From the Los Angeles Times
Ethiopia's war on its own
The government is accused of a reign of
terror similar to what is happening in Darfur.
By Ronan Farrow
February 25, 2008
DADAAB, KENYA —
The bullet tore through Ibrahim Hamad's torso and lodged in his hip.
The 26-year-old teacher was at home with his elderly father when
government forces swept through his town in the Ogaden region of
Ethiopia, burning huts and killing civilians. "The young girls were the
first to die. The soldiers shot them and gathered the bodies and burned
them," he said. The troops demanded that surviving men join their
ranks, threatening those who refused with torture, imprisonment and
death.
FOR THE RECORD:
An earlier version of this article made reference to "Somalia's Darfur
region." Darfur is in Sudan. Also, Ethiopia was misspelled in the
headline as Ethiopa.
"When they came to my home, I told them, 'I am just a schoolteacher, I
will not leave my family,' " said Hamad. In a bleak whisper, he
recounted the ordeal that followed. "They strangled my father with a
wire and hung his body in a tree. Then they shot me and left me for
dead."
Hamad now struggles to survive in this remote refugee camp in northern
Kenya, joining thousands who have fled a reign of terror by the
Ethiopian army. Little noticed by the world, Ethiopia is waging war
against its own people in the Ogaden desert. Long-simmering tensions
erupted last April when separatist rebels attacked a Chinese-run oil
field. The Ethiopian government responded by ejecting humanitarian
agencies and launching a scorched-earth campaign in the region.
The targeting of the predominantly ethnic-Somali Ogaden population has
led to accusations of ethnic cleansing. In October, Human
Rights Watch
warned that events in Ogaden were following a "frighteningly familiar
pattern" to those in Sudan's Darfur region, noting "ethnic overtones"
to attacks and accusing Ethiopia of "displac[ing] large populations"
and "deliberately attack[ing] civilians." Government forces have been
implicated in escalating looting, burnings and atrocities. Recently,
soldiers have begun a brutal campaign of forced conscription, often
torturing or killing those who refuse to join.
The Ethiopian government has suppressed most news from the region,
sealing Ogaden's borders and denying access to the media. Last May,
three New York Times
reporters researching the crisis were held for five days and had their
equipment confiscated. Ethiopian officials have been quick to dismiss
mounting reports of bloodshed as propaganda. But in this camp, refugees
fleeing Ogaden tell stories of rape, torture and mass murder
perpetrated against civilian villages by Ethiopia's military.
However, it is the U.S. government, not Ethiopia's, that elicits
the most anger from Hamad and the other Ogadenis seeking shelter in
Dadaab. The bullet that shattered Hamad's hip, and the gun that fired
it, were likely supplied by the United States. The soldier who pulled
the trigger was almost certainly compensated with U.S. military aid.
The U.S. has historically provided Ethiopian forces with arms, funding
and training. In recent years, the bond has deepened, with Ethiopia's
military serving as a proxy for American interests in a region
increasingly viewed as a crucial front in the war on terrorism. Since 9/11,
military aid to Ethiopia has soared, growing at least 2 1/2 times by
2006. A close intelligence-sharing relationship between the governments
has burgeoned.
In the face of mounting evidence of atrocities, some U.S. officials are
questioning the no-strings-attached backing of Ethiopia's army. "This
is a country that is abusing its own people," said Rep. Donald M. Payne
(D-N.J.), chairman of the House subcommittee on Africa and Global
Health, accusing the Bush administration of "look[ing] the other way"
as Ethiopia's abuses worsen. Last fall, the House passed the Ethiopia
Democracy and Accountability Act, sponsored by Payne, to limit military
aid to Ethiopia. It awaits action by the Senate. "The United States
cannot afford to allow cooperation on the war on terror," Payne said,
"to prevent us from taking a principled stance on democracy and human
rights issues."
Ironically, unbridled support of Ethiopia's army in the interest of
combating terrorism may serve as a powerful catalyst for anti-U.S.
sentiment. "We hate the U.S.A.
more than the Ethiopians," one Ogadeni told me. "It is guns and money
from the U.S.A. that are killing our people."
If Washington wants to fight the rising tide of terrorism in the Horn
of Africa, it cannot continue to turn a blind eye to the abuses of its
closest ally in the region. The U.S. wields unique influence over
Ethiopia; how it uses that influence will determine Ogaden's future.
Legislators should continue to press the Bush administration to help
stop the bloodshed. Current levels of U.S. aid should be made
contingent on Ethiopia halting its attacks on civilians. That might
sacrifice some goodwill with Ethiopian officials -- but it could save
the people of the Ogaden.
Ronan Farrow, a student at Yale Law School, has worked on human rights
issues for the House Foreign Affairs Committee and recently accompanied
a congressional delegation to the Horn of Africa.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times