Fingerprints of International Aid on Forced Relocation, Repression, and Human Rights Abuse in Ethiopia
July 17, 2013
Press Release
OAKLAND, CA — Two new reports from the Oakland Institute, Development Aid to Ethiopia: Overlooking Violence, Marginalization, and Political Repression and Ignoring Abuse in Ethiopia: DFID and USAID in the Lower Omo Valley, show how Western development assistance is supporting forced evictions and massive violations of human rights in Ethiopia.
The Ethiopian government’s controversial “villagization” resettlement
program to clear vast areas for large-scale land investments is funded
largely by international development organizations. The first report, Development Aid to Ethiopia,
establishes direct links between development aid–an average $3.5
billion a year, equivalent to 50 to 60% of Ethiopia’s national
budget–and industrial projects that violate the human rights of people
in the way of their implementation.
The report also shows how indirect support in the form of funding for
infrastructure, such as dams for irrigation and electricity for planned
plantations, plays a role in repressing local communities by making the
projects viable.
Ethiopia is one of the largest recipients of US development aid in
Africa, receiving an average of $800 million annually–even though the US
State Department is well aware of widespread repression and civil
rights violations. A strategically located military partner seen as a
leader in the “African Renaissance,” Ethiopia is gently described as
having a “democratic deficit” by the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID).
Yet this phrase does not begin to describe or justify the kind of
routine violence and coercion taking place on the ground and documented
in the Oakland Institute’s new report, Ignoring Abuse in Ethiopia: DFID and USAID in the Lower Omo Valley.
The massive resettlement of 260,000 people of many different ethnic
groups in the Lower Omo Valley has been fraught with controversy and has
set off an alarm among international human rights groups. Information
around forced evictions, beatings, killings, rapes, imprisonment,
intimidation and political coercion, has been shared, and these tactics
have been documented as tools used in the resettlement process.
In response to allegations, DFID and USAID launched a joint
investigation in January of 2012. After completing their visit, they
came to the puzzling conclusion that allegations of human rights abuses
were “unsubstantiated.” The contents of this new report, which include
first-person accounts via transcripts of interviews that took place
during the aid investigations last year, overwhelmingly contradict that
finding and question the integrity of the inquiry.
The interviews paint a very different story from what DFID and USAID
reportedly saw and witnessed, and for the first time are made available
to the public here.
“[The soldiers] went all over the place, and they took the wives of the
Bodi and raped them, raped them, raped them, raped them. Then they came
and they raped our wives, here,” said one Mursi man interviewed during
the investigation. Another man added: “the Ethiopian government is
saying they are going to collect us all and put us in a resettlement
site in the forest. We are going to have to stay there. What are the
cattle going to eat there? They are our cattle, which we live from. They
are our ancestor’s cattle, which we live from. If we stay out there in
the forest, what are they going to eat?”
It is worrisome that aid agencies rubber stamp development projects that
are violating human rights. Worse, they have chosen to ignore the
results of their own investigations.
“Bottom line, our research shows unequivocally that current violent and
controversial forced resettlement programs of mostly minority groups in
Ethiopia have US and UK aid fingerprints all over them,” said Anuradha
Mittal, Executive Director of the Oakland Institute. “It’s up to the
officials involved to swiftly reexamine their role and determine how to
better monitor funding if they are indeed not in favor of violence and
repression as suitable relocation techniques for the development
industry,” she continued.
***
The Oakland Institute is an independent policy think tank working to
increase public participation and promote fair debate on critical
social, economic, and environmental issues. Starting 2011, the Institute
has unveiled land investment deals in Africa that reveal a disturbing
pattern of a lack of transparency, fairness, and accountability. The
dynamic relationship between research, advocacy, and international media
coverage has resulted in a string of successes and organizing in the US
and abroad.
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