Photo: John James/IRIN. Ethiopian teenage migrants taking part in a voluntarily programme to return home
Source: IRIN
HARADH, 27 June 2013 (IRIN) - In temperatures in the high forties around
1,000 Ethiopian migrants, sweating profusely, turn their backs to Saudi
Arabia and start the walk south - away from the Yemeni border town of
Haradh and their dreams of a new life.
On the road they silently pass others heading north, still hopeful of crossing the border.
Haradh is at the crossroads of these dreams - a potential gateway to a
new life in Saudi Arabia, but getting there is becoming increasingly
difficult.
To get here, the migrants have endured considerable hardship; often
taking on debt to fund the journey, walking for weeks to get to the East
African coast and then crossing the shark-infested Red Sea.
Thousands get picked up by smugglers in Yemen who kidnap and torture them to extract ransom money.
Then, they reach what for many is the end of the road and their hopes: a
dusty poverty-stricken town, 10km from an increasingly impenetrable
Saudi Arabia.
“There’s a general feeling of depression. They come with dreams. Some
just keep trying - they owe so much money,” Fatwa Abdok, a psychiatrist
working with Médecins Sans Frontières in Haradh, told IRIN.
She describes hearing testimonies of “torture you can never imagine” from those held captive by smugglers.
“Some of them are completely destroyed. Some get consumed just coping
with it. It all depends on the strength of the person. Some recover when
they have food and a place to sleep. Ethiopians are strong people, but
some go crazy,” she said.
The numbers of arrivals in Yemen from the Horn of Africa in the last three years has doubled - from 53,382 in 2010 to a record 107,532 in 2012.
Ethiopians make up the majority of arrivals - up from 64 percent in 2010 to 78 percent last year.
The fence
“The Saudis have cracked down. The border’s not closed but it’s more
difficult to get in,” said one aid worker who asked not to be named.
“You see the migrants on the road and they’re stuck. They trudge up to
the border from Haradh. It’s an awful place. There’s nothing there. They
trudge up to the border and they come back and they’re stuck.”
Earlier this year, Saudi Arabia announced plans to resume construction of a 3m-high fence along its 1,800km border with Yemen.
Work on the controversial project initially started in 2003, but was
suspended a year later. In 2008 a fence was put up along the coastal
area around Haradh where much of the cross-border smuggling of people,
drugs and weapons is concentrated.
In addition to the fence, Saudi Arabia has also cleared the border areas
of settlements and uses floodlights and thermal detection cameras to
try to stop the often heavily-armed smugglers.
Growing crisis
These restrictions have led to a build-up of pressure in Haradh and the
surrounding Hajjah Governorate, where poverty is widespread.
The governorate, which depends on economic ties with Saudi Arabia,
already supports more than a 100,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs)
who fled neighbouring Sa’dah Governorate after the 2004 Houthi uprising
and subsequent conflicts.
Some of the IDP families at the al-Mazraq IDP camps a short drive from
Haradh rely on breadwinners in Saudi Arabia, but residents complain that
the border restrictions have pushed them into poverty.
“We used to work in construction in Saudi, but now because of the fence,
lots of Yemenis have been jailed there. Now there are video cameras and
machine guns stopping us getting across,” said one camp resident, Saleh
Hassan.
Recent changes to Saudi labour laws have also threatened tens of
thousands of Yemenis with expulsion, which would further add to the
country’s economic difficulties two years after the turmoil of the Arab
Spring.
Press reports
quoted government officials this week saying 53,000 Yemenis had been
deported from Saudi Arabia since the beginning of June, and tens of
thousands more are expected in the coming days.
Community leaders in Haradh say the new restrictions have led to a
significant decrease in economic activity, making it more and more
difficult for the town to support the tens of thousands of African
migrants.
“We are afraid for the migrants because of the torture they often
suffer, and also of them. Now with the fence up, they are creating more
problems,” the head of the local council in Haradh, Sheik Hamoud Haidar,
told IRIN.
“We are afraid of them because they are hungry. A hungry man is an angry man.”
