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”My baby cried for days without food” – Nigerian Deportees Tell Horrific Stories of Hard Life in Libya Prison

”My baby cried for days without food” – Nigerian Deportees Tell Horrific Stories of Hard Life in Libya Prison

Some Nigerians who were deported from Libya have shared the horrific experiences they had in Libyan prison.

Beauty John, one of the 158 Nigerians deported from Libya last Thursday, has described her five-month experience in the Libyan prison as the most horrible time of her life.

In a chat with Vanguard, 22-year-old Beauty, who hails from Edo State, narrated how she embarked on the trip to Italy through the desert in search of greener pastures, only to discover that she was pregnant while in the prison. She was thrown in prison for not having the necessary documents to be in the country.

Describing her being alive as a miracle, she disclosed that she gave birth inside the prison, but could not breast-feed her baby for some days due to malnutrition and lack of proper medical care.

”One of my aunts, who stays in Italy, visited Benin and told some of us to come over, promising to help us secure jobs. Five of us made up our minds to go, but at the end, I was the only one who could raise money for the trip. On July 11, 2016, some other male friends and I left Benin for Sokoto State, through the desert.

We got to Libya a week after and stayed somewhere in preparation for the trip to Italy by sea. “Unfortunately, we were caught by some security agents. After profiling us, we were taken to a cell in the desert, where I spent five months. .

While in the cell, I discovered I was pregnant for my boyfriend, who lives in Benin. My experience in the desert cell could best be described as hell. Sometimes, we were given a slice of bread as breakfast and watery spaghetti for diner. No lunch.

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Some inmates I met in the cell died as a result of malnutrition and lack of proper medical care, while others lost their sight. “I also fell sick. That I gave birth and we are both alive today is a miracle. .

After giving birth, my baby cried for days without food, as my breasts were not bringing out milk. I was advised to put it in his mouth like that. I cried and regretted embarking on the journey. I thought my baby and I will die of starvation.
Finally, help came my way when the Nigerian Ambassador to Libya visited the cell and asked if we would like to go back home. I am grateful to God that I am alive to share my story.”

Another deportee, who simply gave his name as Michael, claimed to have lost his sight inside the underground cell he was kept with other illegal migrants for 11 months.
Michael, the only child of a widow, stated that he decided to embark on the trip so he can take his family out of poverty.
”I am an only child of a widow. I lost my father at the age of 10 and my mother has been going through a lot to keep us going. I had to defer my admission to study Accounting at the Auchi Polytechnic because my mother could not afford the fees.
It was at that point that I decided to go to Europe for a better living condition and also assist my mother. But that turned out to be my greatest undoing because as I speak with you, I cannot see clearly due to the underground cell I was kept for 11 months, in the desert, without proper feeding. I am glad to be back home where there is freedom.”
Photo credit: Vanguard
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