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I am Justice, A Journey Out of Africa - Paul Kenyon
By AMP
Jun 18, 2009 - 11:19:02 PM
This book describes the journey of Justice Amin from the
village of Effiakuma in Ghana, West Africa to Italy, via the Sahara desert. At
the end of his journey he leaves from Zuwarah, in the west of Libya, in a small
boat with the intention of getting to Europe; he and his companions are finally
rescued in the middle of the Mediterranean by the Italians and taken to the
island of Lampedusa, from where he was allowed to travel to Italy. The author says that in 2008 Justice was
living in Reggia Emilia in Italy and that he wants to eventually return to
Ghana to marry.
Paul Kenyon uses the story of Justice’s journey to
illustrate the exodus of Africans north to Europe, what is known as “doing
lampa-lampa” in West Africa, seeking a promised land. Kenyon points out that up
to 70,000 migrants pass through the town of Agadez, in Niger, each year. The International
Organization for Migration says that in 2008 nearly 32,000 people crossed from
North Africa to the Italian island of Lampedusa. The numbers of young Africans seeking to
migrate to Europe are immense, and many drown in the Mediterranean and Atlantic,
or die of thirst in the wastes of the Sahara where their bodies lie like
cordwood in the sands.
Apart from those leaving the Libyan port of Zuwarah in small
boats, others gather in Nouadhibou in northern Mauritania, in 2005, 10,000 West
African migrants waited there for boats, and in the Spanish enclaves of Ceuta
and Melilla, as well as in the city of Oujda on the Algerian border, where in
2005 an estimated 20,000 migrants from sub-Saharan African countries waited for
an opportunity to cross over to Europe.
As Kenyon makes clear Europe is seen as a place where
ordinary Africans can make good money, buy cars and have the lifestyle that
they have seen on television. Many of the young men who set out are encouraged
by their families, one of Justice’s early companions, Babs, says, “My parents,
they collected money from everyone in the village so that I could travel. … Now
they are waiting. Everyone is waiting. The money I send home will be shared by
many.” All the way the travellers were exploited
by people smugglers, and Justice was abandoned in northern Niger. Justice finally left Niger by walking into
Algeria onto the plateau of the Tassili N’ Ajjer, on the third day Justice
comes across the first body, as Kenyon says, “The copse was the first of many.
Others they found resting in caves, or lying face down on sandy plains. Some
were partially covered by sand, just their jackets or turbans flapping in the
wind.” After seven days they reach the Libyan border, but shortly after
entering Libya they were captured by the police and imprisoned and taken to
Qatrun prison hundreds of miles inside the Libyan desert. He eventually escaped and reaches Tripoli
where he worked butchering goats.
Finally having saved hundreds of dollars he decided to buy a place in a
boat heading for Europe and on the 22nd May 2007 he left Tripoli for
Zuwarah. Justice paid some young Libyans
$500 for his passage and was told that he would be taken out to a large ship in
a small boat, which had no seats, no life-jackets and no provisions. The Libyans told the Africans, “Take everything
from your pockets so we can see. If you take metal onboard it will affect
equipment …. coins, rings, crucifixes, all were collected in a bag”, the Arab
took the bag. Twenty seven Africans were squeezed onboard. Once they were
underway the Libyan who had been steering jumped into the sea, leaving the
Africans alone, heading north.
After days of fear and confusion, in a boat which lacked
fuel to reach Europe, they were found ninety miles north of Libya hanging onto
a tuna net pulled by a Maltese tug. They were rescued by an Italian Patrol
Ship, the Orione, which took them to
Lampedusa.
Kenyon ends by noting that the International Organization
for Migration estimates that there are between 750,000 and a million African
migrants waiting on the African coast for their chance to reach Europe.
I recommend this book, it covers an important issue that is
rarely understood in Europe, which needs to act to counter the image of Europe
as an attractive destination for migrant Africans.
Published in London by Preface Publishing, 2009 £16.99
Paul Kenyon is a BBC journalist
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