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Rwanda first offered to take in Africans stuck in Libya back in November 2017, the same month a CNN report showed what appeared to be a slave market there (AFP Photo/Cyril NDEGEYA) |
Kigali (AFP) - A group of 66 African
refugees and asylum-seekers arrived in Kigali late Thursday, the UN said, the
first of what could be thousands relocated from Libya under a new programme.
Earlier this month, Rwanda signed a deal
with the African Union (AU) and the United Nations refugee agency UNHCR
agreeing to take in African refugees and asylum-seekers stranded in Libya.
The Rwandan government has said it is
prepared to accommodate as many as 30,000 evacuees, although the plan is for
the programme to unfold in batches of 500 to prevent the country of 12 million
from feeling overwhelmed.
"Just landed!" the United Nations
refugee agency wrote on its Twitter account as a first group of unaccompanied
minors, single mothers and families landed in the Rwandan capital.
The youngest passenger was a two-month old
girl born to Somali parents in Libya.
A UN official told AFP Wednesday that a
subsequent flight carrying 125 people was planned for "between 10-12
October".
They will be housed in a transit centre in
Rwanda before being resettled elsewhere unless they agree to return to their
home countries.
In the chaos that followed the fall and
killing of former dictator Moamer Kadhafi in a 2011 uprising, Libya became a
key transit point for sub-Saharan African migrants seeking to embark on
dangerous journeys to Europe.
The UN says some 42,000 refugees are
currently in Libya.
Rwandan President Paul Kagame first offered
to take in Africans stuck in Libya back in November 2017, the same month a CNN
report showed what appeared to be a slave market there.
The issue took on new urgency in July when
more than 40 people were killed in an air strike on a migrant detention centre
in the Libyan town of Tajoura.
The UN has been criticised for its handling
of a transit mechanism for evacuees from Libya established in 2017 on the other
side of the continent, in Niger.
The facilities there have struggled with
overcrowding and the slow pace of resettlement.
But UN and Rwandan officials say they have
learned from Niger's experience.
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