Women were lying dead, men…” Migrants expelled in Sahara

Janet Kamara, from Liberia, sits during an interview conducted in an International Organization for Migration transit center in Arlit, Niger on Saturday, June 2, 2018. Kamara was expelled from Algeria, and left stranded in the Sahara while pregnant. “Our baby was killed, women were lying dead, men. … Other people got missing in the desert because they didn’t know the way,” she says. “Everybody was just on their own.” (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Ju Dennis, from Liberia, stands during an interview about his plight through the Sahara after being expelled from Algeria, in an International Organization for Migration transit camp in the northern Nigerien desert city of Arlit on Friday, June 1, 2018. Dennis documented his deportation with a cell phone he kept hidden on his body. “You’re facing deportation in Algeria _ there is no mercy,” he said. “I want to expose them now… We are here, and we saw what they did. And we got proof.” (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

Ju Dennis, from Liberia, holds his phone with which he filmed his plight through the Sahara after being expelled from Algeria, in an International Organization for Migration transit camp in the northern Nigerien desert city of Arlit on Friday, June 1, 2018. Dennis filmed his deportation with a cell phone he kept hidden on his body. “You’re facing deportation in Algeria _ there is no mercy,” he said. “I want to expose them now… We are here, and we saw what they did. And we got proof.” (AP Photo/Jerome Delay)

In this Wednesday, May 9, 2018 photo provided by Liberian Ju Dennis, fellow migrants being expelled from Algeria lie in a truck headed towards the Niger border at Point Zero, from which they must walk south into the Sahara Desert towards the Nigerien border post of Assamaka, 10 miles south. In the open truck, migrants vainly tried to shade their bodies from the sun and hide from the soldiers outside. (AP Photo/Ju Dennis)

In this Tuesday, May 8, 2018 photo provided by Liberian Ju Dennis, fellow migrants being expelled from Algeria disembark from buses in the Algerian desert before being put in trucks and transported to the Niger border. Algeria has abandoned more than 13,000 people in the desert in the past 14 months, including pregnant women and children, stranding them without food or water and forcing them to walk, sometimes at gunpoint, under temperatures of up to 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit). (AP Photo/Ju Dennis)

Associated Press

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