Friday, 28 August 2020
28th of August 2020, 90 km from Dirkou: Tragic accident in the desert - 4 people killed and 2 wounded

On 28th ofAugust 2020, Laouel Taher, alert person of Alarme Phone Sahara (APS), was informed of an accident 90km west of Dirkou in northern Niger by a satellite phone call. According to current reports, four people have died and two have been injured.

As Alarme Phone Sahara did not have the means to carry out a rescue mission, the alert person Laouel Taher informed the office of Doctors without Borders (MSF) in Dirkou to go to the scene of the accident and provide the necessary assistance. Eventually, the two injured people were evacuated to Dirkou by a military ambulance.

Alarme Phone Sahara deplores the tragic death of the four people in the desert, whose names are not yet known to APS, and wishes a quick recovery to the two injured people.

For Alarme Phone Sahara, this case shows the need to set up effective rescue structures to secure people in distress in the desert, to provide reachable emergency numbers and to provide people crossing the desert with satellite phones.

Furthermore, Alarme Phone Sahara reminds that it is precisely the migration control measures put in place at the request of European states that have increased the risk of death of travellers on trans-Saharan routes: If travel routes are monitored by patrols and checkpoints, drivers with migrant passengers will choose even more remote and dangerous routes. In addition, nobody would be forced to risk their life on the desert roads if there were free movement without passport and visa differences for African people within Africa and between Africa and Europe.

APS (Alarme Phone Sahara) also notes an ambivalent role of the Nigerien military concerning the safety of desert travellers: On the one hand, it is the military that acts under orders to intercept cars and convoys with migrants and refugees passing northwards. On the other hand, in the absence of independent civilian structures equipped for rescue operations, it is often unavoidable to call on the military in case of emergency in the Niger desert. To resolve this dilemma, the programme of repressive migration control must be abandoned in favour of a programme of human security and freedom of movement for all people moving between the Sahel and Sahara countries.

 

May those who died in the desert rest in peace!

May the wounded recover!

For human security and freedom of movement for all people on the move in the Sahel-Saharan region!