Ethiopian migrants tell of torture and rape in Yemen - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

Wandering the information superhighway, he came upon the last refuge of civilization, PoFo, the only forum on the internet ...

Political issues and parties in the nations of Africa.

Moderator: PoFo Africa Mods

Forum rules: No one line posts please. This is an international political discussion forum, so please post in English only.
#14319875
This is really messed up!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-23321638

Efta is just 17 but has experienced shocking brutality.

The Ethiopian teenager survived a treacherous boat journey being smuggled across the Red Sea.

But on reaching Yemen, she was kidnapped and driven at gunpoint to a mud brick house.

She said: "They tortured other girls in front of me. They beat us and they raped us at gunpoint. I was terrified."

She is one of 80,000 Ethiopian migrants who undertake this dangerous journey every year.

They hope they will find work in the wealthy Gulf state of Saudi Arabia and be able to send money home.

Hafton Ekar, 23, made the journey from Ethiopia to Yemen with a group of friends.

Their aim was to find work in Saudi Arabia to support their families but they were kidnapped shortly after being smuggled into Yemen.

Hafton's father was told he needed to pay $300 to free his son but after the ransom was paid, Hafton was sold on to a 'torture camp'.

The new gang wanted another $250 but there was no money left. Hafton was brutally tortured.

"They hurt me very badly. I can't use the bathroom any more. I'm paralysed," he said.

His friends carried him on their backs when they escaped. Hafton now lies on a mattress in the refugee centre in Haradh.

But they risk being exploited by criminal gangs and the Yemeni military in the 500 km (310 miles) trek across Yemen to the Saudi border.
'Raped and burned'

Efta was held at what is known as a "torture camp" for three months.

She was too ashamed to ask her parents for money to set her free so she was raped every day.

Once it became clear that no ransom was going to be paid and after Efta fell ill, she was thrown out on the street.

She is now being cared for in a refugee centre run by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in the Yemeni border town of Haradh.

She remains traumatised by her experience.

"The women get raped and the men are burned. They break bones. They take people's eyes out," she said.

"Everything you can imagine, they do it. I saw it with my own eyes."

Most of the Ethiopians we met came from the Tigray region in the north of the country.

They crossed the mountains into Djibouti and then paid people smugglers to take them across the Red Sea at its shortest point, Bab al-Mandab (or the Gate of Grief).

It was a harbinger of the trials and tribulations ahead of them where thousands are tortured and sexually exploited by people smugglers.
A map showing the Horn of Africa, Yemen and Saudi Arabia A map showing the journey of Ethiopian migrants to Saudi Arabia.

And if they make it to Haradh, many die trying to get across the heavily-fortified border into Saudi Arabia.

Saleh Sabri is the local undertaker. He has lost count of the number of migrants he has buried.

"Some people are shot at the border. Some have been hung. Some are beaten to death," he said.

For centuries, Haradh has thrived on gun-running and drug-smuggling. Now, the commodity is people.

The Medecins Sans Frontieres charity says there are an estimated 200 "torture camps" in this area alone.

We become the first journalists to enter one after we are promised safe passage by a local judge.
Five migrants in what is known as a 'torture camp' Five migrants under armed guard in what is known as a 'torture camp' in Haradh, Yemen

One of the judge's soldiers accompanies us for our safety.

We drive across sand dunes to reach a mud brick house on the outskirts of town.

As we enter, there appear to be five migrants sitting on the ground with two armed men guarding them.

We ask them if they have been abused.

"For the last three days, they have threatened to beat us if our families don't pay," said one migrant.

We then spot the entrance to a small room at the edge of the compound.

The soldier says this is where the migrant women are taken.

We ask to go inside but the soldier says what is going on behind the door could be haram, meaning forbidden.

We are told there could be a man and a woman in there.

We are not allowed to knock on the closed door but there are two pairs of shoes outside.

A man then appears with a pistol who says he was the owner of the camp. We ask him if torture exists on this farm.

"That's forbidden," he said.

"There's no torture here. If we were capturing them by force, we'd have plenty of migrants there. They come here willingly."

We also ask if there are women here.

"No, there's no women in this farm," he said.

After we left, we visited a senior local police officer and told him what we had seen.

We understand that the next day, all the migrants in the camp were released.

The International Organization for Migration says it is dealing with an "international humanitarian crisis".

