Somalia
to Minnesota: One immigrant's perilous journey by land and sea
By
Ibrahim Hirsi, TC Daily Planet
January
15, 2013
Abdullahi
Elmi recently sat quietly at a Minneapolis coffee shop with a bright smile on
his face. His eyes ran over the chatty young Somalis around him.
It
was a weekday, and he expected them to be at work or in school. “What are
they doing here?â€
asked astonished Elmi, who recently arrived in Minnesota through harrowing
journeys on the deserted African borders and stormy seas.
If
they came here through my route, they wouldn’t have wasted a second,†he said with the big smile
now transformed to a loud laugh. “I would have been doing something useful with my
time right now.â€
Because
of the protracted civil war in Somalia, Elmi’s dream of attending university
faded when he graduated from a Mogadishu high school in 2006. Like many young
Somalis his age, Elmi vowed to migrate to Europe for education and a better
life.
For
the first time, Elmi left Somalia in 2008 with a group of strangers, trusting
his life with a smuggler to whom he gave $15 to get him to Djibouti, an East
African country that borders Eritrea, Ethiopia, and Somalia.
On
top of an overcrowded pick-up truck, Elmi traveled for days on the dry and
dusty land between Somalia and Djibouti with only a 5 kg container of water in
his hand.
People
were literally sitting on each other,†he said of the 25 passengers on the vehicle, which
was supposed to hold 10 people. There was no space to breathe. And the driver
was driving like he didn’t
care about their safety.
If
you’re weak, you could get thrown off from the car,†he added, “and the driver would keep
driving.â€
A
car in which a friend of Elmi rode overturned on the way a month before
Elmi’s trip, with 30 people killed, his friend told him. The rest didn’t
get an emergency response for weeks.
They
had no food or water,†Elmi
said. “They
had to drink their urine.â€
Every
year tens of thousands of people, mostly young, migrate through this route,
drawn by the promise of a life of contentment in Europe, according to a recent
study, “Boat Ride to Detention: Adult and Child Migrants in Malta,†by the Human Rights Watch.
Most
of these migrants, like Elmi, travel with little or no information about what
they will encounter during the trip as they go through the borders of Djibouti,
Eritrea and Sudan, which then connect to rickety timber boats in Libya with a
dream to reach Europe.
Often
times, however, they end up in indefinite detention in Malta, a tiny island in
the Mediterranean between Libya and Italy, even though they don’t plan Malta
as their destination — but aim for European countries, especially Italy, the
study said.
All
I wanted to do was leave Somalia,†said Elmi, who would end up in a Maltese detention
center. “I
would never have taken the trip had I known what I know now.â€
In
Djibouti, Elmi was introduced to another smuggler, who took him on the top of a
Jeep that sped fast on the irregular and dangerous deserted ground between
Djibouti and Eritrea. He was dropped about 70 miles away from the Eritrea
border.
There
is the border,†Elmi
said the smuggler told him. “He
gave me names of men [smugglers] in Eritrea.†Elmi walked across the border with no map or
navigation system. No person or home was in sight, and no food or drinks were
in his possession.
Elmi
finally arrived in Emkulu Camp Eritrea. The camp, which welcomed the first wave
of Somali refugees 12 years ago, hosts about 4,000 Somalis, according to a 2008
report by the International Organization for Migration. He stayed in Emkulu for
10 days before he transitioned to a Sudan refugee camp, Shagarab, with the help
of smugglers.
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