PAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONS
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Politics
    PoliticsShow More
    Angola’s Lourenço and DR Congo Announce Ceasefire Under Doha Peace Framework

    By Ajong Mbapndah L The Democratic Republic of the Congo has formally…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Malawi : Faith Leader Bushiri Hails Mutharika’s Reform-Focused SONA

    By Burnett Munthali Prophet Shepherd Bushiri, founder of ECG–Jesus Nation, has praised…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    South Sudan’s Political Transition in Focus as Kiir Attends AU Assembly

    By Deng Machol ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — Salva Kiir arrived in Addis…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    APC Secretary-General Remanded in Sierra Leone Court Over Alleged Incitement

    By Ishmael Sallieu Koroma Freetown, Sierra Leone — 13 February 2026 —…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Mutharika Ignites Malawi’s Recovery Drive with Bold Pro-Growth Agenda

    By Burnett Munthali President Arthur Peter Mutharika has set Malawi on what…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Business
    BusinessShow More
    Ayuk and OPEC Chief Forge Strategic Ties On Africa’s Energy Future

    By Ajong Mbapndah L At a pivotal moment for Africa’s energy future,…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Love in the Skies: Emirates Connects African Travellers to the World’s Most Romantic Destinations

    -Passengers can also enjoy themed menus in lounges worldwide and a curated…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Africa’s Emerging Citizenship Programs: Why Get an African Passport in 2026

    An African passport is rarely the first on the radar for many…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Why Africa’s Energy Supply Gap is its Defining Commercial Opportunity

    Africa’s energy deficit is often framed as a development crisis, but in…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Ecobank And Sierra Rutile Sign Landmark USD 40 Million Financing Deal To Accelerate Intra-African Mining Partnership.

    -The strategic facility funds the relocation of a processing plant from Kenya…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Health
  • Sport
    SportShow More
    Momentum Accelerates As Dakar 2026 Enters Games Year

    -With the Youth Olympic Games (YOG) now firmly on the horizon, preparations…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    SLFA Appoints Benson Bawoh and Ishmail Kanu to Top Administrative Roles

    By Ishmael Sallieu Koroma The Sierra Leone Football Association (SLFA) has announced…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    A Golden Homecoming: World Cup Trophy Lands in Pretoria, Igniting 2026 Dreams and Controversy

    By Fidelis Zvomuya Under the bright Pretoria sun, a case of polished…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Basketball Africa League to Tip Off Sixth Season on March 27 in South Africa

    -The 2026 BAL season will feature the top 12 club teams from…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Cameroon: Derby Dominance Continues as Victoria United Extend PWD Hoodoo

    By Boris Esono Nwenfor LIMBE, PAV – The Anglophone derby lived up…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Multimedia
    • Sports
    • Documentaries
    • Comedy
    • Music
    • Interviews
  • APO/PAV
    APO/PAVShow More
    Billions at Play: Centurion CEO Agrees Deal to Write New Book about Africa’s Oil and Gas

    The book, “Billions at Play: The Future of African Energy”, will be…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • AMA/PAV
    AMA/PAVShow More
    U.S. Embassy Pretoria Celebrates Mandela Day at Zola Community Health Center in Soweto

    PRETORIA, South Africa, July 22, 2019,-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- To honor Nelson Mandela’s…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Zimbabwe: Droughts leave millions food insecure, UN food agency scales up assistance

    Severe drought has rendered more than a third of rural households in…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Mozambique: Opposition candidate facing pre-election death threats and intimidation

    GENEVA, Switzerland, July 19, 2019,-/African Media Agency (AMA)/- The main opposition candidate in…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    The END Fund – Making everyday a Mandela Day

    JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, July 18th 2019,-/African Media Agency/- 2018 was a true landmark…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Innovation leaders gather in Nairobi to unpack Intelligent Enterprise opportunities at SAP Innovation Day.

