Stripped of the last coin by smugglers, affected families in Somaliland now reduced to beggars.

(ERGO) โ€“ย Anab Arab Jibrilย is one of a growing number of Somaliland parents suffering the financial and emotional burden of trying to free their migrant children from the hands of human traffickers in Libya.

Anab, a mother of six whose 17-year-old daughter made the risky journey to Libya last year,has been reduced to begging in the streets to try to pay off the ransom demands for her daughterโ€™s release.

Three months ago, she sent $3,000 that she had begged and borrowed. But she is still waiting day and night to hear what her daughterโ€™s fate will be.

โ€œMy daughter has been held hostage by smugglers on different occasions,โ€ Anab explained to Radio Ergo. โ€œThe first time my daughter was tortured and her hand broken. I was informed that the men wanted$8,000 ransom. I sold my piece of land and paid the amount,โ€ recounted Anab,a simple woman who earns her living selling cakes in Burao town.

Anab sold her piece of land to pay the ransomย earlier this year, but the smugglersโ€™ demands did not end there. Her daughter was released and then fell into the hands of another group, who demanded a fresh ransom.

This time, Anab had nothing to sell and no savings to meet the new demand, so she started begging in the local markets to raise funds.

โ€œMy daughterwas held hostage again. This time theydemandedย $1,000ย in ransom andย $2,000ย for boat fees. I started begging in Burao market. Luckily, I paid the money once again after I managed to raise$1,000 from begging andborrowed anotherย $2,000ย from relatives,โ€ she said.

Anab said she had last heard that her daughter and other migrants set sail in a boat heading towards Europe, but the boat was turned backed to Libya.

Now she is caught between struggling to pay off debts and agonizing over her daughterโ€™s life and safety.

Abdirahman Farah Ali is another parent whose life has been taken over by the financial and emotional pressures of trying to save a child. His son, Zakariye, 17,ย left Burao in March 2017, planning to travel onwards to Europe.

According to Abdirahman, Zakariye travelled by boat to Yemen before crossing into Sudan. After a month later Abdirahman received the first call from Zakariye from Yemen,informingthe family that he was on his way to Europe.

โ€œWe did not know where he was and were so worried buton 27 Aprilhe finally called us from Yemen. He told us that he needed$1,000 to get to Libya. We mobilized for the money and sent it to him,โ€ said Abdirahman, who works as a broker in Burao livestock market.

However, on reaching Libya,ย Zakariye fell into the hands ofย the smugglers.

โ€œFifteen days from the day we sent theย $1,000 dollars, he phoned us from Libya, telling us he had to pay$8,500 dollars in ransom.

I sold my house for$4,000. The amount was not enough so I borrowed $4,000 from other people. We sent the money,โ€Abdirahman told Radio Ergo.

That was not the end of the affair. Zakariye was sold on to another human trafficking group instead of being freedand kept in a cell.

After six months, Abdirahman learnt about this when he was contacted with another demand for $4,000 to free his son.

โ€œThis time, a relative gave us a second-hand car to sell to raise the money to pay the demand. I sold the car and sent $4000 to the smugglers.ย  After that my relative wanted meto pay him back the money for the car,โ€ said Abdirahman.

Despite being heavily indebted,Abdirahman is still supporting his son by sending him$100 dollars a month for food and necessities. He has no houseย andย is unable to pay off his debts.

Mohamed Hamud Elmo, a lecturer at Togdher University in Burao, saidย youths migrating to Europe have subjected their parents and relatives to immense suffering.

โ€œWithout thinking about the consequences, youths from poor families makethese journeys and fall victim to human traffickers, forcing parents to beg or seek loans to save their children,โ€ he said.

According to the academic, the government and the local business community ought to create jobs and opportunities for the young people to discourage them from taking risky journeys overseas.

 

Source: Radio ergo.