Somali refugees wait outside a registration office at the Kharaz refugee camp in southern Yemen February 13, 2008. Many Africans consider Yemen a gateway to other parts of the Middle East and the West as it shares a border with oil-producing Saudi Arabia, which hosts millions of foreign workers. But some Africans find their odyssey ends here, in lives half-lived because Yemen is itself too poor to offer a better future.
A Somali refugee girl stands at the door of her family's shelter at the Kharaz refugee camp in southern Yemen February 13, 2008. Many Africans consider Yemen a gateway to other parts of the Middle East and the West as it shares a border with oil-producing Saudi Arabia, which hosts millions of foreign workers. But some Africans find their odyssey ends here, in lives half-lived because Yemen is itself too poor to offer a better future.
A Somali refugee woman carries her child at the Kharaz refugee camp in southern Yemen February 13, 2008. Many Africans consider Yemen a gateway to other parts of the Middle East and the West as it shares a border with oil-producing Saudi Arabia, which hosts millions of foreign workers. But some Africans find their odyssey ends here, in lives half-lived because Yemen is itself too poor to offer a better future.
Somali refugees disembark off a Yemeni military truck at the Kharaz refugee camp in southern Yemen February 13, 2008, shortly after they arrived from the Gulf of Aden coast that they reached overnight by boat from Somalia. Many Africans consider Yemen a gateway to other parts of the Middle East and the West as it shares a border with oil-producing Saudi Arabia, which hosts millions of foreign workers. But some Africans find their odyssey ends here, in lives half-lived because Yemen is itself too poor to offer a better future.
A Somali refugee woman sits outside her tent at the Kharaz refugee camp in southern Yemen February 13, 2008. Many Africans consider Yemen a gateway to other parts of the Middle East and the West as it shares a border with oil-producing Saudi Arabia, which hosts millions of foreign workers. But some Africans find their odyssey ends here, in lives half-lived because Yemen is itself too poor to offer a better future.
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