AP PHOTOS: Travelling off the map on the Trans-Sahara highway

By Jerome Delay, The Associated Press

ASSAMAKA, Niger – On the map, it links Algeria’s Mediterranean coast to the distant Atlantic shore in Nigeria. Along the way, however, the Trans-Sahara highway frequently deteriorates from black tar into sand tracks lined by half-buried tires.

Once a well-worn roadway for overlander tourists, the highway’s 4,500 kilometres (2,800 miles) are a favoured path for migrants heading north in hopes of a better life — and more recently, thousands who are being expelled south from Algeria. They travel in temperatures reaching 48 degrees Celsius (118 degrees Fahrenheit) in summer.

In Niger, the 450 kilometres (280 miles) linking Agadez to the northern border settlement of Assamaka are largely a fiction of mapping. Harsh desert conditions and increased insecurity have rendered construction and maintenance close to impossible.

The grand monotony of the bare Tenere desert is broken by the carcasses of abandoned vehicles, lone trees able to survive on the barest whisper of water, rusted water barrels and sand-swept truck tires used as distance markers.

There are nonetheless signs of life: a gas pump outside Arlit, a power line bringing electricity to nearby uranium mines, a herdsman and the ubiquitous camel, which thrives where most fear to tread.

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