For the tens of
thousands of
African refugees
fleeing to Yemen
each year, the
journey across
the Gulf of Aden
can be
heartbreakingly
difficult and
dangerous - and
then things
often only get
worse. As the
overcrowded
boats approach
shore, smugglers
sometimes force
passengers in
the water, and
some drown. Many
who survive
undergo a final
indignity at the
hands of Yemen's
two-tier
immigration
system.
The vast
majority of
African refugees
fleeing to Yemen
come from
Somalia and
Ethiopia. To its
credit, Yemen
welcomes Somalis
fleeing the
decades of
conflict in
their country.
But Ethiopians
and others risk
being arrested
and illegally
forced to return
home, possibly
to face
persecution. "We
are escaping
from danger in
our country," an
Ethiopian
refugee told
Human Rights
Watch. "We are
the same as
other refugees,
and yet we are
not treated that
way."
A new report
from Human
Rights Watch
documents the
harsh treatment
of refugees
traveling to
Yemen and calls
on the Yemeni
government to
stop
systematically
arresting
Ethiopian asylum
seekers and
forcibly
returning them
home. The
53-page report
also calls on
the United
Nations High
Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR)
to put more
pressure on the
Yemeni
government to
meet its
obligations
toward all
asylum seekers
and refugees.
"The Yemeni
government's
mistreatment of
Ethiopian asylum
seekers is bad
enough," said
Gerry Simpson,
refugee
researcher and
advocate at
Human Rights
Watch. "What
makes it so much
worse is that
many of the
victims have
been beaten or
even seen their
loved ones
killed during
the crossing.
When they go to
Yemen they are
traumatized and
need help, not
more abuse."
More than
100,000 people
have arrived by
boat along
Yemen's coast
during the past
two years. Most
are fleeing war
or persecution
at home or are
in search of
work. Smugglers
take them from
either the
Somali port city
of Bosasso or
the town of
Obock in
Djibouti. The
smugglers,
especially those
operating out of
Bosasso, often
treat their
passengers with
astonishing
brutality. The
report documents
cases of
passengers being
beaten and
raped. Some were
thrown overboard
miles from
shore.
Once the vessels
sail within
sight of the
Yemeni coast, it
is not uncommon
for the
smugglers to
force their
passengers into
the water. "As
the boat came
close to Yemen
they started
beating the
people to get
them off the
boat," a Somali
man told Human
Rights Watch.
"[The smuggler]
had said
everyone should
go, but the
people did not
go because they
are afraid. They
caught my little
girl and dropped
her into the
sea. She was 3
years old. I
fought with the
man, and he hit
me with a stick
and I lost some
of my teeth.
After that they
started pushing
all of us into
the sea. They
dropped all of
my children into
the sea - five
of them. The
3-year-old girl
died."
If they make it
to land,
non-Somalis who
are caught by
security forces
typically have
no meaningful
opportunity to
claim asylum.
Most often, they
are imprisoned
and put on a
fast track
toward
deportation. It
is not known how
many asylum
seekers have
been arrested
and deported in
this way.
Neither UNHCR
nor anyone else
has regular
access to people
in immigration
detention.
Ethiopian
embassy
officials in the
Yemeni capital,
San'a, interview
people awaiting
deportation to
Ethiopia, and
there are
disturbing
indications that
those officials
have coerced
asylum seekers
into agreeing to
return home.
The Ethiopian
asylum seekers
who manage to
negotiate the
obstacles in
their path and
reach a UNHCR
office without
being arrested
are able to
apply for
refugee status.
If UNHCR
recognizes them
as refugees the
government will
not arrest and
deport them. But
they still face
discriminatory
government
policies that
relegate them to
a kind of
second-tier
refugee status.
And their
problems are not
over.
The Yemeni
government does
not issue
official
identification
documents to
non-Somali
refugees. That
bars them from
claiming rights
and services to
which they
should be
entitled.
Ethiopian
refugees also
suffer
harassment and
violence, fueled
in part by the
perception that
the government
will not protect
them. In many
cases, Yemeni
police officers
have refused to
investigate or
arrest Yemenis
responsible for
serious crimes
against
Ethiopian
refugees. Human
Rights Watch
documented
numerous cases
of assault,
sexual
harassment, and
murder of
Ethiopian
refugees that
went unpunished.
The Human Rights
Watch report
acknowledges
that UNHCR has a
difficult job in
Yemen, and notes
that there are
serious
practical limits
to its ability
to influence
Yemeni
government
policy. Still,
the report
concludes, the
refugee agency
has not done
enough to
pressure Yemeni
authorities to
protect the
rights of
non-Somali
refugees and
asylum seekers.
Human Rights
Watch