    NAIROBI, Kenya , July 18, 2019 -/African Media Agency (AMA)/- About 600…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Media OutReach
    Media OutReachShow More
    CrazyLive to Host Free Investment Seminar in Hong Kong This March

    Helping Retail Investors Build Decision-Making Discipline in Volatile MarketsHONG KONG SAR -…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Media Architects Celebrates 25 Years of Innovation in Live Production Streaming and Video Learning Technologies

    SINGAPORE - Media OutReach Newswire - 14 February 2026 - Media Architects…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Open source of the Congzi AI algorithm: Transforming ordinary artificial intelligence into physical experts

    SHANDONG, CHINA - Media OutReach Newswire - 13 February 2026 - On…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    HKCERT Capture The Flag Challenge 2025 Achieves a Record 40% Surge in Participation

    First-Ever Attack-Defence Simulation Aligns with Real Corporate Needs Setting a New Benchmark…

    By
    Pan African Visions
    Appier Delivers Record Results Driven by Agentic AI Innovation

    E-Commerce and Online Travel Dual Engines Reinforce Robust Expansion. Strong Guidance Underscores…

    By
    Pan African Visions
  • Blogs
    • African Show Biz
    • Insights Africa
    • Cumaland Diary
    • Kamer Blues
    • Nigerian Round Up
    • Ugandan Titbits
    • African View Points
    • Global Africa
  • Magazines
Search
  • Global Africa
  • Interviews
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • African Newsmakers
  • African View Points
  • Development
  • Discoveries
  • Education
© 2026. Pan African Visions. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Witnessing the Hell That a Migrant Can Face
Font ResizerAa
PAN AFRICAN VISIONSPAN AFRICAN VISIONS
  • Politics
  • Business in Africa
  • Blog
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Multimedia
  • Contact
Search
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Health
  • Sport
  • Multimedia
    • Sports
    • Documentaries
    • Comedy
    • Music
    • Interviews
  • APO/PAV
  • AMA/PAV
  • Media OutReach
  • Blogs
    • African Show Biz
    • Insights Africa
    • Cumaland Diary
    • Kamer Blues
    • Nigerian Round Up
    • Ugandan Titbits
    • African View Points
    • Global Africa
  • Magazines
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2025 Pan African Visions.  All Rights Reserved.
PAN AFRICAN VISIONS > Blog > Africa > Algeria > Witnessing the Hell That a Migrant Can Face
AlgeriaAngolaBeninBotswanaBurkina FasoBurundiCameroonCape VerdeCentral African RepublicChadComorosCongo BrazavilleCongo RDCCOTE D'IVOIREDevelopmentDjiboutiEgyptEquatorial GuineaEritreaEthiopiaFeaturedGabonGambiaGhanaGuineaGuinea BissauKENYALESOTHOLIBERIALIBYAMADASGARMALAWIMALIMAURITANIAMAURITIUSMOROCCOMOZAMBIQUENAMIBIANIGERNIGERIARWANDASAHARAWISAO TOMESENEGALSIERRA LEONESOMALIASOUTH AFRICASOUTH SUDANSUDANSWAZILANDTANZANIATOGOTUNISIAUGANDAZAMBIAZIMBABWE

Witnessing the Hell That a Migrant Can Face

Last updated: March 4, 2020 3:17 pm
Pan African Visions
Share
A monthly average of 11,500 people traveling from the Horn of Africa to Yemen last year made the so-called Eastern Route the busiest maritime migration path on earth says the UN. Photo Credit UN
SHARE

By Vijay Prashad*

A young Somali woman recently arrived in Yemen. Somalis made up roughly eight per cent of the 138,000 migrants who arrived in Yemen last year; 92 per cent were Ethiopian. Photo: IOM 2019 

At Obock, Djibouti, 2,000 migrants gather each day along the waters of the Gulf of Aden; they look for boats to get them to Yemen. Over the past two years, more migrants from Africa have used the “Eastern Route” rather than go across the Mediterranean Sea; according to the UN’s migration agency—International Organization for Migration—this Eastern Route is now the “busiest maritime migration path on earth.” Roughly 11,500 people got on boats at places like Obock and Bosasso, Somalia, to go into Yemen, and then overland to Saudi Arabia, where they hope to get employment.

