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Opinions of Wednesday, 29 April 2015

Auteur: VOA

Child migrants traveling solo face unknown future in Europe

Among the thousands of migrants making the deadly journey by boat to Europe, are unaccompanied girls and boys -- some have been sent by relatives to earn money, others orphaned or fleeing war.

Like many teenage boys, the young migrants - officially called unaccompanied minors - dream of playing football for perhaps Barcelona or Chelsea. On the grounds of their temporary new home - a large old farmhouse in the mountains of Sicily - they practice for hours every day.

All the boys living at a shelter in Caltagirone made the deadly journey across the Mediterranean alone, with no parents or relatives.

Alassane from Ivory Coast made his voyage in the depths of winter. He said 15 people aboard the boat died.

He said his best friend died in his own arms. It was so cold, freezing. He hadn’t eaten anything. They were lost at sea.

Rebuilding their lives...

Orphaned

Ivorian Wata Ali, 17, was orphaned as a boy. He said he and his older brother moved around looking for work, first to Burkina Faso then to Libya, where they got caught up in the civil war.

He said his brother went out to work everyday. He would come home now and then to eat, and then go back to work. Then, one day, he didn’t come back. Alis said he and a friend decided to go to Italy. They saved their money and got on the boat.

Daniele Cutugno runs the refugee center in Caltagirone.

Cutugno said when the boys arrive their state of mind is terrible because they are traumatized. They have passed through Libya, where they have experienced extreme violence. When they face certain death in Libya, they prefer to choose the risk of the sea journey where there is a possibility of surviving.

To many of the boys, Cutugno serves as a father figure.

Cutugno said very few of them have a clear idea about their next steps. "And with time, talking to them, their needs start to become clear - as teenagers, just like Italian teenagers - to become football players, to study, to work, so they can help their parents in their country. But a lot of their parents or brothers were killed.”