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LAS QORAY, Somalia Feb 23 (Garowe
Online) - Nearly 100 Ethiopian migrants were dumped off of north
Somalia's coastal town of Las Qoray and informed that they were
on Yemeni shores, local sources reported Saturday.
Las Qoray residents awoke today to find the migrants near the
coast, including women and children.
A local source told Garowe Online that the migrants are from
Ethiopia, and most belong to that country's ethnic Oromo
majority.
The migrants told Las Qoray locals that they were thrown
overboard when they "saw lights" in the distance. The armed
smugglers apparently told the migrants that they had reached the
shores of Yemen, a destination for migrants fleeing the Horn of
Africa region.
The boat was loaded in a small village east of the port city of
Bossaso, the commercial hub of the Puntland regional autonomy,
the migrants said.
The boat stayed on the high seas for many hours and then got
close to the shore during the night, when the unsuspecting
migrants could be easily tricked.
"They [migrants] told us they were thrown overboard," said a
local clan elder who spoke with the Ethiopians. "They looked
tired and were in very bad shape."
The Bossaso-to-Yemen smuggling route kills hundreds of African
migrants each year. Earlier this week, at least 37 people,
mostly Somalis and Ethiopians, died in the Gulf of Aden as they
attempted to reach the Yemeni coast.
Las Qoray is located in Sanaag, a region disputed for years
between Puntland and the neighboring self-declared Republic of
Somaliland.
But since last year, Las Qoray and much of Sanaag region has
remained in the hands of local clan leaders who established the
Maakhir State of Somalia, which considers itself part of federal
Somalia but independent of both Somaliland and Puntland. |