Home WebMail | Calgary | 16.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Action News
  • World
    • Asia
    • Europe
    • Africa
    • Americas
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Contact
  • Breaking News
  • Latest Updates
  • Featured
  • Live
  • Live Now
  • Ceasefire declared between Syrian forces, Kurdish fighters after one killed
  • Italy-Israel World Cup tie faces security concerns amid protests
  • German mayor-elect gravely wounded in stabbing attack
  • Italy to propose global ceasefire for 2026 Winter Olympics
  • Displaced Palestinians hope to return home amid ceasefire talks
  • Tunisia pardons man sentenced to death over Facebook posts
  • Israel is fractured, isolated after two years of its war on Gaza: Analysts
  • What is Insurrection Act, could it help Trump deploy troops to US cities?
  • Fifth French PM quits in three years: Can Macron survive, and what’s next?
  • Pope Leo plans symbolic debut foreign trips to Turkiye and Lebanon
  • Malaysia football federation to fight FIFA sanctions for cheating claims
  • Myanmar activists to sue Norway’s Telenor for handing data to military
  • Is Donald Trump trying to dial back tensions with Brazil?
  • Gaza girl removes ‘stray bullet’ after being injured by an Israeli drone
  • What caused Nepal’s devastating flood damage and how was it contained?
  • Outgoing French PM launches last-gasp bid to quell political crisis
  • Japanese football official sentenced for viewing child pornography images
  • Video: Search for bodies called off after Indonesia school collapse
  • Farah and Myriam: Childhood Under Siege in Gaza
  • The second year of genocide was different
  • French lawmaker “beaten” by Israeli police
  • Al Jazeera reporter reflects on two years of war in Gaza
  • Fighting reported in Syria’s Aleppo between army and SDF
  • Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to trio for quantum mechanics discoveries
  • The young children killed by Israeli fire this year in occupied West Bank

From Gambia to Italy: a refugee’s perilous journey

By Al Jazeera Published 2017-03-22 07:07 Updated 2017-03-22 07:52 Source: Al Jazeera

When Malick Jeng, 19, left Banjul, his hometown and capital of Gambia, on March 14, 2016, he never imagined the risks he would face on his way to Europe.

Malick crossed the desert in Mali inside an oil tank where he almost suffocated. He was later held in a Libyan prison, where he witnessed the murder of some of his fellow travellers and only gained his freedom thanks to a payment sent by his family.

On the night of August 1, after a month in Libya, he was transferred by smugglers to a beach near Tripoli, where he clambered into a rubber boat with 120 people on board to cross the Mediterranean. Hours later, the rescue vessel Iuventa, from the NGO Jugend Rettet, rescued them 20 nautical miles off the Libyan coast.

Malick was first transferred to Catania, Sicily, and later to Biella, a city in the north of Italy, where he has lived ever since, in a temporary reception centre called Hotel Colibri – an old hotel that had been closed for 10 years. The hotel was turned into a reception centre for migrants in August 2016. The cooperative that manages it, which has other centres in the area, receives 35 euros ($37.7) per migrant per day from the Italian state. Malick and other migrants receive their basic necessities, including three meals per day and a bed, as well as monthly pocket money of 75 euros ($80.8).

Malick is awaiting a response to his asylum application to find out if he can begin a life in Europe legally, as a refugee, or whether he will be forced to keep fighting for his future.