SANAA, 14 February (IRIN) - "My name is Suleiman Hassan Al Haj Mohammad and I am an 11-year-old Somali boy. It is only now that I can talk after many days of silence
since I arrived in Yemen from Somalia. I was in shock because I lost my mother after our boat capsized off the Yemeni coast on the 27 December, 2006. "My mother, Noura Abdi Bashir, was one of the
140 people who went missing in this incident. With her loss, I have lost interest in everything, even in mixing with people. And this is why I don't have any friends. "We had escaped from the civil
war in Baidoa, Somalia, and the deteriorating living conditions there to come to Yemen. We do not have any relatives here but we had hopes that we would lead a better life. My mother paid US $100 -
$50 for her and $50 for me for the trip to Yemen. "My dad died three years ago and since then my mother had been working on the farms to earn a living for us. But many times our food and
money were stolen by those who were stronger than us. "I am an only child and now that my parents are both dead I am alone in this world. "I have never been to school in my whole life because I
was born during the [Somali civil] war. My mother wanted to take me to Yemen so that I could learn reading and writing. She wanted me to have a better future, but she couldn't fulfill her dream
because she drowned in the sea. "They told me that they took her body out of the water after it had been there a week. When I asked them how she looked, they told me her body was swollen and fish
ate her eyes. Her skin colour changed and she lost her hair too. I am very sad because she died. May God have mercy on her soul. "I hope I will be able to go to school to fulfill her dream. I want
to be an engineer. I wish I could hear the news of my family [the Alay clan] in Somalia too. "We escaped a difficult life there and we came to a more miserable one. We live in a refugee camp in
Lahej governorate [125 km west of Aden] which lacks almost everything: books, clothes and nice blankets. The beds and the blankets are old and worn out. We are about 4,000 or 5,000 people here and we
survive on the generosity and assistance provided by the Somali community in Yemen." dh/ar/ed