
Mourning Eritrean mother's anger at Kenyan migrant smugglers over Lake Turkana drowning
Mourning mother's anger at Kenyan migrant smugglers
As the sun set over Lake Turkana, a mother sobbed and threw flowers into the greenish-blue water to remember her teenage daughter who had drowned trying to reach Kenya via a new route being used by people smugglers.
Senait Mebrehtu, a Pentecostal Christian Eritrean who had sought asylum in Kenya three years ago, made the pilgrimage to north-western Kenya to see for herself where 14-year-old Hiyab had lost her life last year.
The girl had been travelling with her sister, who survived the late-night crossing over the vast lake, where winds can be powerful.
"If the smugglers told me there was such a big and dangerous lake in Kenya, I wouldn't have let my daughters come this far," Ms Senait told the BBC as she sat on the western shoreline.
Ms Senait had arrived by plane in Kenya's capital, Nairobi, on a tourist visa with her two younger children, fleeing religious persecution. But she was not to allowed to travel with her two other daughters at the time as they were older and nearer the age of conscription.
Eritrea is a highly militarised, one-party country - and often national service can go on for years and can include forced labour.
The teenagers begged to join her in Kenya, so she consulted relatives who told her they would pay smugglers to get the girls out of Eritrea.
The fate of the two girls was put into the hands of traffickers who took them on a weeks-long trip by road and foot from Eritrea into neighbouring northern Ethiopia - then to the south into Kenya to the north-eastern shores of Lake Turkana, the world's largest permanent desert lake.
A female smuggler in Kenya confirmed to the BBC that Lake Turkana was increasingly being used as an illegal crossing for the migrants.
"We call it the digital route because it is very new," she said.
The trafficker, who earns around $1,500 (£1,130) for each migrant she traffics into or through Kenya (four times the average monthly salary of a Kenyan worker), spoke to us about her work at a secret location and on condition of anonymity.
For the last 15 years she has been part of a huge smuggling network that operates across Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and South Africa - mainly moving those fleeing from Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia.
With Kenya having stepped up patrols on its roads, smugglers are now turning to Lake Turkana to get migrants into the country.
"Agents" on the new route, she said, received the migrants in the Kenyan fishing village of Lomekwi where road transport was organised to take them to Nairobi - a journey of about 15 hours.
Warning of the dangers of travelling on the rickety wooden boats, she appealed to parents not to allow their children to make the crossing alone.
"I won't say I love the money I make - because as a mother I can't be happy when I see bad things happening to other women's children," she told the BBC.
"I'd like to advise migrants if they'll listen to me. I'd like to beg them to stay in their countries," she said, further cautioning of the callous attitudes of many traffickers.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
16 hours ago
- BBC News
Frik Potgieter and Peter Huxham return to South Africa from jail in Equatorial Guinea
Two South African engineers have returned home after spending more than two years in jail in Equatorial Guinea on what the UN has called "arbitrary and illegal" drugs Potgieter and Peter Huxham, both in their mid-50s, were arrested in February 2023 after drugs were allegedly found in their were sentenced to 12 years in prison and fined $5m (£4m) but have been given a presidential pardon after a long campaign by their families and the South African arrest came days after luxury assets belonging to Equatorial Guinea's Vice-President Teodoro Nguema Obiang were seized in South Africa. A yacht and two Cape Town villas belonging to Obiang, who is also the son of Equatorial Guinea's president, were impounded in execution of a court ruling."We are overwhelmed with relief and joy. The last two years and four months have been unimaginably painful for both of our families," according to a statement released by the two men's were working for the Dutch oil and gas company SBM in Equatorial Guinea when they arrested the night before they were due to return home after a five-week stint in the families had called for the assistance of the South African government as well as that of the UK government, as Mr Huxham has dual nationality."South Africa expresses its sincere gratitude to the Government of Equatorial Guinea for considering and ultimately granting this Presidential pardon, allowing Mr Huxham and Mr Potgieter to return home to their loved ones," said a post on X by South African Foreign Minister Ronald United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention last year called for the pair's release, saying their detention was families say the pair were arrested in retaliation for the seizure of the assets belonging to Equatorial Guinea's BBC has contacted Equatorial Guinea for comment.A South African official told the BBC it was for the courts to decide the fate of the yacht and villas, and the government couldn't intervene. You may also be interested in: Equatorial Guinea VP's superyacht and homes seized in South AfricaThe president's son who loves Bugattis and Michael JacksonWorld's longest-serving president to continue 43-year-rule Go to for more news from the African us on Twitter @BBCAfrica, on Facebook at BBC Africa or on Instagram at bbcafrica


BBC News
17 hours ago
- BBC News
Viral video catch wia pipo dey beat Rivers LGA Sole administrator, police take action
