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Ethiopia’s Dirty War 


Somalis living in Ethiopia are caught in the crossfire between the government and rebels.


It was early one morning in July when 400 Ethiopian soldiers came to Ridwan Hassan Zahid's village of Qorile, 120 miles southeast of Degehebur, Ethiopia, a dusty market town. The small settlement of ethnic Somalis in eastern Ethiopia was suspected of supporting separatist rebels from the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF), and the government troops were out to exact revenge. They took Zahid, another woman, and eight men to the nearby village of Babase, where, she says, the soldiers chased away residents and burned the village to the ground. "I became like plastic," she says. "I couldn't feel a thing."

 

On the third day after her capture, the soldiers divided the prisoners into groups. As the other captives looked on, soldiers hung one man from one of the parched region's few trees; another was taken out of sight. Soon it was Zahid's turn. A small group of soldiers dug a hole in the sandy ground. They forced her into it and pinned her down by pressing the barrel of an AK-47 to her throat. As she tried to choke

Hungry: A mother with two malnourished children at Gode Hospital in Ethiopia's Somali region
out the words to a final Muslim prayer, she heard two other captives screaming for mercy nearby as a noose was slipped over her head. Two soldiers jerked up on the rope, lifting her out of the hole by her neck, and she lost consciousness.

 

In Ethiopia's Somali region, a long-simmering rebellion by the ONLF, a separatist group seeking an independent state for Ethiopia's Somalis, is boiling over. Rebels, taking advantage of chaos in neighboring Somalia, attacked a Chinese-run oil exploration site in April, killing 74 people and triggering a massive crackdown by Ethiopia's ethnic-Tigray-dominated government. Government forces have since burned villages, blocked trade routes and carried out summary executions in an effort to quell the rebellion. Nine months later Ethiopia's government appears to have gained the upper hand, but only by essentially declaring war on virtually the entire Ogadeni clan of Somalis—a group that makes up the about half of the region's 4.5 million people.

 

Hundreds of civilians have died in the fighting (the ONLF estimates 2,000 killed by the government in the past year, though one independent estimate suggests the figure is less than half that), and 1.8 million more may be at risk, as an Ethiopian blockade has cut off commercial food shipments from neighboring Somalia and prevented the region's nomadic people from selling their livestock. Ogadeni clan elders who have tracked the fighting say people from more than 250 villages have been forced to flee the violence.

Amid a sea of crises in neighboring Sudan, Somalia, and Kenya, the plight of Ethiopia's vast Somali region—an area twice the size of England with just 30 miles of paved highway—has been largely ignored in the West. After barring the foreign press from the region for months, the Ethiopian government recently took NEWSWEEK and a group of other foreign reporters on a tightly controlled tour of parts of the region. Amid scenes of malnourished children and whispered stories of government atrocities, the defining impression was of a population gripped by fear.

One 30-year-old man selling clothes in the marketplace in Degehebur says he came to the dusty town five months ago after Ethiopian troops burned his village of Leby, 18 miles southwest of the town. Fifty civilians were killed, he says. "At the time I had a shop, a good house," he says, refusing to give his name out of fear of government reprisal. "We are in trouble. We are caught between the Ethiopian government and the ONLF … between two guns."

 

Such stories, of course, are almost impossible to verify. Ethiopia has firmly denied reports of atrocities and has placed the blame on the ONLF, which it considers a terrorist organization backed by archfoe Eritrea and Islamist militias in nearby Somalia. In his last public remarks on the subject, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi told reporters in late November that he was "absolutely confident that there hasn't been any widespread violation of human rights" in the region. Reports of army atrocities amount to "baseless allegation[s] and a smear campaign against our government," says Abdullahi Hassan, the regional president of Ethiopia's Somali region. "This is our people, and we cannot abuse human rights. That has never happened and this can never happen." Speaking to reporters in the town of Gode in one of the region's more stable districts, Hassan says development in the area is on the rise, trade routes to Somalia are open, and "the situation is completely calm now." The government has "completely destroyed" the ONLF.

 

Most residents—interviewed in the presence of government translators—voice a similar assessment. But not all do. In a village west of Gode, at a development project where the government is trying to settle nomads on irrigated farmland, a 35-year-old man says violence in the region is continuing. "The Ethiopian government, after they fight the rebels, they often turn on us and kill women and children," he says. "We're very scared. I'm afraid speaking to you now. There's lots of spies. They're everywhere." He estimates that more than two dozen civilians are killed monthly in the area around Gode, before abruptly cutting off the interview as a crowd gathers.

 

A blockage of commercial traffic with neighboring Somalia has also contributed to malnutrition. The embargo, together with locusts and drought, have forced grain prices up—many Somalis say prices have doubled in the past year. The one doctor in the hospital in Gode, Zilalim Eschetu, estimates that 75 percent of the children who visit the hospital are malnourished. "It's a visible crisis," he says. Among the patients in Eschetu's malnutrition ward is two-year-old Sugah Hash, whose emaciated legs curl helplessly on her mother's lap. "We had no food for a few months, so we had to run to this hospital," says Mariam Ali, her mother.

