Over 39 individuals from the Horn of Africa have lost their lives after their boat capsized off the coast of Yemen, according to the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) and local officials.
Survivors informed rescuers that the vessel, carrying 260 migrants, sank on Monday amidst strong winds.
Efforts are underway to locate the whereabouts of 150 individuals who remain missing.
The IOM has confirmed that it is offering assistance to 71 survivors.
Local authorities in Rudum, located east of Aden, stated that the individuals aboard the boat were migrants, primarily from Ethiopia, who use Yemen as a transit point to access Gulf states.
Hadi al-Khurma, the director of Rudum district, informed Reuters news agency that the boat sank before reaching the shore.
Fishermen and local residents managed to rescue survivors, who disclosed that additional migrants were unaccounted for from the same vessel, Mr. al-Khurma added.
“The search is still ongoing and the United Nations has been informed of the incident,” he said.
Last year, 97,000 migrants made their way to Yemen from the Horn of Africa, as reported by the UN.
This surge in arrivals has occurred despite the ongoing conflict in Yemen and recent attacks by Houthi forces on ships in the Red Sea.
Head of the UN’s International Organisation for Migration, there are now significantly more women and children moving to the Gulf States from the Horn of Africa.
The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) chief has expressed concern about the growing number of women and children travelling from the Horn of Africa to Gulf nations via Yemen (UN).
According to IOMDirector General Antonio Vitorino, the number of people making the perilous journey through Yemen from Ethiopia, Somalia, and Djibouti has increased by 64% in the last year as a result of people looking for better livelihoods and an increase in the number of women and children travelling alone.
In the past, women and children would often opt out of the dangerous journey through the desert mostly made on foot. Previously, men would leave their families behind and make the trek in the hope of finding jobs and sending money back home.
“The pressure is mounting” as the numbers of migrants rise, said Vitorino, who was in Kenya for the launch of an $84m appeal to support more than one million migrants using the route through Yemen.
The desperate migrants are vulnerable to criminal gangs along the route and need protection against rape, violence, traffickers and smugglers, he said.
Some of the migrants are unaware of the dangers – including the war in Yemen – and the UN’s migration organisation needs to improve awareness of the perils, he said. For migrants who still choose to take the journey, the organisation should offer basic healthcare and other services and in some cases return them to their countries of origin, he said.
“Last year, we have returned voluntarily to Ethiopia 2,700 migrants and upon arrival we provided post-arrival assistance to support them to move back to their regions of origin,” Vitorino said.
Also rising is the migration of people from West Africa through Libya to Europe, and the plight of those migrants, particularly those who are detained in conflict-stricken Libya, is a global concern, he said.
“We know where the official detention centres are and we have access to them, not permanently, never alone, but under surveillance of security guards. But we have access to provide assistance,” said Vitorino.
But the UN organisation does not have access to the unofficial detentions centres, which are particularly worrying, as there are reports of widespread abuses in them, he said.
The IOM is striving to get more migrants into voluntary return programmes in order to reduce those in detention, he said. It’s difficult because the number of migrants who want to return is much higher than available flights from Libya, he said.
Vitorino said he hopes the factors that lead to increased migration, like climate change and conflict, can be addressed to reduce the number of people moving away from their homes.
He stressed the need for migrants to pursue legal migration routes, adding that although the process is complicated and cumbersome, it cannot be compared to the life-threatening conditions along illegal routes.