Yemenis Fleeing War and Ethiopians Escaping Drought Meet in Djibouti

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Hundreds of Yemenis take boats to Djibouti trying to flee Yemen's war, on May 24, 2015. So far, 2.7 million Yemenis have been internally displaced, and over 19,600 have fled to Djibouti. Jacob Simkin/NurPhoto/AP

A corpse lies by the side of the road. The man, likely an Ethiopian in his late 20s, is face down under a bush with his arms stretched out in front of him. He is wearing only shorts and a bright yellow tank top marred by dust and blood. No shoes, no money, no ID. Passersby heading to Friday prayer are saddened but not surprised.

The man is assumed to be one of thousands fleeing drought in Ethiopia and heading for Saudi Arabia, where they hope to find work. The journey takes them to Djibouti on foot, then by boat to Yemen, the nearest point on the Arabian Peninsula. From Yemen, the migrants pay smugglers to get them across the border to Saudi Arabia. "The worst part is the heat," says Zeynaba Kamil, a 16-year-old Ethiopian girl who does not know that there is a war in Yemen. She walked for 15 days through the Djiboutian desert, passing Lake Assal, where temperatures sometimes reach 130 degrees.

Zeynaba has made it as far as Obock, a sleepy port town in northern Djibouti that has become a hub for people fleeing both into and out of a war zone. While Ethiopians want to travel from here to Yemen, thousands of Yemeni refugees coming the other way have landed on Djiboutian shores in the last year, escaping the conflict in their country.

In the days, sometimes weeks, before crossing, Ethiopians seek shade under parched juniper trees and beg for food by the local mosque. There are about 1,000 of them here, according to the International Organization for Migration (IOM). A few miles from town, 1,400 Yemenis live in the Markazi refugee camp, a fenced compound surrounded by vast stretches of desert.

The war in Yemen has been raging since March 2015, when Houthi insurgents ousted the government, prompting an airstrike campaign by a Saudi-led coalition. So far, 2.7 million Yemenis have been internally displaced, and more than 19,600 have fled to Djibouti. Since the start of the year, the Regional Mixed Migration Secretariat (RMMS) estimates, 40,000 Ethiopians fleeing poverty and the country's worst drought in 50 years have passed through Obock.

Miftahou Kalil, a 30-year-old Ethiopian on his way to Saudi Arabia, says he knows about the conflict in Yemen, but he's determined to go anyway. Back in his home region of Oromia, Kalil worked as a farmer, but the drought ruined his crop. "Nothing can be worse than it is at home," he says. Kalil and a dozen others from his village sleep under a tree on the town's outskirts while they wait for smugglers to load them on boats. Ethiopians pay $100 for a ride to Yemen on overloaded wooden boats. If they survive the voyage, they will pay $250 to cross the highly patrolled border with Saudi Arabia.

The man found by the side of the road just a few miles from Obock is hardly the first to die on the trek. Later, Kalil and other Ethiopians bury him in the local cemetery, beside the unmarked graves of three other migrants. They take turns digging in silence, then lower the body into the ground and quickly scatter back to the trees.

Few of these migrants or refugees want to stay in Djibouti. This desert nation bordering Ethiopia, Eritrea and Somalia is best known for hosting American military bases and has little to offer foreigners besides harsh weather.

Some of the Ethiopians hope the conflict in Yemen will make their trip easier, as Yemeni authorities are preoccupied with other things, but the IOM warns that it's actually the opposite. "We're having to repatriate hundreds of Ethiopians," says Ali al-Jefri, the IOM's project officer in Obock, "and many come back with bullet wounds." Ziad, a recently retired Ethiopian smuggler, claims passage is now more dangerous than ever. He stopped shipping migrants after one of his boats sank and he saw his clients' bodies wash ashore. Now Ziad works as a fisherman. His advice to those heading to Yemen: "Carry a knife."

Yemeni refugees, who often see migrants walk past their camp, can't fathom why anyone would willingly go into the nightmare they just escaped. "These Ethiopians are mad!" says Rania Dheya, a medical student from Aden, in southern Yemen. Her family came to Djibouti a year ago after Houthi forces took over their hometown and "covered the streets in blood."

Dheya is grateful for Djibouti's generosity but says living conditions in Obock are too harsh. "It doesn't matter how UNCHR tries to improve it," she says, referring to the U.N.'s refugee agency. "Desert is desert." The camp is fenced to protect refugees from wild animals, but snakes and scorpions often sneak into their homes. In summer, violent sandstorms blow tents over, and Yemenis say it gets so hot they can fry eggs on the ground. The unrelenting heat is one of the reasons almost 1,000 refugees have left the camp since February for Djibouti's eponymous, and pricey, capital or relatively safe corners of Yemen.

Djibouti has long served as a safe haven for those fleeing conflict; Somali refugees have been in the country since the early '90s. Unlike Yemen's other neighbors, Oman and Saudi Arabia, Djibouti guarantees refugees the right to health care, education and work. But with less than a million citizens, limited public services and a 60 percent unemployment rate, hosting refugees and migrants is a strain on the nation's scarce resources. "We won't turn anyone away," says Obock's prefect, Hassan Gabaleh Ahmed, "but we need help."

Ahmed Houmed, a camp administrator for the Djibouti refugee agency, says refugees are boosting Obock's emaciated economy. Yemenis buy from local shops and spend hours in the town's only cyber café. There's even a popular restaurant run by refugees where locals and U.N. workers eat malooga, traditional Yemeni flatbread, under the despairing watch of hungry Ethiopian migrants who pick up the leftovers.

As the Ethiopian drought continues, Bram Frouws, RMMS coordinator, warns that "the flow [from Ethiopia] won't cease anytime soon." After all, he says, "if war doesn't stop them, what will?" Refugee arrivals in Djibouti from Yemen have dropped, in part due to the current ceasefire. But peace negotiations in Kuwait have made little progress, and experts fear this fragile truce may fail like the previous three.

Everyone is in limbo here. Yemenis text family back home, asking if it's safe to return, while Ethiopians debate which smuggler to trust with their lives. After laying the headstone on his fellow migrant's grave, Kalil approaches an IOM worker. "I want to go back home," he says. "Can you help me?" But the IOM doesn't have funding for voluntary repatriations from Djibouti—all the worker can do is tell him to wait. The translator asks how many others want to return. "All of us," Kalil says. The 20 men around him nod in agreement.

As the sun begins to set, five of them decide to start the long walk back to Ethiopia.