New report: 51,000 Ethiopian refugees to Yemen since July
Published on 7 November 2012 in Report
Amal Al-Yarisi (author)
A new report released by the Danish Refugee Council (DRC) found that
approximately 51,000 Ethiopian refugees entered Yemen since the end of July.
Yemen has continued to see an influx of refugees from different embattled
countries, including Ethiopia. The majority of the Ethiopians enter Yemen
illegally by small boats coming from Djibouti, Puntland and Somalia,
according to a 2012 report released by the DRC, a private humanitarian
group.
Allen Jelich, the DRC manager in Yemen, said Ethiopians often immigrate due
to the deteriorating economic situation in their country.
He said the council works to assist Ethiopian refugees in Yemen by helping
to improve living standards.
"The situation of the Ethiopian refugees and immigrants has worsened in line
with inadequate reporting on these issues," Jelich said.
There are three groups of Ethiopians in Yemen, he said. The first has job
opportunities and stable social relations in the country. The second one
plans to spend time in Yemen to collect money for smugglers and then go to
Saudi Arabia. The third uses Yemen as a stepping-stone to Saudi Arabia.
Jelich said Yemen often hosts immigrants who are illegally smuggled to Saudi
Arabia.
The difficulties of the immigrants
The refugees undergo harsh treatment while en route to Yemen.
Criminal gangs manipulate and abuse them to extort money. And at sea
crossings, military vessels often attack, according to the report.
The report quoted one Ethiopian girl as saying, "I met with an Ethiopian man
in Hodeida. He said he would take me to the Saudi Arabia in return for YR
40,000. After I offered him the sum; he and a group of Yemenis took me to a
distant place and beat me until they broke my hand."
The report mentioned another story of an Ethiopian man who traveled in 2011
by a small boat with seventy others; among them there were young girls. On
the boat, there were four Yemeni smugglers who publicly raped the girls and
then sold the girls to Yemenis who exercise human trafficking, according to
the report.
Yemen is receiving a constant stream of immigrants from many countries at a
time when Yemen itself is passing through a transitional phase and enduring
a deteriorating economy.
"Nowadays, Yemen has its own national economic concerns," Jelich said.
Fawzi Al-Zyood, the project manager for the International Organization for
Migration, said Yemen faces huge challenges with regard to accommodating
these immigrants.
"Yemen has been sharing the suffering with these refugees," Al-Zyood said.
"We thank Yemen for doing that. There should be coordination between the
Ethiopian and the Yemeni governments in regard to aiding the Ethiopian
refugees."
The report found that Yemenis complain about the involvement of the Somalis
in insurgent groups and terror organizations, which contributes to Yemeni
disapproval Ethiopian migration to the country.
Image
Yemen's proximity to the eastern coast of Africa has led to the influx of
refugees from embattled African countries.
Received on Wed Aug 07 2013 - 16:01:12 EDT