Off the wire
1st LD-Writethru: Russian president to visit China  • Chinese premier to attend Summer Davos in Tianjin  • Djibouti president holds talks with Chinese business delegation  • 33,000 refugees registered in Burkina Faso in 2016  • ROK prime minister to visit China  • Top news items in major S. African media outlets  • 2nd LD: Iran says thwarts major terrorist plot in Tehran  • Roundup: Anti-establishment M5S movement set to win mayoral race in Rome  • Chinese banks' net forex sales drop in May  • 1st LD-Writethru-China Headlines: Sunway-TaihuLight outperforms Tianhe-2 as world's fastest supercomputer  
You are here:   Home

141 migrants rescued by Djibouti coast-guard officers

Xinhua, June 20, 2016 Adjust font size:

Djibouti coast-guard officers last week rescued 141 migrants within the waters of Seven Brothers Islands in northern parts of the country, an official source told Xinhua on Sunday.

According to the source, a Yemeni dhow in distress for 48 hours was spotted in the zone at around 3:00 a.m. on Sunday, with 141 migrants most of whom were facing an alarming health situation.

After having received first aid, the migrants, most of them from Somalia, Eritrea and Ethiopia, were immediately handed over to the International Organization for Migration (IOM).

Their smugglers were taken into police custody and their boat seized.

Djibouti is the main route for illegal migrants heading to the Gulf countries. According to IOM, about 75 to 80 percent of these migrants who arrive in Yemen every year, pass through Djibouti in very dangerous conditions, and continually pose humanitarian challenges for Djibouti authorities.

In 2011, IOM opened a migrant's holding center in Djibouti's northern town of Obock, to sensitize them on the risks and dangers of illegal migration. Endit