Tripoli, Libya (CNN) — Scores of people stand packed in the cramped quarters of the Triq Al-Sika Detention Center in Tripoli,?helplessness etched across their faces.?
They’re just some of?700,000 migrants the United Nations believes are now stuck in Libya. They fled poverty and repression?in?sub-Sahara, giving up everything to undertake a desperate — and ultimately unsuccessful — voyage to?get to?Europe.?
Exploited by shameless smugglers who care little whether they live or die, many of the inhabitants of this government-run?detention?center?give?nightmare accounts of forced labor, exploitation and inhumane conditions at the hands of the men they paid to deliver them across the Mediterranean.
“I have been here three weeks now, nobody writes my name. They don’t know my name,” says 29-year-old Ali Jemma from Ghana, one of the many migrants here who feels trapped and forgotten in the Libyan capital. He had hoped to reach Italy, but six months on, all he wants is to return home.
“In this area here we have above 1,000 people, and the place is very tight for them,” says Anes Alazabi, the detention center supervisor. “A few people can’t even find a place to sleep, and we’re missing a lot of stuff for the migrants, like clothes, covers, pillows, slippers, all that stuff.”
In another room, hungry and thirsty men?sit?on the crowded floor. “We did not know the journey was going to be like this,” says Victory, a 21-year-old migrant from Nigeria?who was auctioned off by his smugglers in Libya before he was eventually freed.
In the warehouses where the smugglers held them, some migrants were beaten and didn’t see the sun for days at a time.?Others?were sold into work.? Now they are broke and awaiting deportation?to their home countries.
“I spent my life savings leaving the country,” Victory?says. “I go back and start back from square one. It’s very painful. Very painful.”
Libya has become a congested transit point along the central Mediterranean migrant route. Those rounded up by the authorities never intended to stay in the country, but are now forced to stay here until arrangements can be made to repatriate them.
Outside the center, women line?up in the rain to get on a bus bound for the airport,?where they will be sent back to Nigeria.
One woman says she’s pregnant. “Help me,” another pleads. Both are in tears as they prepare to be deported, leaving their husbands?behind in Libya.
The two women?say they?received the necessary documents from their?embassy to be sent home from Libya,?but their spouses have yet to.
Alazabi, the supervisor, tells them?that the men will follow in ten days. The women plead with him to make an exception.
But without the proper paperwork,?Alazabi says his hands are tied. He directs the women toward the bus, telling them?they will see their husbands soon.