 

Ethiopian government officials say the embargo was imposed to keep arms and supplies from reaching the rebels and insist that Ethiopia has lifted most trade restrictions. Human Rights Watch, however, suspects that the government has been deliberately targeting its Somali population. "There is no question that in the last eight months the Ethiopian military went on a very intensive scorched-earth campaign," says Leslie Lefkow, a researcher at Human Rights Watch who has tracked the crisis. To be sure, the ONLF has also committed atrocities in the region. Somali clan elders in the regional capital of Jijiga say the rebels have mined roads, launched grenade attacks on civilians, and stolen livestock from herders. However, analysts say the government has committed the lion's share of abuses.

 

Western governments don't seem to have put much pressure on Ethiopia to ease the situation. Ethiopia has been a key U.S. ally in the war on terrorism. Zenawi's government has allowed the CIA and FBI to interrogate foreign terror suspects flushed out of Somalia in secret prisons in Ethiopia, as the Associated Press first reported in April. The U.S. military has also trained Ethiopia's army and in 2006 sold $6 million in weapons to Ethiopia, according to the U.S. defense department—more than any other African country. In December, with U.S. intelligence and logistical support, Ethiopia invaded Somalia to oust an Islamist government that briefly controlled southern Somalia. Somalia has been in chaos ever since, as supporters of the former Union of Islamic Courts government have joined clan militias in battling Ethiopian troops and forces loyal to the U.N.-backed transitional government.

 

One Ethiopian security official says Somalia's Al Qaeda-linked Islamic militias have played a key role in fueling the ONLF insurgency in Ethiopia, providing funding and arms to the rebels. A spokesman for the ONLF denies any such connection, and Western diplomats say it's unclear whether the two insurgencies are connected.

Via the United Nations, the United States been providing food aid for the Somali region, but privately international aid officials say the assistance isn't reaching the worst-affected areas. They have good reason to be discreet: earlier this year Ethiopia expelled the International Committee of the Red Cross from the Somali region, accusing both the country's expatriate and Ethiopian staff of funneling support to the ONLF.

 

The U.N. has also been tight-lipped about troubles in the Ogaden. In September it sent a secret assessment of the human rights situation in the region to the Ethiopian government and called for a wider probe of alleged atrocities. Nearly five months later, says Frej Fenniche, a spokesman for the U.N.'s High Commission on Human Rights, "we are waiting for the answer from the government."

 

Meanwhile, the ONLF, fuelled by money from Ethiopian Somalis living in the United States and Britain, vows to continue its guerrilla fight by launching surprise attacks on Ethiopian troops and then melting back in to the region's nomadic communities. "It's a cat-and-mouse game," says Abdi Rahman Mahdi, a rebel spokesman.

 

As recently as last week, Mahdi says, Ethiopian forces burned a village southeast of Degehebur. Verification of his claim is difficult given the region's scant communication links and travel restrictions. But in Ethiopia's capital, Addis Ababa, hundreds of miles to the west of the fighting, Ethiopia's dirty war is barely visible. The lone state-run television agency shows only Potemkin-like pictures of development projects in the Somali region, and the country's tightly restricted private newspapers are effectively prevented from reporting on the situation.


The conflict has been visible enough for Ridwan Hassan Zahid, who miraculously survived her would-be executioners. Left for dead, she was found the next day by Somalis from a nearby village who came to bury the corpses. The other nine were not so lucky. Some had been hung from trees, others hung over holes in the ground like Zahid. Some of the men had been stripped naked and their tongues had been cut out.

Zahid hid in the countryside for three days, but eventually she was told the army had learned she was still alive and was searching for her. Then began a two-week odyssey on foot, camel, and finally by truck to safety in a neighboring country, which she asked NEWSWEEK not to disclose.

 

She complains that her neck still pains her and she can't use her right hand. "We never had links to the ONLF," she says of her fellow captives.

"I am worrying still," Zahid says. "When I sleep at nights I have dreams."

For those caught in the middle of Ethiopia's dirty war, even sleep, it seems, is no respite.


SOURCE: Newsweek,  January 22, 2008



       
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18 comment(s)
Camel Girl @ 2/21/2008 5:53 AM EST
 Ogden you are just dirty in sane page like the Isaac (somehow your friend * Djibouti) somehow trying to keep peace and manipulation "Majrtan lip limbo" who Leaps the President ional Palace and when does A Mom have satisfaction world humans does not work but you bushed your girls to double dance and what religion means for all world is just a walk for dirty.
M12 @ 1/30/2008 2:45 PM EST
 I don't want to reiterate whats already been said, but God willing we will be free from Ethiopian's oppression.
fiqicigaal @ 1/27/2008 6:04 PM EST
 The Ethiopian regime's mission in ogaden is to eliminate  and displace the somalis in the region and the rest of the world seems or rather acts to be oblivious of the atrocities that are commited by the Ethiopian troops and their mindless stooges who are blinded by clan ideology, greed and betreyal . It is our devine right to free ogaden and it's people from sub-human black coloniser who sees no different from one somali regardless of his/her ethnicity to the other even if the later is that brain dead Curad who is an insult to his own family and  to the enemy who after they use him will dump him and dispise him .Dr Ali , i agree with you 100%, and the best option we somalis have is to fight the enemy in ogaden and in somalia  to liberate every inch of somali soil from this evil monster. Viva ONLF!! victory to the freedom fighters of ogaden / somalia
Dr Ali @ 1/27/2008 3:57 AM EST
 Western, UN, AU are all sanctioning what Abyssinian are doing. The only option is to fight to end. 6feet underground is better than this black colonization to our homeland (Somalia), Ogaden, Somali Abbo (orom muslims0.

