A batch
of 218 Nigerians, which included seven pregnant women, on Tuesday
voluntarily returned from the volatile North African country of Libya
where they had been stranded en-route Europe.
The
returnees arrived at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Lagos
about 3.44 a.m. aboard a chartered Libyan Airlines Airbus A330-200
aircraft with registration number 5A-LAU.
The News
Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that they comprised of 46 adult females,
five female infants, 161 adult males, two male children and four male
infants.
The
returnees were brought with the assistance of the International
Organisation for Migration (IOM) and the European Union (EU).
The South
West Zonal Coordinator of the National Emergency Management Agency
(NEMA), Alhaji Yakubu Suleiman, said a total of 8,129 Nigerians had
returned so far under the EU and IOM Assisted Voluntary Returnees
Programme.
Suleiman
advised the returnees to be champions of change in sensitising the
youths against the urge of seeking greener pastures through irregular
migration due to unforeseen dangers.
He
assured them that the Federal Government was pursuing socio-economic
programmes aimed at giving employable opportunities to the youths.
According
to him, the government has intensified efforts at curbing the menace of
corruption that has bedevilled the country and denied Nigerians the
opportunities to put up their best toward its development.
Speaking
to newsmen, one of the returnees, Ms Titilayo Kayode-Owojori, from Ile
Ife, Osun, regretted embarking on the ill-fated journey but thanked God
for returning home safely.
She said: “Nigeria is far better than where we thought we could get better lives. The Libyans live with the sweat of the blacks.
“If the
Arabs see us working and collecting wages, they wait and burst our
houses to collect the money. If they don’t see any money, they will
kidnap us and ask us to call Nigeria to send us money to free ourselves.
If we can’t raise money, we will be sold or imprisoned.”
The
returnee, therefore, urged the government to fulfill its promise of
creating an enabling environment for Nigerians to thrive in order to
reduce the urge to seek greener pastures outside the country. (NAN)

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