At least 30 people drown as boat capsizes amid reports of gunfire used against those on board

This article is more than 2 years old

This article is more than 2 years old

At least 30 people drowned when their migrant boat capsized off war-torn Yemen this week, the UN has said, adding that it had received reports of gunfire being used against those on board.

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At least 152 Somalis and Ethiopians were on board the overcrowded vessel, which left Aden in southern Yemen on Tuesday, the UN refugee and migration agencies said in a joint statement.

“The vessel is believed to have been operated by unscrupulous smugglers who were attempting to take refugees and migrants to Djibouti, while also trying to extort more money from these refugees and migrants,” the statement said.

The boat turned back and “capsized amid reports of gunfire being used against the passengers”, it said, adding that it was working with the Yemeni coastguard to try to establish what happened.

“At least 30 people have died in this tragic incident,” it said.

More than 9,200 people have been killed in Yemen since a Saudi-led military coalition intervened in 2015 against Houthi rebels with the aim of restoring the country’s internationally recognised government to power.

But the impoverished country continues to draw migrants from the Horn of Africa, many of them seeking work in prosperous Gulf countries further north.

The UN Refugee Agency said it was “outraged” by the latest deaths.

“Prolonged conflict and insecurity in Yemen continues to expose vulnerable refugees and migrants to heightened risks of human rights violations including arbitrary arrest, detention, trafficking and deportation,” it said on Twitter.

In August last year, dozens of migrants from Somalia and Ethiopia died after human traffickers forced them off two Yemen-bound boats and into the sea.

Last March, a helicopter opened fire on a vessel carrying more than 140 migrants in the Red Sea off the Yemen coast, killing 42 civilians.

A confidential UN report seen by AFP said the attack was most likely carried out by the Saudi-led coalition.