The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) Thursday received a batch of 126 stranded Nigerians from Libya.
The returnees who were voluntarily airlifted from Misrata, Libya consisted of 62 adult females, 6 female children and 4 infant females.
The agency’s acting Coordinator of the Lagos Territorial Office, Ibrahim Farinloye, confirmed the development to reporters in Lagos.
Farinloye, who represented the Director General, Alhaji Mustapha Ahmed, said the Nigerians were received at the Cargo Wing of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport at about 4.22pm.
He said the returnees, who arrived aboard a Boeing 700-787 Al Buraq Air with registration number 5A-DMG, were brought back to the country by the International Organisation for Migration through a voluntary repatriation programme.
Farinloye said the programme was meant for the distressed Nigerians who had left the country to seek greener pastures in various European countries but could not afford to return when their journey became frustrating.
The acting coordinator urged Nigerians to be wary of close associates, family friends or neighbourhood elders who deceive with sweet talks of a better life in foreign countries.
Farinloye said many were now being deceived with promises of assistance to destinations such as Iraq, Dubai (United Arab Emirates) and Egypt, but end up in connection houses in Libya.
“We admonish the returnees on the need to realise that there’s no country better than Nigeria.
“There are ample opportunities for all of us to thrive and live happily in virtuous and God-fearing manners in Nigeria without unnecessarily exposing ourselves to undeserved dangers in foreign lands,” he said.
Farinloye encouraged the returnees to be positive ambassadors toward advocacy and sensitisation against irregular migration that leaves the youths vulnerable to all sorts of abuses and death in extreme cases.