Tag: Libya

  • Reps urge FG to investigate allegations of modern day slavery in Libya

    Reps urge FG to investigate allegations of modern day slavery in Libya

    The House of Representatives on Wednesday urged the Federal Government to liaise with the Government of Libya to find a solution to the menace of migration and modern day slavery in Libya.

    The Green Chamber also mandated its Committees on Human Rights, and Foreign Affairs to interface with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and relevant stakeholders to identify the factors that encourage the migrants to embark on the perilous journey.

    The resolutions of the House was sequel to the adoption of the prayers of a motion titled: “Need to Investigate the Inhuman and Barbaric Act of Slave Trade Involving the Auctioning of Black Africans in Libya,” sponsored by a member, Hon. Saheed Akinade-Fijabi.

    The joint committee is also to proffer solutions that would discourage same and then provide for how the Nigerian youths caught in the web would return to the country.

    Fijabi, while moving the motion said that African migrants from nations including Nigeria, Guinea, Senegal, Mali, Niger and Gambia make the dangerous crossing through the Sahara Desert to Libya with hopes of making it over the Mediterranean Sea to Italy and other European countries in search of greener pastures.

    He further stated: “On November 14, 2017, the US Television Network, CNN broke the news of auctioning of human beings in Libya with a live footage of the auctioning process in which young men were being sold to North African buyers as potential farm hands and one of the unidentified young men sold off for as little as $400 (₦144,000) is said to be a Nigerian in his twenties.

    “The footage of the auctioning of black Africans in the conflict-torn nation sparked outrage across the world with thousands of people taking to the streets of Paris , France to protest against the modern day slavery, and in reaction, the African Union, on November 17, 2017 called on the Libyan Authorities to investigate the matter.”

    The motion was subsequently put to a vote by the Deputy Speaker of the House, Hon. Lasun Yussuff who presided. It was passed without dissent by members and referred to Committees on Human Rights, and Foreign Affairs for further legislative action.

    The joint committee is to report back to the House in four (4) weeks for further legislative action.

  • Buhari orders immediate repatriation of Nigerians in Libya

    Buhari orders immediate repatriation of Nigerians in Libya

    President Muhammadu Buhari  has ordered the immediate  repatriation of  Nigerians stranded in Libya and other parts of the world for rehabilitation.

    This declaration was made in Abidjan, according to a statement issued on Wednesday by Malam Garba Shehu, President’s Senior Special Assistant on Media and Publicity

    According to him, the president made this known in an interactive session with members of the Nigerian Community in Cote D’ Ivoire.

    The President vowed to reduce the number of Nigerians heading for Europe illegally through the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea by providing basic social amenities such as education, healthcare, and food security at home, Garba said in the statement.

    According to him, the president said that all necessary steps would be taken to stem the tide of illegal migration by Nigerians.

    He, however, noted that it is very difficult to know the origin of the people who died, while attempting the perilous journey across the Mediterranean, because of lack of documentation.

    “When it was announced that 26 Nigerians died recently in the Mediterranean, before they proved that they were all Nigerians they buried them.

    “The evidence I have from the Senior Special Assistant on Diaspora and Foreign Affairs, (Mrs Abike Dabiri-Erewa) is that only three of them were identified as Nigerians.

    “But I’ll not be surprised if the majority of them were Nigerians.

    “For people to cross the Sahara desert and Mediterranean through shanty boats… we will try and keep them at home.

    “Anybody who died in the desert and Mediterranean without documents; to prove that he is a Nigerian, there is absolutely nothing we can do.’’

    On the recent footage on the sale of Africans in Libya, he quotes the president as saying, that, “ it was appalling that some Nigerians (in the footage) were being sold like goats for few dollars in Libya.’’

    He said: “after 43 years of Gadhafi, why are they recruiting so many people from the Sahel including Nigerians? All they learned was how to shoot and kill.

    They didn’t learn to be electricians, plumbers or any other trade.’’

    On domestic issues, President Buhari told Nigerians in the Diaspora that “there is good news from home in the area of security, economy and anti-corruption.

