Human Rights Groups: Donor Countries Fuel Abuse in Ethiopia
LONDON — Two new reports published this month say sustainable
development in Ethiopia is impossible without a specific focus on human
rights. The reports say donor countries should bear responsibility for
ensuring their aid money is not used to fuel abuse.
Ethiopia receives billions of dollars in international aid every year.
It is money that is used to help improve basic services like access to
health and education.
But human-rights campaigners say there also is widespread abuse that
takes place in Africa’s second most populous country. And they say
donors need to face up to what role their aid money might play in
fueling that abuse.
Leslie Lefkow, the deputy director for Human Rights Watch’s Africa
Division, said, “The Ethiopian government is resettling large numbers of
pastoralists and semi-pastoralist communities in the name of better
services. But often this resettlement process is accompanied by very
serious abuses.”
Human rights groups say so-called “villagization” has been marred by
violence, including rapes and beatings, and people are often forced to
leave their homes against their will. They also say the new villages
lack adequate food, farmland, healthcare and education facilities.
Lefkow said the World Bank is turning a blind eye. “In Ethiopia you have
several years’ worth of rising concerns of human rights and yet you do
not really see that being absorbed in the monitoring and in the practice
of donors across the spectrum, so not just the World Bank,” she said.
The World Bank is the world’s top aid donor, with a $30 billion annual budget.
Right now the World Bank is undergoing a review of its safeguard policies, a process that began last year.
Human Rights Watch, a New York-based campaign group, says now is the time for it to commit to respecting and protecting human rights.
“Unlike some of the other international financial institutions, the
European development bank and the African development bank, for example,
is looking at reviewing some of its policies and explicitly committing
to human rights, but the World Bank does not have that, even on paper.”
Another group, the U.S.-based Oakland Institute, published a report last week highlighting donor countries’ roles in alleged Ethiopian abuse.
It said Britain and the United States have ignored abuses taking place
in the Omo Valley as the government forces tens of thousands of people
from their land.
Executive Director Anuradha Mittal of the Oakland Institute, an
independent policy think tank, says forced evictions are taking place in
order to make way for commercial farming and a major new dam. She says
money from donor countries supports the new projects.
“There is also support for infrastructure projects such as power lines
and the rest, which are linked to the large dams that have been built,
for instance, the dam in Lower Omo, which has been built to provide
irrigation and electricity to the investors,” she said.
The Ethiopian government says sugar plantations in the region and the
new dam, which will be Africa’s largest, are key to bringing energy and
development to the country. VOA contacted the government for a reaction
on the Oakland Institute report, but did not get a response.
Britain’s Department for International Development says its assistance in Ethiopia helps millions.
Source: VOA
No comments:
Post a Comment