This, it said, would make desperate migrants more susceptible to criminals.
Franz Celestin, IOM Head of Mission in Nigeria, disclosed this in a virtual interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Abuja on Sunday.
According to Celestin, the socio-economic pressure post-COVID-19, will be so hard and will push a lot of people to migrate to countries with better economy as they always do.
He explained that once the fear of the virus no longer existed and a vaccine was out and distributed, a lot of people would be on the move again.
READ ALSO: Okonjo-Iweala reiterates vital role WTO can play in COVID-19 vaccine production
Celestin said that following the official closure of borders by countries, there had been a significant drop in the numbers of people crossing the borders unofficially at the humanitarian points, which also managed the unofficial borders.
He said: “The official borders have been closed and what keep the people from moving is the fear.
“The official borders that have been closed will reduce the numbers of people travelling officially because smugglers do not use official borders.
“Although it is actually a different process with trafficking because 80 per cent of trafficked victims travel through official borders with official documents.
“But it is a different aspect as they usually travel through unofficial borders, the ones that are not guided by a border management agency.
“We have seen a significant drop in the numbers of people crossing borders unofficially at the humanitarian points because the humanitarian points also manage the unofficial borders.
“I think that it is calm before the storm and I think what is going to happen is that once the fear of COVID-19 is out of people and once we have a vaccine that is effective and widely distributed and the fear no longer exists.
“The socio-economic pressure is going to be so hard and it is going to push a lot of people so hard to migrate and we expect to see a lot more being trafficked.
“So, we have a lot of people who will migrate willingly, who will pay a smuggler to move them from point A to B but we also have a lot of people that will get a lot of people trafficked because they will be more susceptible to these offers that will be made by these criminals.”
Celestin said the COVID-19 pandemic had further increased humanitarian needs in Nigeria, which was already facing dire humanitarian challenges as a result of the conflict in the North East.
He said that pre-COVID-19, the Humanitarian Response Plan was launched seeking to address the needs of 1.6 million people and following the COVID-19 pandemic, there were now 10.4 million people in need.
The IOM head of mission said in other to effectively tackle the humanitarian needs amid the COVID-19 pandemic, IOM Nigeria had initially requested for $20 million from headquarters just for the COVID-19 response for specific sectors.
He said the IOM request was separate from the humanitarian response plan and was subsequently modified from $20 million to $13 million.
Celestin said: “The appeal is followed in two separate tracks: you have the humanitarian response plan, which was for North East Nigeria, and that of pre-COVID.
“That particular plan is less that 32 per cent funded compared to last year and this is a key issue that we have seen because just the response to the North East is in a deep hole right now compared to what it was last year.
“We have seen the increase in need and the reduction of resources.
“We were looking at addressing the needs of 1.6 million people and now it is 10.4 million.
“That can tell you the kind of issues that we have with money and the fact that a lot of countries that are primary donors are experiencing recession themselves and that presents a very big problem for us, leaving the humanitarian response plan behind, for the COVID-19 response.”
NAN.
READ ALSO: Why more Nigerians are migrating – IOM
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