Rivers state police don condemn di attack on di sole administrator of Ahoada-East Local goment area, Goodluck Iheanachor and invite im chief of staff to come answer kwesion on di matter. Police claim say Hector Ekakita, wey be di chief security officer and di Chief of staff to di sole administrator allegedly storm di council secretariat wit 30 jaguda pipo, wey attack oga Iheanacho. Di attack happun on Friday 20 June for di council secretariat according to police. During di attack, di jaguda pipo beat di Sole Administrator, tiff im mobile phones, force am to sign im letter of resignation, den go away vital documents, including official and personal documents from im office, police tok. Dis incident dey happun few months afta im appointment by Vice Admiral Ibot-Ete Ibas di Sole Administrator of Rivers State. Police say Iheanacho dey hospital wia im dey currently collect medical treatment sake of di injuries wey e get during di violent attack. Im dey stable condition. Meanwhile di commissioner of Police, Olugbenga Adepoju, visit di scene of attack wit heads of oda sister security agency for di state and vow to take action. Viral video For di viral video, Honourable Iheanacho wear grey native sitdom for ground surrounded by di Jagudu pipo. Di jaguda pipo flog di sole administrator of Ahoada and shout on am to sign di document wey dem give am. Rivers state emergency rule Na March 18, 2025, President Bola Tinubu declare state of emergency for Rivers state and suspend di governor, im deputy and all lawmakers for di state parliament for six months. For one nationwide broadcast on Tuesday evening Tinubu say im receive "disturbing security reports wia im detail incidents of vandalization of pipelines by some militants without di govnor taking any action to curtail them". Im add say im no allow di "grave situation" to kotinu. But lawyers and opposition politicians dey kwesion di legality of di president decision. Tinubu bin make di announcement afta one of di kontri highest producing crude oil pipelines, di Trans-Niger Pipeline, bin suffer significant damage sake of blast. In di past criminal gang or militant don carry out attack on pipelines wey, halt production and exports. At current prices, the oil flowing through the affected pipeline fetches around $14m (£11m) a day, according to the online publication Africa Report. But against the backdrop of the blast, there has been a political rift in Rivers state that has reached boiling point. Govnor Siminalayi Fubara na member of di People Democratic Party wey dey face serious wahala. PDP na di main opposition party to di president's All Progressives Congress. Tinubu say politicians no bin fit work togeda effectively sake of di wahala. Im allege say Fubara allies bin threaten "fire and brimstone" against di govnor enemies and dem no "disown" dis comments. Rivers state lawmakers bin threaten to impeach di govnor and im deputy. Tinubu say dis political crisis don leave Rivers state im "standstill" im add say dis im move dey based on di need to restore peace and order for di state. Fubara react to di state of emergency, im say na "political disagreements, but good governance dey kotinu". "Rivers state dey safe, secure and peaceful under our watch," im tok. Di state of emergency allow di goment to run di state in di interim and dem go send security forces if needed.


Telegraph
18 hours ago
- Telegraph
Sex predator can stay because home country can't treat his mental illness
A dangerous sexual predator has been allowed to stay in the UK after claiming his home country could not treat his mental illness. An immigration tribunal backed the Bangladeshi man's claims that he should be allowed to stay in the UK despite his convictions for a violent sexual assault on a stranger when he was 17. The Metropolitan Police also provided evidence that he had carried out further sexual offences in the decade since the assault even though he had not been convicted of them. He was also convicted for conspiring to supply 'significant' quantities of heroin as part of a county lines gang. 'High risk of harm to the public' The Home Office argued that he was a sexual predator who was likely to reoffend if he remained free and presented a 'high risk of harm to the public.' A lower tier immigration tribunal, however, accepted expert evidence that he had undergone rehabilitation and could be safely managed in the community. It also agreed that he would face persecution in breach of article 3 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) if returned to Bangladesh, which did not have the facilities to treat his mental illness, and had a reputation for treating those suffering such ill health as outcasts. It ruled the man should be given asylum. However, its decision was overruled by an upper tribunal which concluded it was mistaken in its assessment that the Bangladeshi was not still a sexual predator who posed a threat to the public. It ordered that there should be a re-hearing of the case by a new lower tier tribunal. The case, disclosed in court papers, is the latest example uncovered by The Telegraph where illegal migrants or convicted foreign criminals have been able to remain in the UK or halt their deportations. Ministers are proposing to raise the threshold to make it harder for judges to grant the right to remain based on Article 8 of the ECHR, which protects the right to a family life, and Article 3, which which protects against torture and inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, has pledged to change the law so that any foreign national convicted of a sex offence will be barred from refugee status in the UK. The tribunals were told that the Bangladeshi had attacked the woman after he offered to walk her to a bus stop, claiming that she was drunk and needed his help. As they walked through a park, he pulled her to the ground, ripped off her bra and started to assault her. He was 17 at the time and handed an 18 month detention and training order at a secure training unit for sexual assault. The judge said the Bangladeshi man had been 'insincere' in his expressions of remorse and failed to recognise his guilt. 'Highly vulnerable' However, the lower tribunal set store on an expert witness who backed his rehabilitation and that he was at low risk of any further sexual offending. This was despite evidence that the expert had been previously heavily criticised over a similar risk assessment. The upper tribunal concluded that he 'posed a high risk of reoffending and a high risk of harm to the public having regard to the particular nature of the offence for which he has been convicted.' It said the victim, who was highly vulnerable, had suffered serious psychological harm which had led to her attempting to commit suicide. The upper tribunal ruled: 'The decision of the First-tier Tribunal involved material errors of law. We set aside the decision and do not preserve any findings of fact. The matter is remitted to the First-tier Tribunal to be reheard before a judge other than the judges who decided the [Bangladeshi's] appeal proceedings.'