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Home Migration

A Cry for the Missing: Migration Crisis in The Gambia and Beyond

M.E Njie by M.E Njie
June 1, 2026
in Migration
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A Cry for the Missing: Migration Crisis in The Gambia and Beyond
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The cries of families searching for their loved one’s echo across communities in The Gambia, Senegal, Mauritania, and beyond. Phone calls and messages pour in day and night, each one a desperate plea for help, for answers, for hope. Mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, brothers, and sisters remain unaccounted for, leaving families trapped in fear and uncertainty.

As Tobaski approaches, celebrations feel hollow for many. While some prepare to gather with loved ones, others cannot escape the torment of knowing that their relatives may be stranded in forests in The Gambia and Senegal, lost in the deserts of Tunisia, or adrift in the Atlantic Ocean. The suffering is immense, and the silence unbearable.

The Boats of May

May was a month of perilous journeys. More than 16 migrant boats departed from The Gambia and border areas with Senegal, carrying thousands of hopeful souls bound for the Canary Islands. Yet, none have been confirmed to have reached Spain.

  • Seven boats were intercepted in Senegal.
  • Four boats were intercepted in Mauritania.
  • Two boats returned to The Gambia.
  • Three boats remain unaccounted for.

On 23 May, a boat carrying more than 180 people—including women and children—departed from the area between Kartong, Kadaki, and Nyfuram. Nine days later, families still wait for news. Meanwhile, relief came on 31 May, when a boat from Sanyang was rescued by fishermen and safely arrived in Saint-Louis, Senegal. For those families, the nightmare ended with tears of joy. For many others, the agony continues.

Lives Lost, Families Broken

Reports from intercepted boats in Mauritania and Senegal reveal that at least 14 people died during their journeys. Last weekend, four more lives were lost in Jinack. Each death is a tragedy, each disappearance a wound that deepens the collective trauma of communities across the region.

A Call for Urgent Action

This crisis is not just about numbers—it is about human lives. Families deserve answers, support, and action. No mother should cry endlessly for a missing child. No father should live in silence, wondering if his son is alive. No family should be left without a place to report missing relatives or seek help.

Humanitarian organizations, governments, and all those with the power to act must take this crisis seriously. Urgent assistance is needed to rescue those stranded, provide reliable information to families, and raise awareness of the dangers of the back-way migration route.

Hope Amid Despair

While the suffering is immense, the resilience of families and communities’ shines through. Their prayers, their calls, their relentless search for answers remind us that behind every statistic is a human being—a life worth saving, a family worth protecting.

As the waves of the Atlantic continue to carry boats into uncertainty, may those at sea be protected, rescued, and reunited with their loved ones. May families find peace and may the world finally listen to their cries.

Written by Ebrima Migrant Situation

Tags: Atlantic OceanBoatsMigrantsMissingSenegalThe GambiaWaves
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M.E Njie

M.E Njie

Mamadou Edrisa Njie is the Publisher and Managing Editor of Mansa Banko Online. Mansa Banko Online is a Gambia-based online newspaper focusing on agricultural reporting. The online medium reports on quality, reliable, factual and authoritative information. Mr. Njie is an alumna of the International Institute for Journalism (IIJ) in Germany and studied Mass Communication at the Institute of Professional Administration and Management (IPAM) in Banjul, The Gambia.

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