Around 2,000 migrants have also been freed around Haradh in recent
months following army raids on smuggling yards to free them from
captivity. Deportations from Saudi Arabia also push African migrants
back into Haradh - an estimated 40 percent of the 3,000 migrants using
the International Organization for Migration (IOM) Migrant Response
Centre in Haradh have come from Saudi Arabia.
“It is clear that it is the right of any country to close its borders to
clandestine operations. Having said that, we are today faced with
25,000 people who are trapped in the border,” said Ismail Ould Cheikh
Ahmed, the humanitarian coordinator in Yemen.
“Every time there is a military operation, we discover another 500 or
700 who have been in this or that camp controlled by human traffickers
and abusers. So the number is only increasing - 25,000 is something that
Yemen today cannot absorb.”
Returns
The increase in demand for migrant services in Haradh this year came at
just the wrong time for the supply of humanitarian relief services,
which face cutbacks due to funding shortfalls.
IOM suspended large-scale return flights in September 2012, and the
World Food Programme’s provision of hot meals to around 3,000 migrants
at the IOM centre was scaled back temporarily in January by 90 percent,
though these have now been restored.
The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has been working with NGO InterSOS and
the Yemeni government in providing temporary support to a Child Protection Centre in Haradh, where IRIN met 50 Ethiopian children getting ready to fly back home.
“We were beaten, tortured and scarred by armed gunmen when we arrived in
Yemen. We escaped and made it into Saudi Arabia, but we were caught,”
said Saed Oumar Youssouf, 16.
“After a night in jail, and 12 nights elsewhere, we were shipped back to Yemen.”
All the children said they were looking forward to returning to
Ethiopia. Preliminary registration at the IOM centre in Haradh for
return flights to Ethiopia restarted at the end of May, and since early
June 633 migrants have voluntarily returned, with places given as a
priority to the most vulnerable.
Health
IOM’s operations in Haradh are focused on the Migrant Response Centre
set up in October 2010. It has voluntarily returned nearly 10,000
migrants since then, and treated 52,000 at the health centre, where they
deal with 100-150 cases per day depending on the season.
“The numbers are just growing. Many of the cases we see are infectious
diseases and diarrhoea; their immunity is very weak due to
malnutrition,” said IOM’s doctor at the centre, Fadl Mansour Ali.
He said a large number of patients had malaria and other parasite infections, and also depression and anxiety.
Not everyone recovers. The morgue in Haradh has room for 17 bodies, but
has been keeping around 50, almost all unclaimed bodies of dead
migrants. The electricity supply is unreliable and the single generator
repeatedly breaks down creating a terrible smell.
Korom Asmro Noqassa from the Tigray region in northern Ethiopia shares a
bed with another patient inside the small cabin that forms the main
part of the IOM clinic.
After four months in Haradh, he says he is ready to go home. “I wanted
to go back as soon as I realized it was so hard to get across; back home
maybe I can find a job and support my family. Most here want to go back
home now,” he said.
“I’m going to tell people my own story. Smugglers cost money and aren’t
reliable. But it’s very hard for people to say that they have failed.”
Changing perceptions
There is broad recognition that tackling the migration at source can really help reduce the suffering.
“IOM is talking about flying back 500 but by that time there will be
another 2,000 here,” said Haradh local council chief Sheik Haidar.
“I’m willing to go to Ethiopia and Djibouti to explain how challenging
migration is because the picture there now is that you can go to Saudi,
[and you can get] thousands of dollars and dream jobs,” he added.
Conversations with migrants in Haradh suggest many think it will be
socially difficult to explain their lack of success, and that means
thousands continue to cross into Yemen with little appreciation of the
risks and difficulties.
“The problem is that somehow at the origin people are not receiving the
information. They are still thinking that this is an El Dorado and it
will change their lives,” said Ould Cheikh Ahmed.
“The reality is that the border is now totally fenced or closed and the
camps that are receiving them in Yemen are completely overwhelmed, so
it’s a dramatic situation.”
He says part of a solution would be a regional conference between the
concerned countries including Yemen, Ethiopia and Saudi Arabia among
others.
“It’s a case that has to be addressed with a sub-regional approach. The
point is simply to say that it goes beyond the possible effort of the
government of Yemen and the possible financial means and capacity of
Yemen.”