Youth aspirations spurring migrant smuggling boom from Côte d Ivoire msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
While conflicting statistics put the number of deaths in the hundreds, the immigration service points out that there are about 43 people. The organization also said more than 170 migrants were injured in the fire, more than half of whom were seriously injured.
Meanwhile, the immigration organization reported the deaths of at least eight of the 350 immigrants who were in the hangar where the fire broke out.
Al-Emigration Al-Dali repeated calls by several Houthi militia organizations to allow access to the detention center in Sana’a in order to urgently treat the migrants.
And local media revealed shocking details of the accident. She pointed out that the number of victims exceeded 150 refugees, quoted Ethiopian and Somali refugees and blamed the Houthi coup militia for the accident.
News Scan for Mar 04, 2021 umn.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from umn.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
US Focused on Reuniting Illegal Immigrant Families, DHS’s Mayorkas Says
Could fly parents to the United States
The top official at the Department of Homeland Security said on March 1 that the Biden administration believes it is a “moral imperative” to reunite families of illegal immigrants, as he blamed the previous administration for the waves of people that agents have encountered at the southern border in recent weeks.
Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, who is heading a task force dedicated to family reunification at the direction of President Joe Biden, said options include flying to the United States the parents of unaccompanied minors caught at the border.
Ethiopia Sends Refugees Who Fled Tigray War Back to Camps Bloomberg 12/11/2020 Simon Marks
(Bloomberg) Ethiopia started forcibly returning hundreds of Eritrean refugees who had fled weeks of conflict in Tigray back to the northern region that borders Eritrea.
The refugees were rounded up at an Addis Ababa center belonging to the United Nations International Organization for Migration, put onto buses and driven to the Adi Harush and Mai Ani camps, which were home to about 50,000 people, according to Weldu Zeray, a representative of the exiles.
“Buses came and lined up last night and the refugees started panicking,” he said by phone on Friday, adding that at least 200 people were sent back to Tigray. “They refused to get onto the buses but were forced.”