NIAMEY: Algeria has deported nearly 400 African migrants trying to reach Europe, sending them back over the Sahara desert into neighboring Niger, the UN migration agency (IOM) and Niger said on Sunday.
The IOM and European Union are intensifying efforts to return African migrants home, after thousands have died making the dangerous crossing to Europe across the Mediterranean in overcrowded boats. Many get stuck before ever reaching Africa’s northern coast, either in Libya, where they suffer slavery and abuse at the hands of militias, or Algeria.
IOM operations officer Livia Manente told Reuters in an email that the group of 391 migrants from 16 west and central African countries had arrived in the Nigerien town of Assamaka on Friday on about 20-30 vehicles, after being stopped while heading to work in various Algerian cities.
“They claim their phones were confiscated and that conditions were poor — not much food and water, crowded rooms),” she said. “They were transported in trucks after the locality of In Guezzam and then obliged to walk across the border ... including families with pregnant women and children.”
Aboubacar Ajouel, the mayor of Agadez, the last destination for the migrants, confirmed that they had arrived.
Algeria declined to confirm this particular deportation, but said that 20,000 migrants had been prevented from reaching Europe by Algerian authorities since January, thanks to security measures put in place at its borders with Mali and Niger.
“We have no choice but to prevent them,” Hassen Kacimi, director of Algeria’s interior ministry in charge of migration, told Reuters by telephone.
Algeria deports nearly 400 migrants back to Niger
Algeria deports nearly 400 migrants back to Niger
- The IOM and EU are intensifying efforts to return African migrants home
- 391 migrants from 16 west and central African countries had arrived in Assamaka
Syrian authorities arrest more Daesh members in Damascus Governorate
- Multiple explosive devices, various weapons seized in Jadidat Al-Shaybani, village in Barada Valley
LONDON: Syrian authorities have arrested members of a Daesh cell in the Damascus Governorate as they intensify efforts to protect national security.
The Syrian Arab Republic’s Ministry of Interior announced on Tuesday that two members of a cell had been arrested — along with the seizure of multiple explosive devices and various weapons — in Jadidat Al-Shaybani, a village located in the Barada Valley.
The news follows Monday’s capture of two members of Daesh, who are accused of being behind the deadly bombing of a mosque in an Alawite area of Homs in December.
The Ministry of Interior announced the arrest of “Ahmed Attallah Al-Diab and Anas Al-Zarrad, who belong to the Daesh terrorist organization and are responsible for the bombing that targeted the Imam Ali bin Abi Talib Mosque in the Wadi Al-Dahab neighborhood (of Homs).”









