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62 African migrants drown in boat tragedy off Yemen

62 African migrants drown in boat tragedy off Yemen
Updated 08 June 2014

62 African migrants drown in boat tragedy off Yemen

62 African migrants drown in boat tragedy off Yemen

GENEVA: Sixty migrants from Ethiopia and Somalia along with two Yemeni crew members drowned on May 31 in the worst such tragedy off the coast of Yemen this year, the UN said Friday.
“The tragedy is the largest single loss of life of migrants and refugees attempting to reach Yemen via the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden this year,” Adrian Edwards, spokesman for the refugee agency UNHCR, told reporters in Geneva.
The UN agency said it was still seeking information about the tragedy, but had confirmed that the boat carrying 60 Ethiopian and Somali migrants and two Yemeni crew members sank last Saturday.
“The victims were reportedly buried by local residents after their bodies washed ashore near the Bab El Mandeb area off Yemen’s coast,” Edwards said, adding that the UNHCR did not know where the boat begun it journey.
In Sanaa, a Yemeni employee of the UNHCR said the boat went down because of bad weather conditions off Dhubab, at the entrance to the Bab El Mandeb waterway between the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea.
“Most of the victims are of Ethiopian nationality,” he said, quoting a local NGO, the Society for Humanitarian Solidarity.
The UNHCR pointed out that counting previous such tragedies in the same area, at least 121 people have died so far this year trying to reach Yemen.
The agency said it had documented the arrival of 16,500 refugees and migrants on the Yemeni coast during the first four months of 2014 alone.
That number, however, was far below the 35,000 who arrived in Yemen during the same period last year.
Impoverished Yemen is mainly used as a transit country, with African migrants often aiming to move on to neighboring oil-rich Gulf nations to find work.
Edwards told AFP the drop in arrivals in Yemen appeared linked, among other things, to a shift in migration patterns toward North Africa and Libya because of unrest in Yemen and a crackdown in Ƶ on illegal migration.
“Over the past five years, more than half a million people, mainly Somalis, Ethiopians and Eritreans, have crossed the dangerous waters of the Gulf of Aden and the Red Sea to reach Yemen,” he said.