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DAKAR, Senegal:
More than 80 African migrants have been rescued after being found in a remote stretch of the Sahara Desert where hundreds of others have died along the perilous journey in recent years, the International Organization for Migration said Tuesday.
The 41 females from Nigeria, including twin 4-year-old girls, and 42 males from Nigeria, Togo, Mali and Ghana, were in distress, dehydrated and in need of medical assistance when they were found last week, the U.N. migration agency said. It works with the General Directorate for Civil Protection to carry out these searches and rescues.
One of the men, a 25-year-old whose identity was given by the agency as Dennis, said that they had been stranded for three days without food or water.
We searched for water, but all we found were dirty wells used by livestock, he told IOM. People were collapsing left and right. I started crying when I saw the cars approaching, hoping help was coming.
The group of migrants had left Agadez, a common transit town in Nigers north, two weeks ago on separate pickup trucks to avoid detection, the agency said. They were headed for Libya, and their smugglers made a stop on Sept. 1 about 230 kilometers (143 miles) north of the Sahara crossroad of Dirkou, some of those rescued told the agency. Vehicles often break down in the desert, where many smugglers then leave their passengers.
Boubacar Djaram, Mayor of Dirkou, said that this group of 83 migrants would likely have perished, like so many others, who havent been found.
The migrants rescued last Thursday were found in an isolated place far from any form of life, he said. The Agadez region spans more than 700,000 square kilometers (270,271 square miles).
This group has been transferred to a COVID-19 confinement site where they are receiving food, water and medical care, the IOM said.
Since 2016, more than 1,870 migrants have been rescued through operations in Nigers desert, among them more than 400 this year alone, the U.N. agency said.
It is impossible to know how many migrants have died attempting to cross the Sahara. Many bodies are buried during sandstorms, never to be found again, said Barbara Rijks, IOMs Chief of Mission in Niger.
Libya is a major transit point for African and Arab migrants fleeing war and poverty to Europe.
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