At a time when Yemen is enduring one of the most harrowing humanitarian tragedies in modern history a catastrophe that has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of women and children, pushed more than 17 million people to the brink of slow death from hunger and food insecurity, and displaced millions since 2015 this war-torn nation now finds itself in a paradoxical situation: from a country whose people are bleeding out to one that is increasingly becoming a magnet for waves of irregular migration from the Horn of Africa.
Who Benefits from the Influx of Migrants into…
At a time when Yemen is enduring one of the most harrowing humanitarian tragedies in modern history a catastrophe that has claimed the lives of tens of thousands of women and children, pushed more than 17 million people to the brink of slow death from hunger and food insecurity, and displaced millions since 2015 this war-torn nation now finds itself in a paradoxical situation: from a country whose people are bleeding out to one that is increasingly becoming a magnet for waves of irregular migration from the Horn of Africa.