Haradh — The vast inequalities of wealth on either side of the invisible boundary between the Arab world's richest and poorest countries - Yemen and Saudi Arabia - have come to define the small town of Haradh in northwestern Yemen, where aid agencies are scrambling to help an increasing number of stranded and ill-treated African migrants.
"They took my wife and cousin," said Mohammed Abdullah quietly in Arabic, before our Amharic-to-English translator came in. A 23-year-old Ethiopian, Mohammed has been moving between Yemen and Saudi Arabia for six years, but only recently fell prey to what some aid workers say is Saudi Arabia's unofficial policy of dumping African migrants across the border, where they are left at the mercy of smugglers.
Mohammed made it to Saudi Arabia three years ago and worked as a jockey, before eventually being deported. Last week he tried to cross again, this time with his 20-year-old wife and 28-year-old female cousin. They were captured by Saudi authorities, who filled two buses with Africans to be deported. When they got to the border, however, the Saudi soldiers phoned smugglers on the Yemeni side.
"The smugglers told the soldiers to send the women over first," said Mohammed. "The women were taken off the buses and walked across the border, where they waited with Yemeni soldiers until the smugglers came and took them. Then we were allowed to cross. One Yemeni soldier tried to take my mobile phone, and he beat me when I refused," he said, as he revealed a deep gash on his neck. After Mohammed called his wife, a smuggler took the phone from her and demanded 50,000 Yemeni riyals (US$235) for the release of each of his family members.
Kimya said the women held in smuggler houses are abused. "The women are beaten and forced to call their families in Ethiopia to transfer money. They threaten any woman they want with a gun and rape her."
New reality
Tales such as these are increasing as a result of a new reality in Haradh in recent months. Since early September, Saudi Arabia has reportedly begun an aggressive policy of deporting African migrants to Yemen.
Over 2,800 African migrants are registered with the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Haradh.
There is a robust humanitarian presence here, but the UN and its partner agencies are in Haradh to deal with internally displaced Yemenis fleeing conflict in Saada between Houthi tribesmen and the Yemeni government. About 17,000 internally displaced families are in and around Haradh, surviving primarily on rations provided by the World Food Programme. Already under-funded and stretched by this humanitarian crisis, itself marked by widespread malnutrition, humanitarian actors are now trying to deal with this new situation, too.
MSF (Doctors Without Borders) has opened a hospital - originally intended for internally displaced persons (IDPs) - to the migrants, and UNHCR has devoted staff to dealing with the emerging crisis.
"This is part of a holistic approach, including information campaigns in Somalia and Ethiopia, while also working with authorities here [in Yemen] for better treatment of migrants," said Lorenz, referring to the efforts of the Mixed Migration Task Force, which is composed of a variety of NGOs and inter-governmental organizations.
Two-week walk
Medina Mohammed, 25, is one Ethiopian woman who wishes she had known of the hardships involved before she undertook her journey. She walked for nearly two weeks to get to the Djibouti coast, where she paid 6,000 Ethiopian birr ($365) to smugglers to take her on the five-hour journey to Yemen.
The women are beaten and forced to call their families in Ethiopia to transfer money. They threaten any woman they want with a gun and rape her
After making her way to Haradh, she failed to get into Saudi Arabia. "We could not get in because the soldiers were shooting at us." Referring to her ordeal since leaving Ethiopia, she said: "We didn't know it would be so hard and dangerous... We wish we were back in Ethiopia."
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