    “We are not doing too badly in trying to secure the country, improve the economy and deal with corruption.

    “We are doing our best at all levels including security. It is absolute madness for people to blow others up in markets, churches, and mosques.’’

    According to him, no religion advocates violence, saying that “Justice is the basic thing all religions demand and you can’t go wrong if you do it.’’

    On food security, the President said that his vision of repositioning Nigeria as a food-secure nation was on course as the “country is on the verge of attaining food security.’’

    Read also: 580 more Nigerians to return from Libya this week

    He attributed the development to positive agricultural reform programmes and bumper harvest occasioned by good weather.

    According to the President, interventions through the Anchors Borrows Programme of the CBN and the Presidential Fertilizer Initiative, among others, had been very successful in the agricultural reform initiative.

    “People have gone back to the farm. We got the CBN, agriculture minister and money was provided at very low interest to farmers and the farmers responded and it was very positive.

    “We are lucky that we are in a position to feed ourselves. So we are going to have food security in Nigeria earlier than anybody ever thought,’’ he noted.

    The President advised Nigerians in Cote D’ Ivoire to be good ambassadors in their host country, warning that the Embassy would not hesitate to repatriate those who tarnish the image of the country abroad.

    NAN

  • Obaseki condemns modern-day slavery in Libya

    Obaseki condemns modern-day slavery in Libya

    The Governor of Edo State, Mr Godwin Obaseki, has decried the reported sale of persons into modern-day slavery in Libya, describing the incident as a “desecration of the sanctity of humanity.”

    In a statement, the governor, who condemned the act as an “evil that must be stopped at all cost,” said that indigenes of Edo State, who may have been caught up in the web of human traffickers, should come back home, as his government has set up systems to reintegrate into society.

    The governor was reacting to a recent report by America-based news channel, Cable News Network (CNN), in which victims of human trafficking, who were stuck in Libya, were being auctioned as salves for as low as $400.

    According to the governor, “I received the news of the incident with shock because it reduces the value of the human to the basest levels. In fact, this takes us back to the age of slave trade, which, I believe, doesn’t have a place in modern society.

    “That this is happening shows that many have lost their way. This applies to those who are involved in this trade and those who created the environment for such a dastardly act to thrive.”

    He reiterated the state government’s support initiative for returnees, promising to integrate them back into society through skills training and provision of stipends to ease their resettlement.

    Noting that the state is attracting investment that will make contemplating to embark on such treacherous journeys a thing of the past, he said, “We are building structures to make this state a hub for industrial activity. We have the best of arable land in the country. In time past, there was not enough incentive to invest in this state, but we are removing all the encumbrances.

    “We are also soliciting for international efforts to provide an even more robust package for the returnees and also create an environment that will discourage people from migrating illegally to Europe. We are convinced that there are opportunities back home and we want to make sure the people back here tap from them and do not have reasons to leave.”

  • 31 bodies recovered after migrant boat sinks off Libya

    31 bodies recovered after migrant boat sinks off Libya

    At least 31 migrants died after their boat sank off Libya ‘s western coast yesterday and some 200 others were picked up by the coastguard to be brought back to port in Tripoli, officials said.

    The migrants were on two boats off the coast near Garabulli, east of Tripoli, one of which had already sunk when the coastguard arrived at the scene, said Abu Ajala Amer Abdelbari, a coast guard commander.

    “The boat had sunk and they were spread out in the sea, they were trying to swim towards the coast,” he said.

    “There were about 60 people who we were able to save because they were clinging to the (remains of the) boat.”

    Another 140 migrants were picked up from the second boat, he said.

    The dead, including a number of children, were brought back to Tripoli naval base where they were unloaded in white plastic body bags.

     

     

  • ‘I slept with five men daily for four years in Tripoli’

    ‘I slept with five men daily for four years in Tripoli’

     

    Maryanne Uwadiae, 25, is a troubled woman. Six months ago, she got deported from Libya, where she spent four years moving from one prison to another. Within the period, she was held captive by Nigerian and Libyan traffickers, who forced her into prostitution and use of hard drugs.

