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Djibouti cracks down on illegal immigrants -police

Issue 325
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Riyale No Longer President After 15 May

Inflammatory Remarks By Public Works Minister May Alienate Significant Portion Of Voters

NEC Deputy Chairman Says ‘Government Meddling In Commission Affairs’

Range Resources Misleading Information To Its Shareholders

Somaliland Local Government Re-organisation through Presidential Decrees in an Election Year

Somaliland Keen To Host US Base, Hopeful On Oil

Somaliland: Transitional Government Is A ‘Mirage’

HOW CAN ODM ALLOW PNU, A PARTY THAT LOST ELECTIONS, DRAG IT IN THE MUD?

Confusion surrounds French anti-piracy operation off Somalia coast

Wearisome Time for the Emerging Nation of Somaliland

US General Says No Plans for Africa Command HQ in Africa

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TGS-NOPEC completion of aeromagnetic data & 2D seismic survey of offshore Somaliland

French Troops Seize Somali Pirates After Hostages Are Freed

Djibouti Hunts For Abuse Suspects

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Al Fayed drops Diana conspiracy

Unprecedented coalition unites against the far Right

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Movie Of Somali Mother’s Struggle Comes To Minneapolis

Ethiopia: Djibouti Port Congested

US Shamed By Mandela Terror Link

Government & Organized Crime, A History of Co-existence

Arusha court has shown you can be in power today and in the dock tomorrow

The U.S. Military's Assassination Problem

Greed, Guns And Paranoia

Intimate Glimpses Into Somali Culture

Food for thought

Opinions

As Election Approaches, Demonization Of KULMIYE Party Gains Momentum

Somaliland Tranquility Put At Risk By Own President

How Distant is SLNEC from UDUB

ONLF 101

Somaliland Needs A Political Revolution

Somalia: Revisits the Purpose of War


Djibouti, 13 April 2008 - Djibouti has arrested and repatriated nearly 7,000 immigrants this year, mostly Somalis and Ethiopians, in a crackdown on illegal migration to the Red Sea state, police said on Friday

Thousands of people in the impoverished Horn of Africa risk death every year trying to cross the shark-invested Red Sea in rickety boats from Djibouti to Yemen, seen as a gateway to wealthier parts of the Middle East and Europe.

Djibouti is one of the closest African countries to Yemen, and is safer than lawless Somalia for migrants from landlocked Ethiopia and the northern parts of Somalia.

"This period is the season to pass through the border because it is the cooler November-to-May season. Otherwise in the summer many immigrants die in the desert from thirst," Police Lieutenant Abdourahim Ali told Reuters.

The police said 6,723 immigrants mainly from Ethiopia and Somalia have been arrested and sent home this year. Djibouti caught and repatriated 16,091 people in 2007, and 12,579 in 2006.

Earlier this month, at least 53 Somalis drowned off the coast of Yemen while trying to cross from Somalia to the Arabian peninsula.

Near-daily violence in southern Somalia from an Islamist-led insurgency against the Somali government and its Ethiopian allies has displaced hundreds of thousands.

Djiboutian police said a recent surge in violence in Mogadishu had caused increased numbers of would-be migrants to come into Djibouti.

(Reporting by Omar Hassan; Writing by Jack Kimball; Editing by Bryson Hull and Caroline Drees)

Source: Reuters


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