• LightBox
  • Niger

Discover African Migrants’ Long Journey Through the Sahara

3 minute read

“We move like a big river,” smiles Issa wryly, a young Gambian migrant whose country is itself one long sliver of land hugging an eponymous waterway as it feeds into the sea. “You stop us here, we go there,” he says making leapfrog motions with his hands to emphasize the determination migrants have in making their journeys. “You stop us over there, we go over here!” He repeats.

Six months ago, Issa left his home in Banjul, Gambia, and has slowly made his way to the town of Agadez in northern Niger where he now rests as he waits for his family to send the money needed to carry him farther north to Libya. He won’t be stopped in his journey to Europe, he says, his smile gone, his eyes hard and impenetrable, and neither will the thousands of other migrants passing through this small desert town.

For West Africans headed north to Europe, the vacuum of power following Libya’s revolution and ensuing collapse has provided ample space for smugglers to maneuver its borders unchecked. Niger has come to play a central role in that flow.

Agadez, a dusty, windswept town in northern Niger, has long been a crossroads for the Sahara. Sitting on the cusp of the desert’s barren landscape, it has now become the final jumping-off point for West African migrants headed to Libya, their sights set on Europe.

Fed by an intricate network of smugglers coordinating across West Africa, hundreds stream into Agadez daily by bus, van and private car. Each Monday, as the relentless desert sun begins to arch back towards the horizon, migrants pack into the backs of white Toyota pickup trucks and begin a five-day journey north to the Libyan town of Sabha. Smugglers coordinate their departure, forming a loose caravan in the hopes that traveling in numbers will provide some semblance of safety in the increasingly lawless desert where hijackings, kidnappings, and executions have now become one more risk inherent to the journey.

Within the span of a few hours more than 100 trucks, each packed with 20-25 migrants, barrel out of town and across the parched and cracked earth, dust erupting from the tires, bare feet dangling from the sides.

They cling desperately to the back of their truck and some modicum of hope that life will be more livable than the ones they’ve left behind. The following week 2,000 more will follow, a number that isn’t likely to wane anytime soon and that doesn’t even include those moving through Chad and Sudan.

Sailing season is only ramping up and more migrants will follow, fleeing the fear of waking up without the means to provide for their families, with an angry hunger burrowing deep into the belly of a son or a daughter. The fear of one more hour of war. These fears have been lived, their memories now embedded and palpable like the ridges of bone beneath skin — and so people hope, and each and every Monday thousands more will continue to climb into the back of overcrowded pickup trucks and strike north.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin is a freelance photographer based in Istanbul, Turkey.

Mikko Takkunen, who edited this photo essay, is an Associate Photo Editor at TIME. Follow him on Twitter @photojournalism.

Migrants are stuffed into the back of a pickup truck as they begin the first day of their five day journey across the Sahara to Libya, in Niger on April 20, 2015.
Migrants are stuffed into the back of a pickup truck as they begin the first day of their five day journey across the Sahara to Libya, in Niger on April 20, 2015.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
A camel rests under a tree in the desert north of Agadez, Niger. Temperatures in the Sahara easily rise to 110 F during the day and plummet to the low 50s at night.
A camel rests under a tree in the desert north of Agadez, Niger. Temperatures in the Sahara easily rise to 110 F during the day and plummet to the low 50s at night.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
The lights of trucks carrying migrants to Libya dot the desert horizon in northern Niger. Over 100 trucks leave the town of Agadez every Monday evening, each pickup carrying 20-25 migrants all with hopes of reaching Europe.
The lights of trucks carrying migrants to Libya dot the desert horizon in northern Niger. Over 100 trucks leave the town of Agadez every Monday evening, each pickup carrying 20-25 migrants all with hopes of reaching Europe.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
A young Nigerian woman headed across the Sahara changes money from the back of a pickup truck that will carry her to Libya.
A young Nigerian woman headed across the Sahara changes money from the back of the pickup truck that will transport her to Libya.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
Migrants change money to Libyan Dinars. Each migrant pays 150,000 West African CFA Francs (roughly $250) for their journey north.
Migrants change money to Libyan Dinars. Each migrant pays 150,000 West African CFA Francs (roughly $250) for their journey north.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
Dust covers the face of a young migrant headed to Libya.
Dust covers the face of a young migrant headed to Libya.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
A migrant prays in the headlights of a pickup truck carrying him to Libya.
A migrant prays in the headlights of a pickup truck carrying him to Libya.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
A young boy rests against the stick used to keep him from falling from the back of the pickup as it tears across the Sahara. Any passenger who falls unseen at night will almost certainly die, not due to the fall but because of the desert's relentless heat the following day.
A young boy rests against the stick used to keep him from falling from the back of the pickup as it tears across the Sahara. Any passenger who falls unseen at night will almost certainly die, not due to the fall but because of the desert's relentless heat the following day.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
The barefeet of migrants hang from the back of a pickup truck carrying them to Libya.
The barefeet of migrants hang from the back of a pickup truck carrying them to Libya.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin
Trucks carrying migrants pass back into the desert as vendors push their carts back to wait for more trucks at a small desert outpost a few hours north of Agadez. Smugglers time their departure into the desert to within a few hours, forming a loose caravan in the hopes that it will provide some shred of security against the increasingly lawless Sahara
Trucks carrying migrants pass back into the desert as vendors push their carts back to wait for more trucks at a small desert outpost a few hours north of Agadez. Smugglers time their departure into the desert to within a few hours, forming a loose caravan in the hopes that it will provide some shred of security against the increasingly lawless Sahara.Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin

More Must-Reads From TIME

Contact us at letters@time.com