LAGOS, NIGERIA —
[caption id="attachment_42158" align="alignleft" width="1000"] Nigeria returnees from Libya disembark from Libya disembark from a plane upon arrival at the Murtala Muhammed International Airport Lagos Nigeria Tuesday, Dec. 5, 2017. The African Union has agreed to evacuate more than 15,000 African migrants from Libya by the end of the year in a scaled-up evacuation process along with member states who have expressed outrage since video footage aired weeks ago of migrants being auctioned off as slaves. (AP Photo/Sunday Alamba)[/caption]
Some knelt and placed their foreheads to the ground in prayer. Several carried small children. After being stranded in Libya on a failed attempt to reach Europe, more than 400 Nigerian migrants were brought home and began sharing stories of abuse and fear.
“If they lock you up in a room, you hardly eat, that's number one,” Ejike Ernest, one of the returnees, told The Associated Press on arrival late Tuesday in Lagos. “You'll urinate there, you'll defecate there and every morning, let me say three times a day, you will be severely beaten” until you can pay the money to be freed.
Nigeria's government, its president appalled by recent CNN footage of a slave auction in Libya where migrant Africans were “sold like goats,” has committed to bringing its citizens home, along with a number of other African nations.
After disembarking from a plane chartered by Nigeria, the European Union and the International Organization for Migration, some of the newest arrivals looked exhausted, some clutching sleepy children. Some were astonished by the way they had been treated.
“It's heartbreaking, especially when I see a 13-year-old come with a baby,” said Abike Dabiri-Erewa, senior special assistant to Nigeria's president on diaspora and foreign affairs. “One 14-year-old girl said to us she doesn't know how many men have slept with her, she can't count ... You look at them and wonder whether their lives can ever be the same again.”
The African Union and member states will repatriate more than 15,000 migrants stranded in Libya by the end of the year amid outrage over the slave auction footage, the AU's deputy chairman said Tuesday.
Between 400,000 and 700,000 African migrants are in dozens of camps across the chaotic North African country, often under inhumane conditions, AU Commission chairman Moussa Faki Mahamat told a summit of European and African leaders last week.