(NAN) 

A Federal delegation, led by Foreign Affairs Minister Geoffrey Onyeama on Wednesday departed Abuja for Tripoli, the Libyan Capital, to see to the evacuation of Nigerians trapped in that country.

The Head, Press and Public Relations of the National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP), Mr. Josiah Emerole, made this known in a statement in Abuja.

“Others members [of the delegation],” the statement read “are the Director-General, NAPTIP, Julie Okah-Donli, and Mrs. Abike Dabiri-Erewa, the Senior Special Assistant to the President of Diaspora Matters.”

The spokesman said that the delegation departed the Presidential wing of the Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport, Abuja, on Wednesday at 9:20 a.m aboard a Nigeria Air Force Flight N5FGS.

A fact-finding mission on the level of the enslavement of Nigerians in that country would be part of their engagements in Libya, he said.

The delegation would also engage Libyan Authorities, Nigerian officials and Nigeria citizens living there, as well as International organisations working on migration issues in Libya.

Following reports of the enslavement of Nigerian migrants in Libya, President Muhammadu Buhari ordered the evacuation of all Nigerians trapped in the country back home.

The President also set up a team led by the Foreign Affairs Minister to work out modalities for carrying out a mass evacuation.

Since then, high level meetings have been held among various Federal Agencies, with Vice President Yemi Osinbajo presiding.

Emerole quoted the NAPTIP’s Director-General as saying that, “the Agency is ready to assist victims of human trafficking who will be returning to Nigeria to get properly reintegrated back into the Nigerian Society.

“Our Counsellors are fully ready to receive the returnees and give them the needed psycho-social assistance for proper reintegration into the society.

“We will also help them with all the necessary tools to sustain themselves including vocational training and education assistance.

“This will be done with assistance from Government, Corporate bodies and the international organisations.

“This is not the time for anybody to stand aloof and watch the Federal Government to do it alone; all hands must be on deck now.  Doing nothing will affect all of us,” she said.