The UN migration agency has launched a radio series in Nigeria to sensitise vulnerable people seeking to pursue economic opportunities abroad on the perils of irregular migration.
The International Organisation of Migration (IOM) said no fewer than 37,550 Nigerians arrived on Italian shores in 2016 while many more went missing or died.
The UN agency warned that migration done outside the regulated frameworks was dangerous and provided information on pathways to migrate legally and safely.
IOM said every year, thousands of people from Nigeria and other Sub-Saharan African countries leave their families and homes in the hopes of finding work opportunities elsewhere.
Titled: ‘Abroad Mata’, the awareness-raising 13-episode radio series will include a radio drama titled “Waka Well” – which means “travel well” in Pidgin English.
The series also features testimonies from returning migrants, expert analysis, and live phone-in questions from listeners, IOM said.
“Many do it outside of the protected and safe international legal frameworks, which puts them at risk of trafficking, exploitation, detention without trial, sexual abuse, and other dangers such as dying at sea or in the desert.
“Nigeria is the most common nationality of migrants crossing the Mediterranean Sea into Italy. Some 37,550 Nigerians arrived on Italian shores in 2016. Many more went missing or died.
“The idea is to create awareness through the candid testimonies of returnees who have gone through the harrowing journey both at sea and through the Sahara.
“The programme will also promote social cohesion and deal with the issue of stigmatization of returned migrants,” said Abraham Tamrat, who manages IOM’s migrant protection and reintegration projects in Nigeria.
Tamrat explained that many returning migrants faced discrimination and shame for having failed to reach their destinations and goals of a better future.
Through commentary from IOM staff and government officials, the UN agency said the show would cover key migration issues in Nigeria including the social factors behind migration.
Other issues the show would cover are the role of traditional and religious leaders and the role of migration information centres set up by IOM.
“The best way to take migration to the public is through radio due to its wide coverage and following,” said Charles Anaelo, an official of the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants & Internally Displaced Persons.
The programme would air in Edo, Delta, Oyo, Ogun, Imo and Lagos states in Pidgin English and in Yoruba, one of Nigeria’s most spoken languages.
Edo and Delta alone account for two-thirds of the returns of irregular migrants enabled by a joint initiative by the European Union and IOM.
“We need to raise these issues of irregular migration and human trafficking on the radio… And we need strong narratives to drive the message,” said Arinze Orakwue, an official from the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons.
The radio series is a joint effort between IOM, NCFRMI, NAPTIP, and several local radio stations.
IOM said it is one of the UN’s many initiatives to engage communities through mass media and other communications methods to promote social and behavioural change.
Other initiatives by the UN to support migrants and prevent related suffering include assistance for migrants to reintegrate their communities, vocational trainings and the provision of information on how to migrate safely, it said.
NAN