Less than 600 West African migrants remain in Antigua
Antigua and Barbuda’s chief immigration officer confirmed today that at least 450 West Africans, brought to the country last year on charted flights, stay on the twin island nation.
Chief Immigration Officer Katrina Yearwood provided the updated figure to journalists today at a media conference.
The government said 637 of the more than 900 people who touched down between November and January remained in Antigua.
Many of them are Cameroonians fleeing conflict.
Yearwood said she could not confirm whether the migrants that left when the figure was revealed did so through “normal channels”, but she noted that approximately 200 of the total group that came as tourists left legally.
The migrants from the charted flights have been popping up across the Caribbean in countries such as Suriname, Dominica and Barbados.
Yearwood said a team from the Immigration Department is monitoring the movement of the West Africans that remain in Antigua and Barbuda, and they have an idea of the communities that they are staying in. But she noted the “situation remains fluid”.
Yearwood revealed that the Immigration Department would meet with representatives from the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) tomorrow.
The government invited the IOM and UNHCR to meet with the West Africans to determine their needs and also inquire how many people would like to return home on a particular charter flight.
Information Minister Melford Nicholas noted the government had offered to transport the migrants home. However, Yearwood said no one has taken up the offer.
The information minister said the government remains committed to helping the West Africans while they are in Antigua and Barbuda.
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