europe, to abandon their passengers if they fear they will be intercepted.

"Sometimes smugglers return without their passengers. It's not a rare event," he said. "They know the consequences of leaving people stranded in the desert. It's very troubling this disregard for human life."

Since 2016, IOM has helped rescue over 20,000 migrants from the Sahara desert - one of the most perilous parts of the journey for West Africans risking their lives to seek jobs in Europe.

The rescue teams have helped 321 people so far this year, excluding the latest group.

But sometimes they just find remains.

"Past SAR operations have recovered bodies buried in the sand," Dillon said, referring to joint operations with Niger authorities. "It's a vast space and there are many, many routes north and we don't have resources for patrols," he added.

(Reporting by Emma Farge; additional reporting by Alessandra Prentice; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

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