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Boats with dead and desperate arrive in Yemen from Somalia

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Boats with dead and desperate arrive in Yemen from Somalia

A fresh wave of smugglers' boats arriving in Yemen with desperate Somalis and Ethiopians has underlined the urgency of the UN refugee agency's appeal for action to stop the human traffickers operating from Somalia.
20 January 2006 Also available in:
The bodies of asylum seekers forced to jump off of a traffickers' boat wash ashore in Yemen, last September.

GENEVA, 20 Jan (UNHCR) - A fresh wave of smugglers' boats has arrived in Yemen with desperate Somalis and Ethiopians, some of them already dead from thirst, underlining the urgency of the UN refugee agency's appeal for action to stop the human traffickers operating from Somalia.

UNHCR staff in Yemen said a boat reached shore on 16 January carrying 65 people and six dead bodies. Another 14 people reportedly died during the voyage across the Gulf of Aden - six who threw themselves into the sea because they could not bear the thirst, and a further eight who died on board of thirst and hunger and whose bodies were thrown overboard. Of the 20 people reported dead, four were Ethiopians and 16 Somalis.

The boat left port near Bossaso in the Puntland region of Somalia with little food or water, allegedly to maximise space for its human cargo. After its engine failed, the boat drifted in the Gulf of Aden for six days, with passengers growing hungrier and more desperate. UNHCR staff in Yemen arranged medical assistance for survivors - some of whom had bite marks from crazed fellow passengers - and took 25 to the refugee agency's Mayfa'a Transit Centre.

"That horrific voyage is not unusual," William Spindler, a spokesman for UNHCR, told reporters in Geneva. "Smugglers frequently beat their passengers or force them overboard while still well away from shore. UNHCR has in the past thanked the crews of passing ships who have saved people found drifting helplessly in the shark-infested waters."

In the period from 12-17 January, 22 boats carrying an unknown number of Somalis and Ethiopians arrived in Yemen. Of those, the UNHCR Transit Centre registered 1,217 Somalis and 39 Ethiopians.

"The true numbers can only be guessed at," said Spindler. "Thousands of Somalis arrive in Yemen every year, including an estimated average of 100 people per day during the annual September to March period of good sailing weather. Last September, UNHCR called for international action to stem the flow of desperate people across the Gulf of Aden after at least 150 people died in a three-week period."

UNHCR has been working with the authorities in Puntland, in north-eastern Somalia, on ways to inform people about the dangers of using smugglers to cross the Gulf of Aden. This includes production of videos and radio programmes to raise awareness among Somalis and Ethiopians of the risks involved in such crossings.

Yemen, one of the few countries in the region to have signed the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees, has been generous in receiving migrants and refugees. The Yemeni authorities automatically grant refugee status to Somali citizens arriving in Yemen (prima facie refugee status).

There are currently over 80,000 registered refugees in Yemen, including some 75,000 Somalis, but it is estimated that there are hundreds of thousands more in the country. Many who arrive by sea continue north from Yemen in search of a better life.