The bodies of 92 people, thought to be migrants, were discovered in the Sahara desert in the north of Niger on Thursday. They died of thirst when their vehicles broke down en route to Algeria. Shafa, a 14-year-old girl, survived and told her story.
"We were on our way to Algeria to visit family members. There were more than 100 of us in a convoy of two vehicles. Our truck broke down and it took a whole day to fix. In that time we ran out of water.
"We managed to find a well but there was very little water - one of us climbed down into the well and managed to draw out a tiny amount, but the rest of us went thirsty.
"The drivers told us to wait while others went to fetch water, but a night and a day later they had not returned.
"That was when people started dying. Some 15 of us died on that second day without water.
"One of the passing cars even knocked down three of our group and killed them.
"We moved on with the dead bodies in the truck. By this time the second vehicle had returned with some water, Alhamdulillah (thanks to God).
"We came across some Algerian security forces - but the drivers turned around because they didn't want to be caught carrying us since this was illegal.
"They asked us to hide inside a trench, we spent another night there - so that is three nights in a row without any water.
"One woman started complaining and one of the drivers used a hose to beat us.
"Many women and children died. The drivers had some water in jerrycans but kept it for themselves.
'I buried them'
"From there, they took us back into
Niger. Our water ran out again. There we were, hungry and sitting amidst
corpses in the truck.
"Once we were in Niger, the drivers
removed the bodies from the truck for burial. They laid them out on the
ground - mothers first, then their children on top of them.
"Those of us who were still able to
move were told we would be taken back to our village. On the way, we ran
out of petrol and they asked us to give them money to buy more.
"They told us to get out of the car while they went to get the fuel. They never came back.
"We waited for two days in the desert - no food, no water - before we decided to start walking.
"Some vehicles passed by, we tried to
stop them but no-one would stop. One of the passing cars even knocked
down three of our group and killed them.
"There were eight of us by now,
including my mum and my younger sisters. When we got tired, we sat under
a tree, and that was where one of my sisters died. We buried her there.
"Then we continued walking and after a
day, my second sister died. Then on the third day my mother died. I
buried all of them myself.
Rescued
"None of the vehicles that passed by agreed to stop and pick me up.
"After a while I found a tree and sat under its shade, almost giving up at that point... then a car came by.
"I took off my blouse and started
waving it wildly. He stopped and asked me what happened and I told him.
They gave me some milk, then water and rice cake.
"I ate a little bit but I couldn't continue, then they made me some tea.
"It was only then that we carried on travelling towards Arlit, where I was reunited with my grandfather.
"So here I am - my father died long ago, now my mother is dead, I have no sisters, no brothers.
"I am living with my aunt. I heard that
only myself and a little girl and 18 men survived the journey out of
more than 100 of us.
Migration routes across the Sahara desert
A minister in Niger says women and children may be banned from travelling north out of the country.
"I will be proposing in our next
cabinet meeting to ban women and children from travelling to the north
from Arlit," Foreign Minister Bazoum Mohammed says.
Mr Mohammed said a ban would "stop this
kind of tragedy". But it is not clear how it would be enforced over the
country's porous northern borders.
The bodies of the migrants were found
by rescue workers after the migrants' vehicles broke down as they tried
to cross the Sahara.
Rescue worker Almoustapha Alhacen says
the corpses were in a severe state of decomposition and had been partly
eaten, probably by jackals.
"There was a well about 25km (16 miles)
away from where the truck broke down," Mr Alhacen said. "They were
trying to reach the well, but unfortunately they couldn't make it. So as
we followed the route, we kept finding the bodies in groups. The
corpses were decomposed; it was horrible".
''What was shocking was that they were small. There was a dead woman holding her baby," he added.
Niger is one of the world's poorest countries and frequently suffers from drought and food crises.
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