Ethiopia

Outside the Horn of Africa, Ethiopia is typically thought of as a country of distress due to the 1983-85 famine that wracked the country. But over the past few years, according to World Bank numbers, Ethiopia has been one of the fastest-growing countries in the world (after Myanmar and China). On July 18, 2019, the director of the International Monetary Fund’s African Department Abebe Aemro Selassie gave a presentation at the Ethiopian Economics Association. In his presentation, Selassie said that the key reasons why Ethiopia has seen such high growth have been improvements in the productivity of labor and increased investment in capital stock (factories, infrastructure). To make these gains, Ethiopia had to borrow, which has now put it in a position of debt vulnerability.

If you just look at the numbers, Ethiopia is doing great. But, not for people in the rural districts, where agrarian distress remains a fact of life. Of those who use the Eastern Route to migrate, over 90 percent come from Ethiopia, and most of them from the rural districts of Amhara, Oromia, and Tigray. The World Food Program and the Ethiopian government’s data shows us that these districts face terrible food insecurity and that there is a high level of food energy deficiency per adult in rural Ethiopia, with Amhara and Tigray leading the way. There has been barely any exit from the long-term crisis of agriculture in Ethiopia, whose lands are now increasingly threatened by corporations from India and Saudi Arabia and by shifts in the climate.

Neoliberal policies have enabled Ethiopia to grow quickly, but this growth has not been pro-people, certainly not the people of the rural districts of Amhara, Oromia, and Tigray, from where the main migration has been taking place.

Djibouti

Djibouti, at the tip of the Horn of Africa, within sight of Yemen, is one of the smallest countries in the world. But it is located at a strategic vantage, at the entrance of the Red Sea. That is the reason why it has been home to a very large United States military base—at Camp Lemonnier. But the U.S. base is no longer the only one; there are substantial bases for the militaries of China, France, Italy, and Japan.

For years, there was concern about the rise of piracy in the water off the Horn of Africa, with pirates from Somalia being seen as a major threat to global shipping. But, over the past decade, piracy here has decreased in these waters as it has decreased worldwide. It is clear that none of these bases are in Djibouti to deter piracy, which is their stated goal. They are there because of the geopolitical tensions around the Gulf region.

India and Saudi Arabia are building their own bases in Djibouti, with the Saudis even looking at Obock for land. The United Arab Emirates (UAE), which is prosecuting the war in Yemen with Saudi Arabia, already has military bases in Eritrea, Somaliland, and Somalia.

Despite the presence of these forces in such a small country, there is no effective way to prevent the migration of thousands of Ethiopians through Djibouti to Yemen. Neither the ports nor the waters are barriers to this human exodus.

Yemen

The Saudi-UAE war on Yemen has been going on for five years. On February 23, the parties to the conflict met in Jordan to agree on a prisoner exchange; this fulfills some of the commitments made in the Stockholm Agreement of 2018. A medical air bridge has allowed a handful of critically ill patients to be taken out of Yemen’s capital of Sana’a, while the port of Hudaydah is largely left free for necessary humanitarian goods to enter the country. Almost all of Yemen’s people are reliant upon these humanitarian goods for basic survival.

Despite this relatively good news, violence has escalated in certain key districts of Yemen over the past two weeks. Since January, 35,000 Yemenis have been displaced from their homes, an indicator of the dangerous situation in the country.

It is into this cauldron that the Ethiopian migrants come. Crossing the Red Sea is not easy, since the boats are insufficient and overcrowded; migrants who make it to Yemen report that they have seen people leap off the boats to certain death because of the terrible situation that they face. In March 2017, a UAE-Saudi helicopter fired at a boat carrying Somali migrants—killing at least 42 people; there are additional reports of this kind of activity along the Yemeni shoreline.

