New York - About 100 people were feared drowned off the
coast of Yemen after they were forced to swim ashore by smugglers,
the UN refugee agency said Friday citing reports by survivors.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees said 47 Somalis survived the
ordeal after the smugglers forced all 150 people aboard off the boat
that left the Somali port of Marera, near Bossaro on Monday. The boat
spent three days crossing the Gulf of Aden and was 5 kilometres off
the Yemeni coast when the smugglers forced their human cargo to swim.
UNHCR said 12 people that were put on a smaller boat and arrived
safely.
'The 12 were placed in a smaller boat, while the others had to try
to swim to shore,' UNHCR spokesman Ron Redmond said in Geneva.
'Survivors said they counted a total of 47 people reaching shore,
and later saw Yemeni authorities burying five bodies,' he said.
UNHCR said a search was ordered for the rest of the passengers.
The smuggling accident was the latest in a series of human smuggling
cases. At least 52 Somalis died last month onboard their smuggling
boat after it broke down and drifted for 18 days without food or
water.
UNHCR said about 32,000 people were safely smuggled into Yemen so
far this year, while 230 people have died and 365 others were
reported missing.
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