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Ethiopia: Ethiopia 'Abusing Ogaden
People'
June 12, 2008 – (BBC News) Ethiopian troops
are systematically ill-treating civilians in their counter-insurgency
campaign in the Somali region, Human Rights Watch says.
Ethnic Somali rebels have been fighting for more autonomy for two
decades in the south-eastern region, also known as the Ogaden.
The US-based group also accused the United States and the European
Union of ignoring widespread abuses there.
An Ethiopian government official denied the allegations as "old
fabrications".
'Confused'
HRW cites evidence of extrajudicial detentions and killings, beatings
and rapes in military custody, forced displacement of the rural
population and the collective punishment of communities suspected
of helping or sympathising with the Ogaden National Liberation Front
(ONLF) rebels.
"We found that over the last year the Ethiopian army has been
killing, raping, torturing and systematically displacing civilians
in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia," HRW's Georgette Gagnon told
the BBC's Network Africa programme.
She said there was no doubt about the identity of those carrying
out the abuses.
"All the victims and eyewitnesses that we interviewed clearly
identified the Ethiopian army and soldiers as those who had raped
them, for example, who had summarily killed people by strangling,
and who had forcibly displaced them and burned their villages."
One recurrent scenario was of the army's response to ONLF activity
in a neighbourhood; they would call the inhabitants together and
demand that they hand over the culprits.
Failure to do so, HRW says, resulted in village elders and others
being arrested, beaten, sometimes killed.
Young people, both boys and girls, were arbitrarily arrested and
accused of being ONLF sympathisers; they were routinely beaten in
custody and women often raped, HRW says.
The apparently arbitrary nature of many of the arrests was explained
to HRW by a former judge in the region who said the army could not
tell the difference between rebels and civilians, he said they were
confused as to who was who.
The report concludes that the army is engaged in a deliberate policy
of terrorising the local population; that the abuses are far too
systematic and widespread to be considered simply the acts of rogue
commanders.
But Bereket Simon, special adviser to Ethiopia's prime minister,
said that HRW had based its findings on ONLF propaganda.
"Human Rights Watch is engaged in misinforming the public based
on the information of the ONLF, whose forces have been destroyed
by the actions of the Ethiopian government," he told AFP news
agency.
From:http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7450533.stm
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