But Yemen is ill-equipped to solve this problem when it is fighting two insurgencies that have displaced tens of thousands.

International aid is mainly directed towards them and the 200,000 Somali refugees in the south.

In the vacuum, gangs of kidnappers and torturers seem to operate at will.

But many Ethiopian migrants say the Yemeni army is complicit.

Efta said the men who kidnapped her were dressed in military clothing.

"They were wearing army uniforms," she said.

"So that's why we did what they said. We didn't think they would do all of this to us."

She also said the same men - Yemeni soldiers - raped her at the 'torture camp'.

And 16-year-old Asma said the same. She nearly made it past the Yemeni guards at the Saudi border.

"Then the Yemeni army came," she said.

"They caught us. They sold us to the torture camp."

Asma was raped by up to three men every day for two months. She got out because one of her captors, she said, felt pity for her.

She is also living in the refugee centre in Haradh.

We requested an interview with the Yemeni government about the treatment of migrants but our request was declined.
The undertaker of Hardah Saleh Sabri The undertaker of Haradh burying another migrant. Saleh Sabri says he has lost count of the number.

The undertaker of Haradh is used to operating without government support.

"I have 40 bodies in the morgue and I have only six draws to store them," said Saleh Sabri.

He still washes and prepares the bodies in the traditional way.

"I'm a simple man with a simple job," he said.

"I take care of the morgue so I must take care of these poor unknown people. I do it for God."
#14319878
And, topic-related development,

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-24663049

Ethiopia bans citizens from travelling abroad for work

Ethiopia's government has temporarily banned its citizens from travelling abroad to look for work, the state-run Erta news agency reports.

The foreign ministry was quoted as saying countless Ethiopians had lost their lives or undergone untold physical and psychological trauma because of illegal human trafficking.

The decision was meant to "safeguard the well-being of citizens", it added.

The travel ban will remain in place until a "lasting solution" is found.

The ministry said the government had taken various measures to limit the suffering of its citizens, including setting up a national council and a taskforce to educate them.

But those measures had not been able to address the problem sufficiently, it added.

Employment agencies will also be barred from facilitating travel abroad.

The scarcity of work opportunities is a major factor fuelling emigration from Ethiopia, which has Africa's second largest population. Youth unemployment is officially estimated at more than 50%.

Human rights activists also say a significant number of those classified as economic migrants flee the country because of political and economic oppression or ethnic discrimination by the state.

Many Ethiopians try to reach Saudi Arabia, travelling via Yemen by sea and entering the kingdom illegally. Thousands of others head for South Africa, Israel and Europe.

They often end up being smuggled, trafficked or subjected to mental and physical torture. And once they reach their destinations, many require humanitarian assistance or face a wide range of abuses from employers.
#14319988
I am completely able to believe these stories. Ever since the Saudi-puppet state of North Yemen effectively came to control all of Yemen, that state has been trapped in a level of ignorance and poverty that is mind-numbing to behold.

Since they are incapable of building a working central government, it becomes questionable as to whether they even have control over their own soldiers.
#14337343
Its not just Yemen who is doing shit like this. Add Sudan, Eritrea and Egypt to the list.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-25222336

Up to 30,000 Eritreans have been abducted since 2007 and taken to Egypt's Sinai to suffer torture and ransom demands, new research says.

The study, presented to the European parliament, says Eritrean and Sudanese security officers are colluding with the kidnap gangs.

At least $600m (£366m) has been extorted from families in ransom payments, it says.

Victims are kidnapped in Ethiopia, Sudan and Eritrea and taken to Sinai.

Eritrea has denied its officials are involved in the kidnappings.
'Chained together'

Most of those targeted are Eritrean refugees fleeing the country, says the report - The Human Trafficking Cycle: Sinai and Beyond.
Continue reading the main story
“Start Quote

Almost every Eritrean knows somebody who has been held hostage”

Meron Estefanos Rights activist

"Their captors are opportunistic criminals looking to profit from their vulnerability," the report says.

"[The victims] are then taken to the Sinai and sold, sometimes more than once, to Bedouin groups living in the Sinai."

The report was authored by Meron Estefanos, an Eritrean human rights activist in Sweden, and Prof Mirjam van Reisen and Dr Conny Rijken of Tilburg University in the Netherlands.

The report says Eritrea's Border Surveillance Unit (BSU) and Sudanese security officials are among the "actors" colluding with the gangs that hold people hostage in the the largely lawless Sinai.

