Abuja – President Muhammadu Buhari has enjoined illegal migrants to stay back home, and find ways to improve their personal economies rather than dare the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea, with scores of lives lost in the process.

The president stated this when he received Louise Mushikiwabo, Rwandan Minister of Foreign Affairs, who came as Special Envoy of President Paul Kagame, at the State House, Abuja, on Tuesday.

He said Nigeria had taken it upon herself to bring back thousands of her citizens now stranded in Libya.

“Illegal migration is now a major issue in Africa.

“Many dare the Sahara Desert and the Mediterranean Sea to get into Europe, and many die in the process or they get into trouble, as we now see in Libya.

“I don’t envy our position, as many Blacks claim to be Nigerians, even when they are not. Our Embassies in North Africa are now overworked, trying to identify the true Nigerians.

According to the President, most of the reasons they mention for migrating illegally are untenable.

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He, therefore, advised that, “they should stay here, and see how they can improve their own economies, instead of risking their lives.’’

The President said Kagame, as the incoming Chairman of African Union (AU), had the issues of South Sudan, separatist agitation in southern Cameroon, unrest in Togo, and many others on the continent, to contend with.

“Gaddafi’s long rule produced many people, whose only skill is how to shoot guns.

“Now, they are scattered around the continent, still with their weapons, and fomenting trouble,’’ he maintained.

President Buhari added that Nigeria was taking steps to curtail the development.

Mushikiwabo said President Kagame looked forward to “the counsel and support of the Nigerian President, as he assumes the AU chair for the month of January.’’

According to Mushikiwabo, President Kagame will also need counsel on security issues in the Sahel, ongoing reforms in AU, borrow Buhari’s expertise in agriculture, and renew friendship and kinship between Nigeria and Rwanda.