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Six missing after attempted sea crossing from Somalia to Yemen – UN agency

Six missing after attempted sea crossing from Somalia to Yemen – UN agency

People hoping to make Gulf of Aden crossing queue to board vessel off Somalia's coast
Six people are missing after a smuggler’s boat transporting 175 people from Somalia to Yemen ran into difficulties in heavy seas this weekend, the United Nations refugee agency reported today.

On Saturday a fishing boat carrying about 175 people was stranded in deep water when it broke down while approaching Yemen’s Mayfa’a Hager coast after setting off from Marera village near Bossaso on the northern tip of Somalia, according to the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

Some were rescued by fishermen while another group managed to leave on a smaller boat and reach the coast through heavy storms and choppy seas. Upon arrival they alerted UNHCR's local partner, the Society for Humanitarian Solidarity (SHS).

The Yemeni Coast Guard and SHS deployed three boats to rescue the stranded passengers. The first attempt took place late on Saturday night, but was not successful because of the atrocious weather. A second attempt at dawn on Sunday led to the rescue of more people. Survivors reported that six passengers were still missing.

All rescued people were transferred to Mayfa’a reception centre, where they are being assisted by UNHCR and its partners, and provided with food, blankets, shelter and medical care.

UNHCR says the weekend incident marks the end of a brief lull over the summer, when bad weather traditionally prevents human smugglers from operating in the gulf. In the last week alone, nine boats have brought more than 458 people, mainly Somalis and Ethiopians, to the coast of Yemen.

“This is a steep increase from 2007 and the numbers will continue to rise,” said Myra Sabongi, UNHCR's Protection Officer in Aden, Yemen. “We are not even half-way through August, but the number of arrivals is already significantly higher than for the entire month of August 2007. Similarly, this July, more than 233 people arrived to the shore, compared to 57 during the same month in 2007.”

So far this year, more than 22,532 people have made the perilous Gulf of Aden crossing aboard smugglers’ boats. More than 165 people have died trying to make the voyage this year and 220 are missing.

Over the past year, the refugee agency has stepped up its work in Yemen and appealed for over $17 million to provide for additional staff, better assistance, more shelter for refugees and training programmes for the coastguard. UNHCR has also enhanced its presence along the coast and opened an additional reception centre earlier this year.

In April, a regional conference was convened by UNHCR in cooperation with the Mixed Migration Task Force for Somalia to establish a regional mechanism and long-term plan of action on refugee protection and mixed migration in the Gulf of Aden. The flow of people across the Gulf of Yemen includes a significant number of refugees.

“Yemen has carried a major burden in dealing with irregular migratory movements in the region, yet has maintained an open-door policy to refugees,” said Claire Bourgeois, UNHCR's Representative in Yemen. “Support from the international community however remains an absolute necessity.”