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Smugglers Target Ethiopian, Somali Teens for Deadly Trip to Yemen


UN Migration Agency staff tend to the remains of a deceased migrant on a beach in Yemen.
UN Migration Agency staff tend to the remains of a deceased migrant on a beach in Yemen.

Despite being seven months pregnant, Mesno Taha left her home in Harerge, Ethiopia to find peace and a better future. She trekked to the Somali zone of Ethiopia, crossed the border into Somalia and paid to board a boat bound for Yemen.

After traveling 18 hours at sea, she ended up near the shore of the war-torn country.

Taha said that she and over 100 other migrants aboard were told that they had arrived at their destination, despite still being at sea. Armed smugglers forced Taha to jump off the boat into the choppy water while its engine continued to run.

"They were beating us. They were pulling the women by their hair and pushing them around. We were holding hands with the two women whom we [later] buried," Taha told VOA's Afaan Oromoo service by phone last week. "He grabbed the three of us and pushed us. The two of them died, and I survived with the grace of God."

Smugglers intentionally pushed people

In separate incidents on August 8 and 9, smugglers forced about 300 people from their boats as they approached the coast of Shabwa, Yemen on the Arabian Sea. The migrants were from Ethiopia and Somalia. Several dozen migrants drowned and dozens more remain missing. Shortly after the first incident, staff from the U.N.'s International Organization for Migration found shallow graves of 29 migrants on a nearby beach.

The smugglers pushed some of them into the sea at gunpoint. Some survivors reported that the smugglers feared being arrested by Yemeni authorities.

"If the Yemeni air force sees them, they wouldn't let them go. So, after they get what they want, they don't have sympathy for people. They throw people as they wish, like objects," said Jemal Kebelo Guracha, a witness who spoke to VOA's Amharic service.

Teenaged migrants

Most of the people aboard were children. Sayo Ahmed, a 17-year-old orphan, traveled from Ethiopia and found herself in one of the two boats. Ahmed hadn't seen her brother for months after Ethiopian authorities arrested him, so she took the risk of fleeing.

"I don't have a father or a mother. I have one brother, and the government took him for participating in protests. We don't know where he is, and then I gave up and decided to leave my country," she told VOA's Afaan Oromoo service.

Olivia Headon, spokeswoman for the IOM, says that Ahmed was one of the many teenagers in the two boats. This fact is "shocking," Headon told VOA, because "the average age of these Somali and Ethiopian migrants was approximately 16. They are children."

UN Migration Agency staff assist Somali, Ethiopian migrants who were forced into the sea by smugglers.
UN Migration Agency staff assist Somali, Ethiopian migrants who were forced into the sea by smugglers.

Extortion, rape and forced at gunpoint

The incidents off the coast of Shabwa illustrate the tactics smugglers use to protect themselves while jeopardizing migrants' lives.

Smugglers use false promises and intimidation to convince refugees and migrants, many of whom are children, to travel in dangerous, unpredictable circumstances. Then, smugglers load them on rickety vessels, often without lifejackets or adequate hydration.

Smugglers abuse migrants to maintain control and maximize profits. "People are being abused and raped en route so that their families will pay more...Some people are paying as little as $100 U.S., but then en route they are tortured, they are abused, their families are made aware of this and are forced to pay $1,000 or to $2,000 more," Headon said.

‘Better to die traveling'

Despite disease, war and famine-like conditions, Yemen has become a popular layover for African migrants traveling to Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. "When you ask them if they knew that there is war in this country, they say it is better to die traveling instead of sitting where we were," Guracha said. Last year, more than 117,000 people arrived in Yemen, according to the UNHCR. This year, over 50,000 people, most of whom are children from Ethiopia and Somalia, reached Yemen via the Gulf of Aden or the Red Sea, according to estimates from the IOM.

Ethiopian migrants walk after arriving to Yemen's shore on a smugglers boat in the southern province of Shabwa, Yemen, Aug. 11, 2017.
Ethiopian migrants walk after arriving to Yemen's shore on a smugglers boat in the southern province of Shabwa, Yemen, Aug. 11, 2017.

Searching for peace

Poverty, prolonged drought, conflict, disease and civil unrest force young people in Ethiopia and Somalia from their homes, sometimes at the request of their parents. These parents hope their children can escape, find employment, and send money back home. In other cases, young people's family members have died or been imprisoned, leaving little reason for them to remain in their homes. Taha said she left her home because her husband is in prison, and she has no children. She said he was jailed during protests by Ethiopia's Oromo ethnic group advocating for land rights and equal political representation.

"It's been two months since my husband has been imprisoned due to the protests. Ethiopian authorities pressured me to tell them what type of political agenda he has, and I left because of that," Taha said. "They continuously asked me questions and threatened me. There was even a time when they slapped me. We don't know why my husband is arrested. We couldn't find him in any of the prisons. He could be dead. His name is Hassan Jamal and his parents couldn't find him after searching."

Those migrants who survived the perilous journey to Yemen looked after one another and buried those who had died. Mohammed Abdiker, IOM's director of operations and emergencies, wrote about the migrants' care for one another in a recent post.

"The sight of some 50 bodies buried in shallow graves, rapidly dug by the young hands of the distraught survivors in an attempt to bring some dignity to their dead companions was also deeply shocking to our team."

Jalene Gemeda, Tsion Girma and Lisa Schlein contributed to this report

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