    At 17, she was impregnated by Mike Onogedion, her boyfriend, a school dropout,  just about a year to the completion of her high school education in Esan, Edo State.

    Broken and disoriented, Maryanne abandoned her academic pursuit. She dropped out of school to face the pressure of a difficult pregnancy. By the time she had her baby at 18, Onogedion had travelled to Libya en route Italy unannounced, thus leaving her to the child’s upkeep.

    With no financial support from her boyfriend’s family, Maryanne struggled to cater for herself and the child with the little pocket money she got from her mother. Since it could not sustain her and the baby, she became desperate e for any kind of lifeline.

    Her desperation led her to consider travelling out of the country in search of greener pasture. Kelly, an acquaintance who regularly visited her neighbourhood, promised to help her achieve her oversea dreams if only she paid him N400,000 to facilitate the trip.

    “This was in 2013. I was 19 years old then. I was staying in my parents’ house in Ishan when Kelly came to our house and asked me if I was interested in travelling to Italy to work. I showed interest in the discussion because I was already planning to do that, at least to change my living condition. I had a baby I could not feed properly. I considered the offer without hesitation,” she explained.

    Weeks after she accepted Kelly’s offer, Maryanne couldn’t get money to pay for the trip. Hence she pleaded with Kelly to help her get the visa to Italy on credit. She promised to refund the money after she secures employment in Italy.

    Kelly reluctantly accepted the arrangement. He requested that Maryanne should get a travel passport. He pledged he would get Maryanne to Italy and also promised to get her a decent job.

    Weeks after she gave her passport to Kelly, he called Maryanne and informed her about her travel itinerary.

    It was too late for her to prepare for the trip thus she told her mother to look after her baby and left Nigeria in company of boys she had never met.

     

    The tortuous journey to Libya

    Maryanne left her base in Esan, Edo State through Kano State, where she joined another group of Libya-bound migrants with Kelly. At this juncture, she experienced her first trepidation in respect of the trip: when she got her passport back from Kelly, Maryanne was surprised to see that there was no visa on it. But it was not a time to ask questions hence she sat back to brave the ride as a rickety bus conveyed them to Niger Republic.

    She said: “I left my then two-year-old baby with my mother. I bade her farewell, hoping to speak to her when I get to Italy. When we got to Niger Republic, we spent two nights there before we proceeded to the next stop. We travelled a far distance through the desert to Zinder and to Agadez, from where we got to Tripoli.

    “We spent about seven days in Agadez. During this period, I did not eat anything. I felt sick and looked skinny by the time we arrived in Libya. In the course of the journey, Kelly was disturbing me for sex. He assaulted me several times, telling me he wanted to sleep with me in the desert. I rebuffed him on each occasion that he requested for sex. He told me that I was stubborn and told me I would regret my action by the time we get to Libya.”

    Unknown to Maryanne, Kelly had already sold her to traffickers before she left Nigeria. When she arrived in Tripoli, she was forced into prostitution to pay back the money paid to Kelly. By then, Kelly had left Libya and crossed the Mediterranean Sea to Italy.

    “It did not occur to me that Kelly had already sold me to human traffickers right from Nigeria. When we got to Libya, Kelly handed me over to some people and disappeared. I later discovered those people were traffickers. They took me to a large building with several rooms. It looked like a hostel. There, I saw many girls of different ages; some of them were underage, about 14 to 15 years old,” she said.

    According to Maryanne, men entered at interval and picked girls of their choice. “They would take them into the rooms. I was looking at them in surprise and I still did not know what I was there to do. Then, a lady approached me and said, ‘Hey, why are you standing like a novice? Can’t you hustle?’ I asked what kind of hustle it was and  she replied that those young girls being taken inside the rooms were my seniors and they were working hard to pay the boss.

    “She told me the boss had paid Kelly to bring me to Libya and that I needed to hustle to pay back the money. She also told me that I needed to hustle to get LYD 9,400 (N2.4 million) before I could be allowed to go. Then I knew I had been sold into prostitution. Some of the girls I met in the building had been held in that place for years without being allowed to go, even when some of them had already completed their bonds.

