 إن كبيرة كوفت ، بحفظ ليل كوفت بحفظ ليل ءه بحفظ ليل if a man is singing , it's because he is happy his regular meetings with Kha'ula are very helpful for him she listens to him without judging she has been counselling him regularly since his return to Kazablanqa إسمه بالخلام لأنه نصفه من مغرب إسمه بلا يشبه إسمه بلا يشبه إسمه بلا تخلام رجاله ويأتي إلى مروركو من جريس مع the help of IOM, the United Nations Agency for the Human Rights and Human Rights. I'm in return to Morocco from Greece with the help of IOM, the United Nations Agency for the Human Rights and Human Rights. I'm in return to Morocco from Greece with the help of IOM, the United Nations Agency for the Human Rights and Human Rights. I'm in return to Morocco from Greece with the help of IOM, the United Nations Agency for Migration. He is supported by Raoula as part of a personalised mentorship approach being piloted by the Orion Project. Above all, Raoula provides Amin with moral support helping him to overcome the consequences of a very difficult migration journey as well as to reintegrate his home community which he has decided to rejoin. I appreciate the sharing value between the mentor and the mentor and also the focus points and the coordinators of the project program based here in Morocco or internationally. Since January 2019, a dozen mentors spread across multiple communities in Guinea, Senegal and Morocco each assume responsibility for around 20 returning migrants. If there is no mutual commitment, a trust and a climate that is enviable, there will be no results. They travel many kilometres to meet each other regularly. They call each other, they share meals, they meet their families. In short, they build a relationship based on trust. They brainstorm together about all kinds of projects which would help bring lasting stability to the life of returnees in their communities. This mentoring goes hand in hand with economic assistance provided by IOM. It makes their social and psychosocial reintegration easier by ensuring they are not isolated by helping them with official paperwork and by working to improve their well-being. The Orion Project is part of a larger programme called Safety, Support and Solutions in the Central Mediterranean Route financed by UK aid. A recent study has shown the positive impact of this approach on the reintegration of returning migrants. Fatumata, from Timbituni in Guinea, left in 2014 to join her husband who was working in Libya. After a failed attempt to cross the Mediterranean, she returned to Guinea in 2017. Her husband then left for Senegal. Since then, Fatumata has been able to open a grocery store mostly thanks to the help of IOM and the support of her Guardian Angel, Alhamdul. Esperance experiences a similar situation. This young Senegalese got help from IOM and Abdul Karim, her mentor, to return from Morocco with her two children and open a cosmetic store in Capskirin. He is a father of four. He first migrated over 20 years ago. After an epic six-year journey across six countries, he escaped from a detention centre in Tripoli and decided to return to Senegal with the help of the IOM office in Niger. With the support of his mentor, Maren, he is back in his former house in Kaulak. He is managing to pay his bills and has found a maintenance job at a local football ground. Abdul Rahman also found himself in Libya. Having failed to cross the Mediterranean, he drifted from Mali to Burkina Faso, in a jeer and then Libya, where he had a serious accident. In 2017, he returned to Sompareya in Guinea. Thanks to Alfa Osman, his IOM mentor, Abdul Rahman slowly regained the respect of his family as well as his self-confidence and ended up opening his own restaurant. I hope that many more will soon be able to benefit from this approach in the future.