Mass migrations of Africans To Europe
IT is a
great and tragic irony of history that about 200 years after Africans were
being trafficked across the Sahara Desert and the Atlantic Ocean to the Europe
and the Americas as slaves, Africans are willingly heading to Europe, in worse
conditions than when they went as slaves.
Today, the
impoverished conditions at home resulting from poor governance, causes Africans
to abandon their countries in desperate search for assumed better life in
Europe and the Middle East.
Africans
submit themselves to human traffickers, paying to be taken to Europe in cash
and most times with their lives as many
die in the Sahara Desert. Those who survive the ordeal could perish in
the treacherous waters of the Mediterranean aboard overloaded, rickety boats.
They die in their thousands – Nigerians inclusive.
President
Muhammadu Buhari put it correctly when
at the African Union( AU) summit in South Africa he noted, “It is not
only an embarrassment to us as leaders, but dehumanises our persons. Indeed,
they combine to paint a very unfavourable picture of our peoples and
countries.”
Human
trafficking and mass migration of Africans outside the continent have joined
terrorism and internal instability across the continent as part of the pathetic
conditions that diminish the stature of Africans in today’s world. It is very
important for the AU to pay attention to the root causes of the migration. Bad
governance, sit-tight leadership, inter-ethnic and religious rivalries, human
rights abuses and corruption are at the centre of the enervating poverty in
Africa.
The solution
to the problem does not lie in Africans bolting from their countries to alien climes
in hopes of non-existent “better” living conditions. While efforts must be made
to stem the tide of these migrations, greater efforts should be invested in
ensuring the quality of leadership improves across Africa. No substitute exists
for governance that improves conditions of citizens within their countries, so
that such countries can improve general global conditions.
Africans
should work out unique blueprints that would make it possible to improve the
quality of agriculture and infrastructure, especially power supply, to broaden
the base of economies and give people useful means of livelihood within their
countries. These are possible with collaborations across countries and regions.
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