68 killed as African migrant boat capsizes off Yemen

Dozens of bodies have washed ashore in the southern Yemeni governorate of Abyan. Authorities in Abyan are taking part in a search and rescue operation.
68 killed as African migrant boat capsizes off Yemen
The vessel was taking Ethiopians to Yemen, a popular transit country for migrants to reach wealthy Gulf nations such as Saudi Arabia. The UN says Yemen is witnessing an influx of African migrants, despite a civil war.
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A vessel carrying African migrants sank off the coast of Yemen, killing dozens, the UN's International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said on Sunday.
Sixty-eight of some 154 migrants on board the boat died when it sank early on Sunday, with 74 still missing, the Associated Press news agency reported, citing the IOM.
The passengers on the vessel are reported to all be Ethiopian nationals.
Dozens of bodies have washed ashore in the southern Yemeni governorate of Abyan. Authorities in Abyan are taking part in a search and rescue operation.
Abdusattor Esoev, the head of the IOM in Yemen, told AP that 12 migrants survived the capsizing of the boat.
Despite a decade of civil war, Yemen is still a popular transit country for migrants seeking access to wealthy Arab countries such as Saudi Arabia for a better life.
There is a large Ethiopian community in Saudi Arabia, with significant diaspora populations also in the UAE and Bahrain.
On their journey in Yemen, the Ethiopians face danger due to the war between the Iran-linked Houthis and the UN-recognised government.
A 2020 Human Rights Watch Report found the Houthis killed and expelled Ethiopian migrants in Yemen at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.
An IOM report published in March found that 60,000 migrants came to Yemen in 2024. The IOM says the route between the Horn of Africa to Yemen is "one of the world's busiest and most perilous mixed migration routes."
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