Finding new homes, escaping their old life, to find safety and shelter and food to eat and water to drink so they don't starve. They also have difficulty finding a job and some locals have a bad attitude towards them.
Thousands end up stranded on one side of the border or the other, without food or sanitation. "The biggest thing that hits me is just the desperation of people when you see migrants come in," says Katherine Roux, communications officer for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies,As quoted by MSMB. "I mean you know how far they have walked. They're carrying baggage, blankets. It's really devastating."
Much worse. In Libya's climate of fear and uncertainty, "we're talking about potentially 200,000 to 300,000 people over a year who could try to cross the Mediterranean towards Europe," says European Affairs Minister Laurent Wauquiez. And that could be a conservative estimate. Gadhafi had closed off possible migration routes of millions of sub-Saharan migrants, as part of a deal with Italy, but that agreement has been suspended since the revolts broke out.