    “The only way we could be freed at that moment was if any man comes and says he likes any of us. The man would ask our boss how much we needed to pay before we could be freed. Then, they would pay and we would go with them. In reality, that was not freedom. The men who paid bond for girls also turned them to sex objects in their private houses,” she said.

     

    The road to prison

    Maryanne explained that her desperation to travel abroad in search of greener pasture was not to engage in prostitution but to work as a house help or factory hand, since she has no academic qualification.

    But she had been sold to prostitution and she needed money to pay for her freedom from the traffickers’ den. For weeks, Maryanne said she refused to ‘hustle.’

    She called her mother back home and explained her ordeal in Libya. But there was nothing her mother could do to salvage the situation. To negotiate her freedom, Maryanne’s mother was conditioned to pay N2.4 million into a Nigerian bank account. Since she could not get the money, she told her daughter to agree with the terms of freedom given to her by her boss.

    “When I told them I could not participate in prostitution, they asked me to pay LYD 9,400 which was the money paid to Kelly for selling me to them. I told the traffickers to look for Kelly and get back their money. They told me he had already used the money to pay for his trip to cross to Italy.

    “They said the only option I had to live in Libya was to hustle, so that I could pay back the money. When I declined, they locked me up in a room and beat me seriously. They threatened to kill me and dump my body in a latrine. I called my mother back home and explained what I was facing.

    “Since there was no means my mother and I could pay back the money, I succumbed to their wish. I started hustling and I was getting money daily to pay back the boss. I was sleeping with, at least, four men a day. Sometimes, if there were many clients, I could sleep with more than five men. We were given drugs and other substances to boost our sexual activities. This is what I was doing to for almost a year after I arrived in Tripoli.

    “When I almost completed the bond payment, my mother went to borrow N200,000 and sent to the boss, so that she could allow me to go. When this was done, they told me I still had a balance of LYD500 (N128,000) left.”

    When Kelly got to know about Maryanne’s ordeal, he called the traffickers from his base in Italy and requested to speak to her.

    “Kelly apologised for selling me into prostitution. He told me he needed the money at that time to cross to Italy through the Mediterranean Sea. He told me he would send LYD1,000 (N257,000) from Italy to the boss for my freedom. The woman deducted the balance I owed and gave me LYD500, telling me I was free to go. This was after about 11 months after I had been paying for the bond,” she said.

     

    Freedom to nowhere

    Released from the traffickers’ den, Maryanne dreamed of starting a new life. She contemplated moving to other parts of Libya to look for job as a house help in order to earn decent living. But the lure of crossing the Mediterranean to Italy set in once again.

    She said: “I went straight to the sea side, with the intention to cross to Italy by the ocean.” But unknown to her, she had been set up for arrest by the traffickers. As she attempted to join a group of migrants to the shore of the Mediterranean Sea, she was picked up by Libyan immigration officers.

    She said: “I was locked up in a prison, where I spent four months. I lost communication with my mother and child back home. They thought I had died in Libya since I could not be reached anymore.”

    Relief came for her when an Arab lady came to the prison to arrange for the bail of six Nigerian girls in the immigration’s detention facility.

    “I was one of the six girls she bailed out of detention. When she got us out of prison, the Arab woman promised to help us get factory work. She requested that we follow her to her private residence in Tripoli. When we got to her house, she locked us up in a car garage and said each of us must pay her LYD4,000 (N1,028,300). We were shocked,” Maryanne said.

    She added: “She called some Arab boys to beat us with all manners of materials. I got across to Kelly in Italy and told him my experience. Kelly spoke to the Arab woman and said he would pay the money on my behalf.”

    About a month late, Kelly did not send the money as promised. But, a Ghanaian national paid the Arab woman LYD 6,000 (N1.5 million) to free two girls, excluding Maryanne. The Arab woman, Maryanne said, held on to them and locked them up in a garage without bed.

     

    Freedom at last

    Maryanne and the three remaining captives eventually escaped from the garage at midnight, when they discovered the iron-gate was loosely shut.

