Yemen Life On The Edge
Yemen Life On The Edge
Yemen Life On The Edge
P RTFOLIO
Micah Albert, an award-winning photojournalist specializing in the Middle East and Africa, is represented by Redux
Pictures.
©Micah Albert
—SUNRISE OVER THE PORT OF ADEN, BARELY TWO MILES FROM WHERE THE USS COLE WAS ATTACKED BY
TERRORISTS IN 2000.
TAIZ, YEMEN—“This is the first food I’ve eaten in four days,” Habiba Mohammad
Hassan, a 17-year old Somali girl, tells me as we wedge ourselves into the back of a truck
with more than 40 other refugees. She opens a packet of biscuits given to her by the UN
World Food Program (WFP). Hassan, and 150 others, had just spent the last three days in a
rickety, overcrowded boat, crossing the hazardous Gulf of Aden, fleeing the civil conflict in
the nation she left behind. Just hours before we met, she had landed on the beach at Bab
al-Mandeb, a small port village in far western Yemen. Thousands of people fleeing civil
strife in Somalia have fled safely to Yemen, where refugees are given automatic political
asylum, but survivors report other refugees being forced overboard in deep waters by pi-
rates and traffickers. The United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, has recovered over 500
bodies on the beaches around al-Mandeb.
The trip from the beach at al-Mandeb to the UNHCR’s Al Kharaz refugee camp takes
two hours. On arrival, Hassan and the others are greeted by crowds of Somali refugees,
—RAMAH ISMAIL, A SOMALI REFUGEE, RECUPERATES FROM THE TWO-DAY JOURNEY ACROSS THE RED SEA IN A
SMALL STRIP OF SHADE, BEFORE TRAVELING TO THE AL KHARAZ REFUGEE CAMP.
seeking friends and family who may have arrived on the latest boat. Most turn away, disap-
pointed once again. Out of the scorching midday sun, Hassan waits under a corrugated
metal structure to receive food ration cards that will allow five days of cooked meals pro-
vided by the WFP. As she holds her card and stands in the food line, she explains why she
left home in Somalia. “They came into my house and cut out my sister’s eyes and then cut
off her head...when I saw this, I could no longer stay,” says Hassan.
But the quality of life that awaits these refugees in Yemen holds few promises of relief.
The nation is beset with problems: increasing dependence on external food supplies has
only been intensified by climate change, dependence on a dwindling single commodity,
threats of an intensifying seccesionist rebel movement, and massive population growth.
Outside the squalor of the refugee camps, things are little better. The tribal-controlled
areas of northern Yemen are beset with violence and military checkpoints are common. In
the windswept town of Raydah, I met Hayeem Ya’esh, a 66-year-old Yemeni man. Like
—SOMALI REFUGEES FLEEING THE CONTINUAL UNREST IN THAT COUNTRY RISK DEHYDRATION, PIRATES, STARVA-
TION OR WORSE. THIS TEENAGE REFUGEE COLLAPSED FROM HEAT EXHAUSTION AND HUNGER EN ROUTE TO THE
REFUGEE CAMP. [TOP]
—ARRIVING AT THE CAMP, REFUGEES WAIT IN LINE FOR FOOD RATION CARDS PROVIDING FIVE DAYS OF COOKED
MEALS FROM THE WORLD FOOD PROGRAM (WFP). THOUGH SAFE FOR NOW, THE REFUGEES ARE UNLIKELY TO
SETTLE IN YEMEN, WHICH CAN BARELY FEED ITS OWN PEOPLE. [BOTTOM]
©Micah Albert
©Micah Albert
—HABIBA MOHAMMAD HASSAN, 17, NOW IN THE AL KHARAZ REFUGEE CAMP, SAYS, “THEY CAME INTO MY HOUSE
AND CUT OUT MY SISTER’S EYES AND THEN CUT OFF HER HEAD... WHEN I SAW THIS, I COULD NO LONGER STAY” IN
SOMALIA. [TOP]
—THE UN HIGH COMMISSION FOR REFUGEES, WHICH OPERATES THE CAMP, SEES IT GROWING BY 2,000 REFUGEES
PER MONTH TO A CEILING OF 15,000. MANY WILL LIKELY STAY FOR YEARS, PUTTING PRESSURE ON THE INTERNA-
TIONAL COMMUNITY’S ABILITY TO FEED AND HOUSE THE INFLUX OF PEOPLE. [BOTTOM]
©Micah Albert
©Micah Albert
—NATIVE YEMENIS ARE FACING SIMILAR FOOD PROBLEMS. IN RAYDAH, IN YEMEN’S NORTH, HAYEEM YA’ESH, 66,
FILLS OUT FORMS THAT WILL ALLOW HIM TO BUY SUBSIDIZED FOOD. HE HAS CUT BACK ON OTHER EXPENSES TO
ENSURE THAT HIS FAMILY CAN EAT. “I NOW SPEND ALMOST 100 PERCENT OF MY INCOME ON FOOD.” [TOP]
—HIGH COMMODITY PRICES LAST YEAR AGGRAVATED HUNGER IN POOR YEMENI HOUSEHOLDS, WHICH ALREADY
SUFFER FROM MALNUTRITION. TODAY, THE WORLD FOOD PROGRAM (WFP) IS FEEDING MORE THAN 500,000 YEME-
NIS. SOME 40 PERCENT OF THE POPULATION IS MALNOURISHED. [BOTTOM]
©Micah Albert
©Micah Albert
—NABEELA, 12, LIVES ON AN EXPOSED TERRACED HILLSIDE, WHERE REGULAR TEMPERATURES OF MORE THAN 115
DEGREES FAHRENHEIT MAKE GROWING CROPS NEARLY IMPOSSIBLE. OF EAST AFRICAN DESCENT, HER FAMILY STRUG-
GLES TO SURVIVE IN THIS REMOTE CORNER OF YEMEN. “WE ARE ONLY ABLE TO EAT ONCE A DAY,” SAYS NABEELA.
[BOTTOM]
©Micah Albert
©Micah Albert
—THE MORE FORTUNATE, LIKE SHEMA, 7, ATTEND SCHOOL AND STUDY ARABIC. BUT SHE IS OFTEN HUNGRY.
“IT’S HARD FOR ME TO STUDY AND DO WELL IN SCHOOL,” SAYS SHEMA. [TOP]
—SHE AND HER 600 NEIGHBORS IN THE ARID, RED SEA COASTAL VILLAGE OF DEBA ARE ALSO THE RECIPIENTS OF
FOOD ASSISTANCE. [BOTTOM]
©Micah Albert
©Micah Albert
—OFF THE BEACH OF DOBABA, A SMALL COASTAL VILLAGE, ABDALLA POINTS TO PROMISING FISHING GROUNDS.
OFTEN, HE PICKS UP STRANDED REFUGEES, WHO RISK BEING THROWN OVERBOARD BY PIRATES WHO THREATEN
THE LIVELIHOOD OF YEMENI FISHERMEN. [TOP]
—ONSHORE, IN AN UNFORGIVING LANDSCAPE, FAMILIES SCRAPE BY, DEALING WITH FAMINE AND A PERPETUAL
SEARCH FOR FRESH WATER. THEY CANNOT AFFORD TO TRAVEL FAR FROM THE SEA—THE ONLY LIFE THEY REALLY
KNOW. [BOTTOM]
©Micah Albert