'Worse than
an oven': Saudi-funded camp won't be liveable soon
Yemenis fear they could suffocate due to intermittent
electricity and soaring temperatures in new housing units.
Markazi
refugee camp, Djibouti – He survived Saudi-led air raids, Houthi snipers
and a perilous boat journey from Yemen to Djibouti. But for Ahmad
Muhammed Ali, the next few months could be the toughest of his life.
For three years, he says he merely
"existed" at one of the UN-funded tents in the Markazi refugee
camp.
Surviving on meagre portions of food and routinely being
stung by scorpions and bitten by snakes; he prayed for his family's
circumstances to change.
The eldest of four children, Ali said it was his
"duty" to look after his siblings and mother after their father
passed away.
So, in
November, when Saudi Arabia inaugurated 300 shipping-container style
housing units, he thought his prayers had finally been answered.
A Ywmwni’s harrowing
journey through the “ate of Tears”
In a
ceremony marked with pomp and celebration, the Saudi and Djiboutian governments
unveiled the units to accommodate around 1,200 Yemeni refugees
at
Markazi, along with a mosque, a school, and two medical centres.
Costing a
reported $6.5m, less than the price of five Raytheon Tomahawk cruise missiles,
Ali, like many of the camps residents rejoiced, hopeful that the project would
generate more funding and development from the oil-rich kingdom.
But only three months in, temperatures inside Ali's unit are
already exceeding 35 degrees, raising fears that intermittent supplies of
electricity could make the steel units "worse than ovens," and
potentially death traps.
"We get about four hours of electricity in the morning,
and then another four hours in the evening," the 24-year-old told Al
Jazeera, his brow dripping with sweat.
"The authorities switch off the power at around 1pm
because of fears the generators might get hot and damaged.
"So we stay in indoors for about an hour after lunch,
but once it gets really unbearable, we head outside. It's cooler outside than
it is inside".
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Each air-conditioned residential unit includes a toilet,
bedroom, living room and kitchen, along with cooking facilities [Faisal
Edroos/Al Jazeera]
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'I want to be resettled in Mexico or Brazil'
A tiny
nation of around 800,000 people, Djibouti became a haven for Yemeni
refugees in March 2015 after the country's civil war embroiled the region.
At the
time, Saudi Arabia, alarmed that a Shia group with ties to Iran had taken over parts of their southern
neighbour, intervened at the request of Yemen's President Abu-Rabby Manour
Hadi
Expectations
were high that a coalition assembled by Saudi Arabia, with all its military
might, would crush the rag-tag alliance of Houthi fighters and army forces
loyal to former President Ali Abdullah Saleh
within a matter of weeks.
Hyenas, wolver
and disease “welcomñe” Yemenis fleeing war.
But after
nearly four years of fighting, and an estimated 60,000 deaths, the coalition
has failed to pave the way for the recapture of the capital Sanaa.
Instead, tens of thousands of Yemenis have fled on small
rickety boats across the Bab al-Mandeb Strait, known as the Gate of Tears - a
name derived from the long history of people perishing when trying to cross it.
At least 37,248 people have arrived in Djibouti, which sits
just 32km from Yemen, with around 2,200 Yemenis currently registered at the
Markazi camp.
For its part, the Djiboutian government has tried to welcome
the Yemenis, introducing new laws making it easier for them to find work.
But with the unemployment rate
hovering at around 45 percent, and few Yemenis speaking French, the local
lingua franca, most have opted to either head to other countries or return
home.
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With wind speeds as high as 60kph, this year's Khamsin
dust storm coincides with the start of Ramadan [Faisal Edroos/Al Jazeera]
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In an attempt to make the best of their situation, Ali said
his mother sold all of her jewellery to start up a small business in their
living room.
Sitting on a thin mattress in a bedroom that he shares with
his younger brother, he signalled towards his mother Hayfa who was trying to
sell cold drinks, cigarettes, and lollypops in their living room as the warm
air carrying sand swept in through the door, lashing her face.
"She sacrificed everything to make our lives
tolerable," he said, as his eyes drifted to a damaged TV playing a dance
scene in Shah Rukh Khan's 2004 blockbuster Bollywood flick, Kal Hoh Naa Ho.
"She sold all her jewellery to start this shop and make
it work. But I've had enough. I
don't want to live here. "I want to be resettled in Mexico, Brazil or
Canada. Somewhere where I'm free to do what I want. Or somewhere where it's cold".'Ramadan
will be very bad'
Many of the
residents told Al Jazeera they were dreading the summer months which are
accompanied by the "khamsin", a ferociously hot sandstorm.
With temperatures reaching 50 degrees Celsius and wind
speeds as high as 60kph, this year's dust storm coincides with the start of
Ramadan, the daily fasting period that begins in May.
Refugees such as Ali will be hungry, hot and have little to
do.
"When Ramadan comes it will be very bad," said
Ali's mother Hayfa, as she served a customer two individual cigarettes.
"We
started buying ice from the capital (two half hours away by boat), so God
willing, the chocolates and cakes won't melt". The entire project
cost a reported $6.5m, less than the price of five Raytheon Tomahawk cruise
missiles [Faisal Edroos/Al Jazeera]
"We
hope that there will be continuity and the people will stay in the units, and
that there will be funding for electricity in the summer," Vanessa
Panaligan, the UN's media relations officer in Djibouti told Al Jazeera. "But
if the refugees head back to the tents they will have to contend with the
Khamsin winds and the camps are not built to withstand that.
"The sand gets everywhere, so they should be better
protected with the housing units against the hot winds, the sand and the
elements".
Trying to keep a brave face, Hayfa said she hoped sustained
media coverage would help shed a light on what was happening at the camp.
"I've spent a fortune starting this business, but for
many reasons, I couldn't go forward. I was subject to harassment and people
have tried to take advantage of me.
"I wanted to buy a house here, a car, to settle down
with my children, But we can't because we're foreigners and refugees.
"Now, our only hope is that the war ends and some of
the Arab countries take us in.
"We don't want to go to the West, we want our Arab and
Muslim brothers to let us in."
by Faisal Edroos
https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/oven-saudi-funded-camp-won-liveable-190301121224205.html

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