After a perilous three-day journey from conflict-torn Sudan, Muhamad Yusuf reached the Ethiopian border town of Metema.
But like so many who had fled the deadly chaos, his relief was clouded by anxiety.
His immediate prospects were limited to a seemingly interminable wait in a makeshift camp in northwestern Ethiopia, where everything was in short supply.
More than 15,000 people have fled Sudan via Metema since fighting broke out in Khartoum in mid-April, according to the UN's International Organization for Migration, with an average of 1,000 arrivals registered every day.
Every person interviewed by AFP spoke of the terror leading up to their departure -- days spent holed up at home in a city gripped by gunfire and bombings, followed by a 550-kilometre (350-mile) journey haunted by fear of armed robbery en route.
"Now we are secure and they provide us with shelter and some food sometimes," Yusuf, a 30-year-old auditor, told AFP.
But life is difficult in the camp, he said, with most refugees "lacking even the necessities -- even they don't have money to feed their children, this situation is very bad."
- 'Checkpoints' -
By the end of the afternoon the 10,000-litre (2,600-gallon) water tank serving thousands of people is empty, and there is possibility of refilling it until the next morning.
Those who can afford it approach local hawkers to purchase mineral water or fruit juice -- kept cool under damp canvas coverings.
An Ethiopian waiter who moved to Khartoum seven years ago to earn a living, Mohamed Ali left behind everything he owned as he made a desperate push to leave the Sudanese capital.
"I spent a lot of money to go there but had to borrow money to return to my country," he told AFP.
"At each checkpoint, (armed men) searched us... and took whatever they found, including our money and any belongings we had."
His fellow citizen Zakir Aba Jihad, 25, worked at a steel factory in Khartoum.
"I lived there for eight years and I left only with the clothes I'm wearing," he told AFP.
- 'No hope' -
Both hoped to restart their lives in Ethiopia, once they had found their way home to Jimma in the southwest -- about 1,000 kilometres away.
Others no longer have a passport or a country to return to.
Mohammad Yousuf, a 29-year-old Afghan who was studying engineering in Khartoum, told AFP he and his compatriots had approached the UN refugee agency UNHCR for help.
"At the moment we cannot expect anything... but we hope something good will happen."
A Nigerian at the camp told AFP that he felt trapped by his circumstances because of a shortage of funds.
"They ask me $80 for a visa, but I don't have money."
For Sudanese citizens like Yusuf, hope is fading fast.
Even if the fighting ends, he does not anticipate going back in the absence of a civilian-led government.
The situation in Sudan is going "from bad to worse", he said.
"If the war stopped today... what's the future there? Is there gonna be democracy?"
But with no prospects in sight, and no possibility of returning home, "we don't have a hope, really."
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© Agence France-Presse
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