confinement, given a huge fine and deported, so in an exclusive interview, our bbc africa correspondent, catheringreally like. it was tricky, hard. nothing really prepares you for it, you know. being alone in a tiny space, confined space, the first place i was was a tiny, tiny room. it was — the walls were padded like an asylum, it had a small button like an intercom, i had to use that to ask for water, go to the bathroom, that kind of thing. all the way through, there was interrogation back and forth, back and forth, which was really disorientating. they just kept asking the same questions over and over again. also, the fear, you know, of, i might never make it out of here, you know? so that was something constantly on my mind like, this is it, this is it. how did you make it out? i was visited by people who entered that people were fighting for me on the outside, and a bunch of organisations and a bunch of organisations and everyone was coming together, so i think that gave me hope. what shocked you most about your experience? the biggest thing would have to be the living conditions. the company