Niger junta reneges on EU migration deal, reopening Mediterranean floodgate
Post By Diaspoint | December 3, 2023
The junta in Niger has repealed anti-migration legislation designed to limit the mass influx of West African arrivals to Europe.
Four months after the successful coup d’état, the move by the pro-Russian leadership in the country looks likely to give people-smugglers carte blanche.
General Abdourahmane Tchiani, the president of the new military junta, the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland, issued a directive abolishing the relevant Law 36 a few days ago, according to the German news outlet Die Welt.
“This law has been repealed!” Niger Government spokesman Ibrahima Hamidou stated on Facebook.
“Good news for all those who had to go to jail after the law passed in 2015 because the transportation of migrants was criminalised.”
Niger had passed Law 36 in that year, making it illegal to move migrants through the country.
At the time, record numbers of Africans had reached Europe via the Mediterranean Sea, causing a political and humanitarian crisis in Europe and, in turn, leading to a raft of measures to curb the influx.
In exchange for creating the law, the then pro-western government in the Niger capital Niamey received €5 billion via the European Union Trust Fund for Africa, with the goal of addressing the core causes of mass migration.
Traffickers who were apprehended faced up to 30 years imprisonment and, thereafter, the number of migrants dwindled from 300,000 annually to fewer than 50,000 a year.
The ban on illegal migration also had economic repercussions in the region, affecting those communities that had benefited, notably the indigenous Tuareg.
According to Reuters: “The change drained the lifeblood from towns and villages that had fed and housed migrants and sold car parts and fuel to traffickers.”
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