    Maryanne said: “One of us got up at midnight and saw that the gate was not properly shut. She woke us up and said we needed to escape. As we ran out from the compound, the Arab woman woke up. She alerted some local militia members. They ran after us with vehicles and guns. We ran into an empty shop where we hid till the next day. We escaped from the area at dawn.”

    Maryanne said she had no choice order than to engage in prostitution to get money.

    “We were stranded and homeless. We needed to buy phones and clothes. I did not have any money with me. One of the girls with whom I escaped took us to Connection House (a parlance for brothel) owned by her Ghanaian boyfriend. We engaged in prostitution at the Connection House to raise money for our trip to Italy through the Mediterranean Sea,” she said.

    While working as commercial sex workers at the Connection House, Maryanne and her newfound friends made money without having to pay her boss. The only ‘tax’ they paid was given to the owner of the brothel, where they resided.

    However, when they thought their tribulations had ended, Maryanne and her fellow adventurers came under regular police and armed robbery attacks in the brothel. They were dispossessed and robbed of the money and other valuables during a night raid by the police.

    She said: “The police raid was fatal. After they collected our phones and money, they went to male section of the brothel and killed some of the boys, claiming that they were dealing in cocaine and hard drugs. They took all the money found in the rooms. They arrested the rest of us and took us to Abu Salim Prison. They asked us to bring LYD2,000 (N514,000) each to regain our freedom. I was there for months before a Nigerian man came and bailed four of us.”

     

    Back in captivity

    Two months later, Maryanne and five other girls were bailed out of the Abu Salim Prison in Tripoli by a Nigerian man simply identified as Alhaji, at the rate of LYD2,000 each, the latter promised to help them secure decent jobs and rebuild their lives. He took them to Abu Salim Rubbish, a slum close to the prison.

    “When we got to his house, Alhaji said we would need to pay him double of the money he paid for our bail. He told us not to bother about the work he promised. He said he purposely bailed us out of the prison to help us serve clients who usually look for Nigerian girls to sleep with.

    “He gave us rooms where men would sleep with us for a fee. We had no option but to agree to Alhaji’s terms. The clients would pay Alhaji directly and come in to have sex with us. We did not make enough money because Alhaji told the clients not to show any appreciation after having sex with us. But some of them would still give us money.

    “When I finished the repayment, I left Alhaji’s house and moved to another area called Garage. The slum is populated mostly by black Africans. I went there to start hustling, so that I could get money to pay my way to Italy.”

     

    Perilous cruise to Italy

    When she found out it would cost her LYD700 to travel to Italy by boat, Maryanne doubled her ‘hustle’. Having gone through hell in Tripoli, she was determined to risk anything in order to reach her dreamland and start a new life.

    She joined a herd of Mediterranean Sea-bound migrants to Italy. She said migrants were laid on the floor of the buses taking them through the Libyan border of Zuhara, from where they would join boats on a four-hour journey to the Italian shoreline through the high sea.

    It was not a free ride to the sea. The buses were stopped for inspections by the border police thus the migrants were expected to contribute money to bribe the policemen at the border for easy access to the sea.

    Each migrant paid LYD300 (N77,000) to the Libyan drivers who drove them to the Mediterranean Sea. The drivers gave kickbacks to the border police to allow them free passage.

    “When we got to the shoreline, all of us who were migrating to Italy came down and we were handed over to Gambian boat owners, who ferried us across the Mediterranean Sea to the Italian shoreline. We paid LYD700 each for the boat ride.

    If the boat owners were Libyans, the fare could be less because the Libyan border police were not allowed to collect from their citizens.

    “When we got close to the shoreline, we were asked to jump into the ocean with poorly inflated lifejackets and tubes. They said we should hide our mobile phones, because the Italian rescue team would turn back the boats to Libya if they discovered our phones. We were told to send distress signal to the Italian rescue team when we got to the shoreline.”

    Luck however, ran out on Maryanne when the boat she was in, was arrested by the Italian water patrol police. The boat was led back to Libya and the migrants fled to avoid being arrested by the Libyan police.

