Their names are Joy and Testimony. Both of them are two weeks old. Baby
Testimony was so named because her mother said she passed through a lot of
stress before her birth, while baby Joy, according to her mother, “is the joy of my
heart”.
Both babies are examples of children returning from Libya without their fathers.
What makes their stories sad is the fact that they may never see their fathers
again. Their mothers are among the 373 Edo State-born returnees from Libya.
Unlike the previous batches of returnees taken care of by the International
Organisation in Migration (IOM), these ones were released from an underground cell
in Libya and returned to Nigeria immediately.
They looked unkempt and hungry as they started begging for food from people the
morning they arrived Benin City.
The males among the returnees looked skinny, while some of the females are
pregnant.
Carol Wisdom, aged 23, is the mother of Testimony, while Alice Monday, also 23, is
the mother of Joy.
Both women sat separately from others, and from their looks, one could tell they
were uncertain of their futures and those of their babies. They said they carried
their pregnancies in an underground cell in Libya without any medication or
antenatal care. What worsened their situations was the torture and beating they
went through.
Carol said she trained as a hair stylist before embarking on her journey to Europe.
She said Burger, the agent who collected N100,000 from her, did not inform her
that there was no free movement in Libya. She said she could not find any job in
the country until she met her baby’s father.
She said her baby’s father was a welder in Libya before both of them were arrested
in March 2017 and led to separate cells. That was the last she saw and heard from
him.
She further said: “He is Igbo, but I have forgotten the state he comes from. I have
his brother’s contact. He does not know that I have given birth. I have not heard
or seen him since we were separated.
“The Libyans beat pregnant women. When I was in labour two weeks ago, they
took me to a hospital. It was at the hospital that I was rescued.
“When I leave here, I will call my husband’s brother. I have not called. I called him
last in March. We were not allowed to use mobile phones or call our relatives.
“The brother did not know I was pregnant. Right now, I need help. I don’t know
where to start. I am very confused about what to tell this baby about her father. I
call my child Testimony because of the stress I went through in the cell. No drug
was given to me when I was pregnant.”
For Alice, her problems are complicated by the fact that she only knows her baby’s
father as Tunde. What she knows is that he used to live in Lagos before travelling
to Libya. She has forgotten the state he hails from, and there is no way of reaching
his relatives.
Alice said she worked as food vendor in Libya while her baby’s father was a
doctor.
She said both of them were separated in May, 2017 when they were arrested and
she had not heard any news about him, whether dead or alive.
Her words: “They took us to different prisons. In the prison where I was, people
were not allowed to make calls. It was there I lost the contacts of his family
members. I don’t have his photograph to show to my baby. I don’t know the state
he comes from. I only know that he lived in Lagos before coming to Libya.
“I am thinking of what to tell my baby. Government should help me, so that I can
take good care of my baby. I named my baby Joy because she is the joy of my
heart. Inside the prison, I was not given any medicine. I was only taken to the
hospital when I fell into labour.”

Axact

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