Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search

Deadly migration to Yemen continues, despite risks

Issue 309
Front Page
Index
Headlines

QARAN Leaders Will Continue To Be Banned From Politics

Women Candidates In Somaliland's Upcoming Elections Agree To Cooperate

Somaliland Ministry Of Water & Minerals Soon To Publish Seismic Survey Data

A New Market Complex For Buroa, Togdheer

Ethiopia PM attacks UN on Somalia

'This isn't the US. This is South Africa!'

Somaliland Minister For Agriculture Opens Training At School Of Agriculture

Annals of Liberation: Bush-Induced Disaster in Somalia Grows

African Union warning over Somalia conflict

Why Tanzania should keep away from US

Sending Money And Ideas Home

Somalia's resources do not belong to clan: Federal official

Somaliland Classrooms

Regional Affairs

People smuggling in the Horn of Africa

Italy pledges 450,000 Euros to support UNHCR emergency activities in Somalia

Editorial
Special Report

International News

US Navy Gets Tough with Pirates off Somalia

Somali refugees find a haven in Shelbyville

Hajj: It’s a Sea of Humanity at Mina

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Frankincense still a precious stock in Oman

U.S. Veteran Reveals Atomic Bombs Dropped On Afghanistan And Iraq

6 species of giraffe "discovered"

The Meaning of Peace in the Kenya 2007 Elections: Reflections

Rape a 'weapon of war' in eastern Congo

Food for thought

Opinions

Hon: My Dear Friend Abdillahi M Dualeh

Hurrah! Democracy Defeated Dictatorship

Colonel Yusuf And His Ultimatums: What Makes Him Blast?

Somaliland should be recognised

The Tribal Wailers

Spare a moment

Somaliland elders never tire and retire


NAIROBI , December 21, 2007 – Somali and Ethiopian migrants continue to set out to Yemen from Somalia's self-declared autonomous region of Puntland, despite the deadly risks and warnings from aid agencies, local sources told IRIN on 21 December.

"As we speak, there is a boat getting ready to depart for Yemen with about 200 migrants," said Abdirazaq Omar Osman, a journalist in Bosasso, the Puntland commercial capital.

He said the boat would most likely leave on 21 December "if it has not already left." A week earlier at least 100 migrants died trying to reach Yemen.

"There were two boats that left Puntland on 9 and 10 December. Both capsized and many, if not most, of those on board perished," said Osman, who visited one of the beach ports used by the smugglers.

He said reports reaching Bosasso indicate that 60 passengers in one boat and 50 in the other had died, "with many missing and presumed dead."

He said the smugglers were using bigger but older boats from Yemen. "These are boats owned by Yemenis but operated by their Somali partners."

Each migrant is charged US $70 for the trip.

On 19 December, the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, said: "One out of every 20 people who set out in rickety boats across the Gulf of Aden this year has perished."

The agency said at least 28,000 people had made the perilous voyage to Yemen in 2007. Of that number, "more than 1,400 have died, killed by smugglers or drowned at sea."

UNHCR has begun an advocacy campaign in the Horn of Africa region to inform potential migrants about the perils of crossing illegally into Yemen.

Osman said awareness-raising campaigns for potential migrants were useful but would not deter many.

"It may work with Somalis from the south, who are more likely to stay in Somalia if they get some help, but I doubt very much if it will have any effect on the more desperate ones from Ethiopia," he said. "These are desperate people who will do anything to better their lives. They listen to the odd ones who makes it to Saudi Arabia and think they also can make it."

Since Yemen itself offers few job prospects for the migrants, most head on to Saudi Arabia or other Gulf states, where the demand for menial labour is much greater.

Source: IRIN


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search