    Maryanne disclosed that desperate nursing mothers and pregnant women embarked on the dangerous journey regularly because Italian authorities considered pregnancy and infants as part of the conditions to fast-track issuance of legal permits to the refugees in Italy.

    Maryanne said it was common occurrence for migrant-laden boats to be attacked midstream by pirates. “They took the engines and watched the vessels capsize with migrants onboard.

    After her failed trip to Italy, Maryanne returned to Garage to continue hustling. But at that time, Libyans had started killing black Africans.

    “Many people were killed. It was God who saved me from being killed during the riot. It was there that I was arrested and taken to the deportation camp. I was deported back to Nigeria in May.”

     

    An odyssey of regrets

    The last time she set her eye on her daughter was in 2013 when she left Nigeria through Niger Republic. Her daughter is now six, but she barely recognised Maryanne. Yet she couldn’t go home after she was deported from Libya due to the shame of returning empty-handed.

    She said: “I had thought I would come back and take my baby when I eventually get to Italy and things become rosy for me. I regret ever embarking on the journey. Kelly told my mother he was taking me to Libya from where we would cross to Italy. This is why my mother allowed me to go with him.”

     

    ‘More pain, no gain’

    Maryanne, who is now working as a sales girl in a local restaurant in Lagos, still has the ambition to travel out of the country for greener pasture. But she wouldn’t reenact her Libyan experience.

    “I don’t want to go through what I experienced in Libya again in my life. I will tell you the truth about my plan. I still have ambition to travel out of this country. I don’t think I can make it in Nigeria because of the hardship I have been facing since I was a teenager. I don’t think I can stay in Nigeria. I will travel to Europe if I see the opportunity.”

     

     

     

     

  • Human trafficking: 40 arrested, 500 others rescued in West Africa

    Human trafficking: 40 arrested, 500 others rescued in West Africa

    Forty people were arrested and 500 people rescued after a swoop on human trafficking across West Africa, international police organisation Interpol said on Thursday.

    The Interpol-led action comes amid a global outcry sparked by footage of Africans being sold as slaves in Libya, often the final transit for migrants wanting to reach Europe.

    In a statement, Interpol said that some 500 people, including 236 minors, had been rescued in simultaneous operations across Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal.

    Read Also: 16 Edo girls returned from Libya with pregnancy

    Forty suspected traffickers were arrested.

    “The results of this operation underline the challenge faced by law enforcement and all stakeholders in addressing human trafficking in the Sahel region,” said the operation’s coordinator, Innocentia Apovo.

    The 40 arrested face prosecution for offences including human trafficking, forced labour and child exploitation.

    “They are accused of forcing victims to engage in activities ranging from begging to prostitution, with little or no regard for working conditions or human life,” Apovo said.

  • 124 illegal migrants repatriated from Libya – Official

    124 illegal migrants repatriated from Libya – Official

    Tripoli Illegal Immigration Department says a total of 124 illegal immigrants from Ivory Coast were voluntarily deported on Thursday from the Libya n capital Tripoli.

    “The child Mamani returned to her home in Ivory Coast today, accompanied by 123 other illegal immigrants from Ivory Coast,” Hosni Abu-Ayana, head of the media office of told Xinhua.

    “The migrants returned within the humanitarian voluntary program by the International Organization for Migration in cooperation with the Libyan authorities,” Abu-Ayana added.

    The International Organisation for Migration and the Libyan authorities launched a humanitarian repatriation program to repatriate migrants detained in Libyan shelters in their countries of origin.

    Libya is a major departure point for illegal migrants wanting to cross the Mediterranean towards European shores, due to the insecurity and chaos in the North African nation.

    Read Also: Libya deportee goes into labour in Edo

  • Libya deportee goes into labour in Edo

    Libya deportee goes into labour in Edo

    One of the 16 girls that were on Tuesday deported from Libya with pregnancy has gone into labour.

    The expectant mother simply identified as Nike was rushed to the Benin Central hospital and was yet to deliver as at press time.

    It would be recalled that 169 persons mostly females were received by officials of the Edo State Task Force on Human Trafficking and were lodged at a hotel for possible rehabilitation.

