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Dead Bodies Found on the Sahara migration route


Thursday, 16 June 2016

Save the Children's response to reports that 34 people, 20 of them children, have been found dead in the Sahara desert.

Kirsty McNeill, Director of Policy, Advocacy and Campaigns at Save the Children said: : “Reports that 34 people, 20 of them children, have been found dead in the Sahara desert, is yet another tragic example of lives lost along the refugee and migrant route.

“The majority of children who make it to Italy report harrowing and severely abusive journeys when interviewed by Save the Children. At the mercy of people smugglers and traffickers, they continue to face grave risks on their way to reach safety. We have heard of the horrors children face; many suffer appalling torture, abuse and exploitation as they make their way through sub-Saharan Africa on to Libya.

The criminals that transport desperate families will continue to flourish as long as there are no safe and legal alternatives.

“International leaders are pulling up the drawbridge and prioritising border control over saving lives. We must not rip up the moral rule book. If they continue the current course of inaction, we will continue to see children dying of thirst in the summer heat in the desert or drowning at sea, as they try to seek a better life.”

Ismail* from Somalia, 17 years old, told Save the Children in Italy: “We all got onto a truck, we were about 30 people, seven of these were women, all Somali and in six days we arrived in the desert.

“In the desert the traffickers took the women, and raped them. One of these was a woman who was seven months pregnant. We tried to stop them but they threatened us with arms. The woman who was pregnant, when she came back to the group took a scarf and tried to strangle herself but luckily we stopped her.

“We tried to calm her, telling her that what had happened wasn’t her fault. We started driving again. The driver forced one of the women to sit next to him, without clothes, to do to him what he wanted. One of them told us ‘welcome to Hell’.”

ENDS

For more information or interviews, contact Valentina Bollenback at the Save the Children press office on 07770 940 519 or v.bollenback@savethechildren.org.uk

Notes to editor:

Save the Children is responding to the refugee crisis in the countries of origin, en route and when they arrive. Working along these migration routes, we are providing food, clothes, shelter, legal advice and psychological care to vulnerable children and families travelling long and dangerous journeys, braving rough seas along the refugee route. Many report having been beaten, tortured and sexually abused during their journey. Support our work.

Here’s a link to download some of our latest and free of charge multi-media on the refugee crisis.