Sixteen would-be migrants have died and another 28 are missing after a boat carrying 77 people capsized off the coast of Djibouti, the second such incident in two weeks, the United Nations migration agency said on Tuesday.
The boat’s occupants included children, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said in a post on social media platform X.
It said its Djiboutian office was helping with rescue efforts.
Two weeks ago, the United Nations migration agency reported that 38 people, including children, died in another shipwreck off the Djibouti coast.
The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) said at least six other people were missing and presumed dead, and that 22 survivors were being assisted by the IOM and local authorities.
Yvonne Ndege, regional spokesperson for the IOM, said the shipwreck happened about 200 metres off Djibouti and that the boat carrying the migrants had left Yemen around 2 a.m. local time on April 8.
It sank about two hours later with around 66 people on board, predominantly from the Horn of Africa region.
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They were believed to be mostly Ethiopian nationals, she said.
“Every year tens of thousands of migrants leave the Horn of Africa, mainly from Ethiopia and Somalia trying to reach the Gulf nations,” Ndege said.
“(But) thousands are stuck in Yemen. It’s rational to conclude that the group of migrants who perished in this tragedy was trying to return to Djibouti to buy time and try again later or return home.” (Reuters/NAN)