Gulf of Aden

- The Gulf of Aden is in the Indian Ocean, between Yemen on the south coast of the Arabian Peninsula and Somalia in Africa.
- The Gulf—roughly 900 kilometres long and 500 kilometres wide—is an important waterway for transporting Persian Gulf oil.
- Together with the Red Sea, which connects within the northwest through the Bab el Mandeb, it forms an essential oil transport route between Europe and the Far East.
- The Gulf of Aden, which runs in a west-east direction, and the Red Sea have been used for thousands of years for fishing, trading, and transportation.
- When the British military withdrew from the area in the late 1960s, the use of the gulf was diminished due to the closing of the Suez Canal. Egypt renovated and reopened the canal in 1975.
- In recent years, the Gulf has received a lot of attention due to piracy, terrorism, and refugee smuggling.
- According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), 142 people died in 2023 while crossing the Gulf of Aden from the Horn of Africa to the coast of Yemen in search of refugee status.
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