By Magnus Onyibe
The recent revelation by Hon. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, Chairperson of the Nigerians in Diaspora Commission (NiDCOM), that more than 7,000 Nigerians are currently stranded in Libya, inspired this intervention. Her statement revived painful memories that moved me, eight years ago in March 2017, to publish an article lamenting the surge of illegal migration by our young men and women in search of greener pastures abroad.
That desperate pursuit often ended tragically, as countless Nigerians lost their lives attempting to cross the Sahara Desert on foot via Libya into Europe or navigating the Mediterranean Sea in rickety wooden boats into the Lampedusa islands, Italy.
These
harrowing journeys evoke chilling reminders of how our forefathers were once
shipped across oceans in tightly packed vessels during the Transatlantic slave
trade, or dragged in chains across deserts in the Trans-Saharan trade. Sadly,
despite the solutions I proposed in that earlier piece, nothing has changed.
Eight years later, the Sahara and the Mediterranean remain vast graveyards for
our youth, their lives wasted in pursuit of uncertain dreams.
The
title of this essay underscores the central point—that the sheer scale at which
Nigerian lives are squandered through illegal migration, where our youth lose
not only their identities as undocumented migrants but also fall prey to human
traffickers, must be brought to the fore. Some of these traffickers even go as
far as harvesting organs from their victims. These stark realities need to be
highlighted to guide our youth away from such dangerous paths.
The
purpose of this essay, therefore is to paint a complete picture of the
consequences of being undocumented—whether stranded in foreign lands or en
route to them—so our young people can draw the right lessons. Before revisiting
a significant portion of my 2017 article titled “Human Trafficking: How
Nollywood, Traditional Rulers, and Businesses Can Come to the Rescue,” it is
important to provide an update on global efforts to curb undocumented
migration.
One striking example is the plan
once championed by former UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, who sought an
agreement with Rwanda to “offload” undocumented migrants from Britain. The
irony is glaring: a country that centuries ago forcefully uprooted Africans from
their homelands and shipped them across the globe under imperial rule, now
seeks to expel their descendants, preventing them from setting foot in the UK
and even attempting to deport them to another African country.
Of
course, every nation reserves the sovereign right to decide who it admits or
rejects. What raises deep moral concerns is the inhumane manner in which such
policies are sometimes pursued. The UK’s failed attempt to deport migrants to
Rwanda echoes history—specifically the relocation of freed slaves from Britain
to Sierra Leone in 1787, under the initiative of abolitionist Granville Sharp.
Sierra Leone eventually became a British Crown Colony in 1808 and gained
independence in 1961.
Similarly,
the United States once adopted a comparable policy. In 1822, freed Black slaves
were sent to Liberia, which declared independence in 1847. Like Sierra Leone,
it symbolized both liberation and exile—a reminder that even efforts framed as
humanitarian often carried undertones of rejection.
Now,
although the new UK Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, has scrapped the Rwanda plan,
the parallels remain.
The
historical echoes—from Sierra Leone to Liberia—show how the legacies of forced
displacement continue to shape the fate of Africans and their descendants
today.
It is also interesting and abhorrent
how Americans with Nigerian heritage are celebrated when they accomplish feats
in sports, academia, entrepreneurship, and even in politics. But if they are
involved in crime they are disowned by being described as Nigerian immigrants.
It
conforms with the popular notion- success has many fathers but failure is an
orphan. It must be stated that, such an attitude is unfair because it is
morally wrong to selectively claim Americans of Nigerian origin only when it is
convenient and serves their best interest and tag them with a Nigerian identity
when they commit an offense against the U.S.
To
be clear, the situation of tarnishing the image of Nigerians abroad in the U.S.
applies in all the other climes where Nigerians are in the diaspora. That needs
to change. The concept of citizen diplomacy is the solution that Nigerians in
the diaspora must adopt to separate the bad eggs from the good ones.
Trump’s Deportation Strategy, Global
Parallels, And Lessons For Nigeria
Just as the United Kingdom once attempted to deport undocumented migrants to
Rwanda, the Trump administration in the United States has been pursuing similar
agreements with multiple countries in South America and Africa. A striking
example is the case of Aggrego Garcia, an undocumented immigrant who, after
being deported to El Salvador and returning, was given through the courts the
unusual choice of being deported either to nearby Costa Rica or as far away as
Uganda in Africa.
This
approach mirrors the UK’s deal with Rwanda and recalls the historical
precedents of Sierra Leone and Liberia—nations founded centuries ago when freed
slaves were deported from Britain and the United States respectively.
As a public policy analyst—not an
activist—I find it necessary to draw attention to the ideas I presented eight
years ago in my earlier referenced publication. These recommendations, if
adapted, could guide Nigerian and African policymakers today, especially as the
US has adopted strategies that aim to deglamorize illegal migration.
One
example is the Florida-based “Alligator Alcatraz” detention center, a facility
for undocumented immigrants awaiting deportation. Known for its harsh
conditions and surrounded by dangerous reptiles like alligators and snakes, the
center’s very reputation is meant to serve as a deterrent to those considering
illegal entry.
The
logic is clear: by showcasing the grim realities that await undocumented
migrants, authorities hope to discourage would-be migrants before they embark
on the journey. And, according to reports, the strategy appears to be working.
Recent
studies, including one by Pew Research, indicate that illegal immigration to
the U.S. has dropped sharply. In the first half of 2025 alone, the foreign-born
population declined by 1.4 million—the first such fall in fifty years. This
drop is attributed to stricter border controls, mass deportations, and
voluntary returns. Key figures highlight the scale: the foreign-born population
shrank from 53.3 million to 51.9 million, with the unauthorised immigrant
population falling by about 1 million.
On
the surface, this decline may seem like a policy success. But it carries risks.
The immigrant share of the U.S. labor force has dropped from 20 per cent to 19
per cent, translating to over 750,000 fewer workers, many of whom traditionally
filled roles in farming and artisan labor. Economists warn that labor shortages
could weaken industries heavily dependent on immigrant workers. History itself
reinforces this point: America’s economic rise was built in no small part on
immigrant labor, going back to the forced labor of African slaves brought
through the transatlantic slave trade to work in wheat farms, etc.
Thus, while the Trump administration
hails these policies as achievements—boasting of reduced illegal crossings,
safer streets, and more jobs for Americans—many experts caution that the
economic consequences could be severe, affecting both immigrants and U.S.
citizens alike.
Fingers
are crossed on whether President Trump’s sweeping anti-illegal immigrants
approach serves the US economy better or otherwise. But generally, sweeping
actions against illegal immigrants are part of Trump’s campaign promises most
of which he has been fulfilling.
For
Nigeria, there are lessons. The U.S. has implemented one of the very ideas I
suggested years ago: deglamorising migration by exposing its harsh realities
that the streets of Europe or the U.S. are not paved with gold as depicted in
Western movies. But our leaders have yet to take seriously other
recommendations, such as leveraging Nollywood to depict the dangers of illegal
migration, or mobilising traditional rulers- who are closest to the grassroots-
to enlighten rural communities.
Thankfully, the
ongoing review of the 1999 constitution of Nigeria promises to assign our
traditional rulers a more critical role in the governance of our country.
Persuading our youth not to flee to a foreign land because of the grave danger
they may face is a job well cut out for our traditional rulers in their
impending new role.
The
Oba of Benin, for example, once led an effective campaign against human
trafficking at the height of the crisis about a decade ago in his kingdom,
which had become an epicenter of sex trafficking trade.
*Onyibe is a
commentator on public issues
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