"[The hostages] are chained together without toilets or washing facilities and dehydrated, starved and deprived of sleep," the report says.

"They are subject to threats of death and organ harvesting... Those who attempt to escape are severely tortured."

Ms Meron told the BBC's Focus on Africa radio programme that one of her cousins was freed after a ransom of $37,000 was paid.

The cousin was abducted in Sudan, before being taken to Sinai where her captors tortured and raped her, Ms Meron said.

"Almost every Eritrean knows somebody who has been held hostage. It's a very common thing," she told the BBC.

The report said the trafficking would have been impossible without the direct involvement of Eritrean security officials, given the "restrictions on movement within the country, the requirement of exit visas at the border and the shoot-to-kill policy for illegal border crossings".

However, Eritrea's UK ambassador, Tesfamichael Gerahtu, said Eritrea was a "victim of human trafficking".

The government was "working hard" to arrest and bring to justice criminal gangs operating along its border, he told Focus on Africa.

The UN estimates that 3,000 Eritreans fled their repressive and impoverished country each month last year.

Many headed for the swollen refugee camps of neighbouring eastern Sudan, now home to more than 90,000 people.
#14337385
Ter wrote:So the Bedouins in the Sinai are inhuman bandits
But the Bedouins in the Negev, just across in Israel, are victims of Israeli oppression according to you yourself ?
viewtopic.php?p=14336965#p14336965
How strange this world is.


You're just trolling me here. Bedouins in Israel are not involved in human trafficking. And its not just Bedouins in Sinai who are involved in this abuse. Sinai is a rather lawless place and perfect for keeping slaves and abuses at free will. You don't see the same Bedouins snatching Eritreans into Israel to keep in dark basements in order to extract money from families. Basements that they don't have because Israeli bulldozers keep razing their villages every few months.
#14337389
Magnetonium wrote:Bedouins in Israel are not involved in human trafficking

Of course not, the Israeli Authorities would not allow this to happen.
Magnetonium wrote: And its not just Bedouins in Sinai who are involved in this abuse.

They mentioned only Bedouins in the article. I think most of the people living in the Sinai are Bedouins.
Magnetonium wrote:You don't see the same Bedouins snatching Eritreans into Israel to keep in dark basements in order to extract money from families.

Indeed. As I said earlier, Israel would not allow it. Good point for Israel, no ?
Magnetonium wrote: Basements that they don't have because Israeli bulldozers keep razing their villages every few months.

Bedouins never had basements because they didn't need them and it was not a part of their building practice. They also don't need them because contrary to the Israelis Jews living there, they are not targeted by terrorist rockets.

So no, I was not trolling you, only showing your bias.

All that aside, I think the Israelis are doing a very stupid thing by relocating the Bedouins.
#14337424
So the actions of some Bedouins in the Sinai over the Egyptian border provides an excuse for their wholesale ethnic cleansing in Israel, Ter?

It's astounding that so much of the contemporary 21st century Jewish persona can be based upon stories of collective victim-hood from ethnic and religious persecution (events in Europe and Palestine of the 20th century only added another layer to this - the entire Hanukkah holiday is centered around it), yet it isn't even considered risky PR for Jews in Tel Aviv or New York City to turn their backs and laugh sardonically at the Bedouin situation in the Negev region today.
#14337428
Far-Right Sage wrote:So the actions of some Bedouins in the Sinai over the Egyptian border provides an excuse for their wholesale ethnic cleansing in Israel, Ter?

No, they don't. I have stated repeatedly that I find the plans of the Israeli government repulsive and looking bad.
What I did was pointing out the (usual) hypocrisy by showing that the same Bedouins across the border from Israel are committing atrocious human rights violations whilst the one living on the Israeli side of the border are painted as victims of persecution. Many posters use two sizes and two measures when it comes to Israeli Jews compared to their Muslim counterparts in neighbouring countries.
#14337757
I dont understand where the alleged bias is. If I was biased, then I would have approved both of Bedouin abuse in Sinai and Bedouine cause in Israel. However, that is not the case. I am against human degradation, abuse, and ethnic cleansing, and both articles I posted fit each quite well in either one of those.
World War II Day by Day

May 22, Wednesday Bletchley Park breaks Luftwaf[…]

You might be surprised and he might wind up being[…]

He may have gotten a lot more votes than Genocide[…]