    Governor Godwin Obaseki had earlier promised to train the deportees on any skill of their choice.

    Edo State Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice,who is also the chairman of the task force, Prof. Yinka Omorogbe, stated that the purpose of rehabilitating the deportees was to eradicate trafficking in persons and stem the illegal migration.

    “If you want to travel, do it legally. We are worried about what the people go through when they decided to travel to Libya illegally,” she said.

    “Government is taking the problem as its own. We are interested in those who will partner with the state government to address the issue.

    “As we have seen, 80 percent of illegal migrants are from Edo State so it has been a big challenge to us.

    “We are trying to assist them and be integrated into the society. Those who want to go back to school would be encouraged to go back while those who need training in skill acquisition would be trained in their chosen skills.”

  • CHAN 2018: Eagles to face Libya, Rwanda, Equatorial Guinea  

    CHAN 2018: Eagles to face Libya, Rwanda, Equatorial Guinea  

    Nigeria’s Super Eagles will face 2014 champions Libya, as well as Rwanda and Equatorial Guinea, in the group stage of the 5th African Nations Championship (CHAN) in Morocco.

    The competition is holding from Jan. 13 to Feb. 4, with the Eagles playing their Group C matches in Tangier.

    Libya had shocked all by winning in South Africa at the expense of Ghana, in spite of the North African nation being embroiled in political turmoil at the time.

    Nigeria had finished third at the 2014 competition, and will need to be wary of them this time around, after late Friday’s Draw Ceremony in Rabat has now paired them.

    Rwanda were the last team to qualify for the 2018 finals, edging Ethiopia 3-2 on aggregate in a play-off after Egypt decided to forfeit its slot at the championship.

    Equatorial Guinea qualified for the finals following Gabon’s withdrawal of Gabon.

    Hosts Morocco, Guinea, Sudan and Mauritania have been drawn in Group A.

    The Atlas Lions will be facing Mauritania in the competition’s opening match at the Mohamed V Stadium in Casablanca on Jan. 13.

    Hosts of the inaugural edition of the competition in 2009, Cote d’Ivoire, head Group B which will be based in Marrakech, and have Zambia, Uganda and Namibia as group mates.

    Group D, based in Agadir, has 2011 runners-up Angola, Cameroon, Congo and Burkina Faso.

    Group A (Casablanca)

    Morocco

    Guinea

    Sudan

    Mauritania

    Group B (Marrakech)

    Cote d’Ivoire

    Zambia

    Uganda

    Namibia

    Group C (Tangier)

    Libya

    Nigeria

    Rwanda

    Equatorial Guinea

    Group D (Agadir)

    Angola

    Cameroon

    Congo

    Burkina Faso

    NAN

  • 16 Libya deportees pregnant

    16 Libya deportees pregnant

    Sixteen of the 169 Libya deportees received by the Edo State government are pregnant.

    Many of the girls refused to speak with reporters and some had little children with them.

    Last week, the Edo State government took delivery of 84 indigenes deported from Libya.

    Governor Godwin Obaseki offered to train them in vocational skills, and pay them monthly stipends.

    Some of the girls lamented their unjust treatment in Libya, saying some were walking in the streets when they were arrested and deported.

    Attorney General and Commissioner for Justice Prof. Yinka Omorogbe said this batch of deportees were women and children, with only one male adult.

    She said the government was highlighting the evil of trafficking to the deportees.

    “The idea is that Edo wants to eradicate trafficking in persons and stem the illegal migration. If you want to travel, do it legally. We are worried about what the people go through when they decided to travel to Libya illegally.

    “The government is taking the problem as its own; we are interested in those who will partner the government to address the issue. As we have seen, 80 per cent of these illegal migrants are from Edo State, so it has been a big challenge to us.

    “We are trying to assist them to be re-integrated into the society. Those who want to go back to school would be encouraged to do so while those who desire skill will be trained.

    One of the returnees, Joseph Faith, described her experience as horrible, saying she would have remained in Nigeria if she was employed.

    She wants to go back to school to study English.