Among them are 105 Egyptians and 20 Sudanese.. Libya deports 226 migrants to their countries

On Thursday, the Libyan Anti-Illegal Immigration Service organized land convoys to the eastern and southern borders of the country to return more than 200 immigrants to their countries of origin, in an unusual coordination between the competing authorities in eastern and western Libya.

The head of the office in charge of deportations, Badr al-Din bin Hamed, told AFP that the apparatus affiliated with the Ministry of Interior in the Tripoli government "organized today land convoys to return 105 Egyptians, 101 Chadians and 20 Sudanese to the border."

The number of people "subject to inadmissibility" is increasing, and "prison centers are overcrowded, which creates a lot of difficulties," said the Public Relations Officer in the Judicial Police at the Ministry of Justice, Brigadier General Ahmed Abu Karaa.

In the presence of representatives of their embassies, the deportees, all dressed in black and white or black and gray tracksuits according to their nationality, were rounded up, then the police distributed bottles of water, some food and milk to them and escorted them to buses that took them towards the border.

Upon their arrival in Ajdabiya (east), the Egyptians will be returned to the Salloum border crossing while the Chadians and Sudanese will take the road to Kufra (south) and then Owainat on the border with Sudan.

The United Nations agencies were interested in returning refugees and migrants to their countries, but since an agreement was recently signed between the leaderships of western, southern and eastern Libya, the apparatus responsible for these referrals of the Ministry of Interior has become working in a unified manner.

More than 20,000 migrants were returned to Libya from the beginning of this year until last month, while the fate of 714 remained missing, and more than 400 migrants drowned, according to the International Organization for Migration.

Most of the migrants across Libya's vast desert border are from Sudan, Chad, Niger and Egypt.

The United Nations says that the detention of migrants is carried out in an "arbitrary" manner, and they are often subjected to "killings, enforced disappearances and torture" or "slavery, sexual violence, rape and other inhuman acts."

The Libyan authorities defend themselves, stressing that they do not resort to violence, and that all migrants receive the necessary services and care for them in government detention centers.

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