Every day on World Now, we choose a striking photo from
around the world. Today we were arrested by this shot of a little girl waiting
to be evacuated from Yemen and taken back to her home country, Ethiopia.
Others may not get that chance. The International
Organization for Migration says it is short on funding to help stranded
Ethiopian migrants return home, forcing it to stop unless new money is found.
Ethiopians and other East African migrants pass through the
town of Haradh, where this girl was photographed Wednesday, as a stepping stone
to Saudi Arabia, the group said. Many end up being stranded in Yemen or
deported back there from Saudi Arabia or other Arab destination countries.
The Times reported on the flight of Somali and Ethiopian
refugees to Yemen two years ago:
The roughly 200-mile passage to Yemen from port cities and
fishing villages in Somalia and the shorter voyage from Djibouti are
treacherous. For two days, refugees are crammed shoulder to shoulder in
creaking boats -- nothing more than 30-foot wooden dinghies.
Along the way, they face high winds, deadly storms, pirates
and possible detention by the Yemeni coast guard or international anti-piracy
patrols. Many are women and children. Some are raped, beaten or thrown
overboard by smugglers wary of being caught if they deliver their human cargo
too close to shore. Untold numbers disappear at sea.
Some African migrants have been kidnapped and tortured in
Yemen until their families send money, the humanitarian news network IRIN
recently reported. A local Yemeni news website published some photographs of
the victims earlier this month. (Warning: These images are graphic.)
The migration group says that more than 400 people are now
packed into a transit center for migrants who want to go home. The shelter was
built for 150. It estimates that 12,000 stranded migrants, mostly from the Horn
of Africa, remain in Yemen, suffering diseases and wounds inflicted by
smugglers.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com
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