Arab News

Death toll in migrant boat capsize off Djibouti rises to 24: UN agency

- AFP Nairobi

The death toll from a migrant boat disaster off Djibouti this week has risen to 24, the UN’s migration agency said, highlighti­ng a sharp increase in the number of people returning from Yemen to the Horn of Africa nation this year.

The capsize on Monday was the second fatal maritime accident in two weeks off Djibouti, which lies on the perilous so-called Eastern Migration Route from Africa to the Arabian Peninsula.

At least 24 people died, and 20 remain missing after the boat carrying at least 77 migrants, including children, capsized near the town of Obock, the Internatio­nal Organizati­on for Migration said. It said 33 survivors were being cared for at an IOM center in Obock and that local authoritie­s are conducting search and rescue operations in the hope of finding more people alive.

Addis Ababa’s ambassador to Djibouti had said those on the boat were Ethiopian migrants.

Another vessel also carrying mainly

Ethiopian migrants sank in the same area on April 8, with a death toll of at least 38.

“The occurrence of two such tragedies within two weeks highlights the dangers faced by children, women, and men migrating through irregular routes, underscori­ng the importance of establishi­ng safe and legal pathways for migration,” IOM chief of mission in Djibouti, Tanja Pacifico, said.

The IOM said it had recorded a total of 1,350 deaths on the Eastern Route since 2014, not including this year. In 2023 alone, it said it documented at least 698 deaths along the route, including 105 lost at sea.

The agency believed the people on both ill-fated vessels were attempting to return from Yemen to Djibouti. Each year, tens of thousands of African migrants brave the Eastern Route across the Red Sea to reach Gulf nations, escape conflict or natural disaster, or seek better economic opportunit­ies.

However, many are unsuccessf­ul and “thousands are stranded in Yemen where they experience extremely harsh conditions,” the IOM said.

 ?? AFP ?? The remains of boats used by migrants to cross the Mediterran­ean are scattered along the port of El-Amra in Tunisia’s Sfax governorat­e.
AFP The remains of boats used by migrants to cross the Mediterran­ean are scattered along the port of El-Amra in Tunisia’s Sfax governorat­e.

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