In Yemen, the migrants are held in detention camps, where they are abused by human traffickers and by other gangsters. Migrants in these camps, including in Aden, face extortion—if they cannot pay the guards, they are beaten, raped, and held indefinitely. When the spotlight is shone on any one of these camps, it closes and another opens elsewhere.

Saudi Arabia

If the migrants somehow make it to Saudi Arabia, the terror continues. Smugglers take the migrants into Saudi Arabia’s Jizan Province; often the migrants are made to carry qat (a stimulant grown in Eastern Africa) across the border. They are often shot at by Saudi border guards and—if caught—are either ransomed or held in places such as Jizan Central Prison (which might as well be a detention camp).

Saudi Arabia and Ethiopia have a strangely symbiotic relationship. Saudi Arabia relies upon at least 400,000 Ethiopian workers, who come to do a variety of jobs in the kingdom. But, every few years, Saudi Arabia deports these workers. In 2013, the Saudi government removed 100,000 Ethiopian workers; they were deemed to be “illegal,” arrested, and removed in chartered flights. Then, slowly, Ethiopian workers returned, now with lower wages and almost no rights. In March 2017, Saudi Arabia deported 260,000 Ethiopians. These deportations are a disciplinary mechanism, a way to keep the Ethiopian migrants on their toes.

Ethiopia conducted agreements with Saudi Arabia (2017) and the UAE (2018) to ensure protections for their citizens, but there is little evidence that this is helping. Both Saudi Arabia and the UAE have been putting billions of dollars into the National Bank of Ethiopia and into its government, part of the foreign direct investment (FDI) that has heated up the Ethiopian economy. Given this money, it is impossible to imagine the government of Ethiopia standing up for its citizens in the Gulf.

The boats from Obock, Djibouti, will continue to ply their trade; Ethiopians will continue to travel the Eastern Route into Saudi Arabia. No plans are afoot inside Ethiopia to be able to generate employment to hold the population in place, and there are certainly no plans in Saudi Arabia to improve the conditions of its workers.

There is a demonstration of values here: when workers come to Saudi Arabia, they have to travel by the dangerous waters and through war-torn Yemen; when they get deported, they are flown home by aircraft.

*Source: Independent Media Institute .This article was produced by Globetrotter, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

Share This Article
LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Coronavirus : 151 Sud-Africains bientôt rapatriés de Chine
Next Article The regional forum was in its second edition Cameroon: Entrepreneurs schooled on gaining proper business exposure at SBEC 2020 Regional Forum
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your Trusted Source for Accurate and Timely Updates!

Our commitment to accuracy, impartiality, and delivering breaking news as it happens has earned us the trust of a vast audience. Stay ahead with real-time updates on the latest events, trends.
FacebookLike
XFollow
InstagramFollow
LinkedInFollow

You Might Also Like

AlgeriaAngolaBenin

MORUWASA Trains Its Staff On Gender Equality

By
Pan African Visions

Canada @ 150: Lessons for Nigerian youth

By
Pan African Visions
AlgeriaAngolaBenin

Comheswa Unveils Radical Initiative Empowering Tanzanian Youth Against Human Trafficking

By
Pan African Visions
Nchout Ajara, player of the Match
AlgeriaAngolaBenin

FIFA WWC: Nchout Ajara’s last gasp effort sends Cameroon into round of 16

By
Pan African Visions
PAN AFRICAN VISIONS
Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss Medium

About US


Pan African Visions: Your instant connection to breaking stories and live updates. Stay informed with our real-time coverage across politics, tech, entertainment, and more. Your reliable source for 24/7 news.

  • 7614 Green Willow Court, Hyattsville, MD 20785 , USA
  • 1 24 0429 2177
  • pav@panafricanvisions.com
Top Categories
  • Politics
  • Business in Africa
  • Blog
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Multimedia
  • Contact
Usefull Links
  • PAV – Home
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Complaint
  • Advertise With Us

© 2025 Pan African Visions. 
All Rights Reserved.