For commentators, don't waste your precious time with Amhara agents.
4happy@.uk @ 1/26/2008 7:46 PM EST
 ASALAMU ALEYKUM WARAHMATULAHI  DADKA SOMALIYEED MELWALBA OOD JOOGTAN.
Ugu horeyn shaqaalaha shabakada  hiiraan waad mahad santihiin.

2.Waxaa iga su'al ah yuu danbi kagala eryga ah S.O.M.A.L.I.?

3.Dad kan maalin walba dhimanaya ma S.O.M.A.L.I. BAA MISE WAA JAMEYKAAN?\
4.Adunka dad ka kudhaqan wuxuu isugu jiraa dad wadaniyiin ah iyo dad yar oo sikale wax ufahamsan,
              MAXAA DAD KII SOMALI ISKU MIDKA KAWADA DHIGAY? MARKII DULKII LAGATAY AYAA HADA MIDBA MIDKUU KA AWOODROON YAHAY GADANAYAA,MAXAY KU DHACDA?
CARUURTA, NAAGAHA,GABDHAHA LAKUFSANAYO YEY YIHIIN WAA SU AAL EH?
  MEEYE WAX GARAD KII SOMALIYEED?MEEYE DHALINYARADII SOMALIYEED?  MEEDAY XUQUUQDII UMADAAN?\\
      rajadu waa walax aan abid dhamaanin inta umadi unooshahay.
wadaad yare @ 1/26/2008 5:56 PM EST
 Waxaan u maleynayaa ninka Curad ah, waa taageerayaasha C/laahi Yuusuf mid ka mid ah, oo ku dhex waashey siyaasada dabadhilifnimada. Xataa Itoobiya tacadigeedi bahalnimada ahaa ee dad soomaaliyeed ee qasab ay ku heysato oo gaaladii xataa qarin weydey dadkaas difaacaya oo noocaas ah weeye dadka Itoobiya ay ugu aamin qabto iney jamhuuriyada soomaaliyeed xakumaan.

Dawlad soomaaliyeed oo madax banaan hadey jirto haba tabar yaraatee waxey dadkaasi heli lahaayeen ugu yaraan meel ay informationka marsiistaan, caalamkana kala xiriiraan. Laakiin hada waxey la mid yihiin qof tabar yar oo tuugo dilayaal ah albaabada usoo xirteen nalkana u dansadeen. Dhibka waan wada qabnaaye sabra walaalayaal inshaa allaah iftiinka xoriyada waan wada gaareynaa.

Sidey u indho xuntahay uma alle la, waa murti dhiiri gelin xanbaarsan.
bahja84 @ 1/26/2008 10:21 AM EST
 CURAD, YOU ARE HEARTLESS ANIMAL, WHAT A JERK.
Umm Rasheed @ 1/26/2008 4:34 AM EST
 inalilahe wa ina elahe rajaoon.

The world sits by and watches.  And I would like to ask
who paid for the beautiful freeway in Addis Ababa?

I ask Allaj aza wa jel,that our brothers, sisters and their
children live in peace under the Allahs law and the
people of Somalia/Somaliland become united
and allowed to follow the religion of Islam, completely
and correctly ...amiiiin
Umm Rasheed
cigaalcigaal @ 1/25/2008 7:59 PM EST
  ethiopia and their western suporters  will never win agaist somalia  people . we will fight for ever  and we don't differential  ethiopia and  their renegades .  
@ 1/25/2008 4:23 PM EST
 ILAAH magiciisa ayaan ku bilaabayaa, ALLAHA mahad oo dhan is kaleh...
I think we ( Somalian people) have no other option today but to unite and prepare for  long fight with the Tigrey. Brothers please wake up and look around and  look who you are??  “ when Ethiopians ware  superior then Somalians??! I always bileaved that I am superior then any Ethiopian and indeed we are, don’t accept the unfair, unbalance situation which civil war created in or country. We have to do what ever we could to re- liberate our country. SO BROTHER ASK YOUR SELF WHAT IS YOUR POSTION TODAY.
curad @ 1/25/2008 11:42 AM EST
 onlf is winning the propaganda war, the author even says
Such stories, of course, are almost impossible to verify.

Ridwan story is perfectly rehearsed and will be flown to the west soon.

There are problems in this region and for sure a lot people are suffering. all because of  misguided ONLF war
Mosal1 @ 1/25/2008 10:42 AM EST
 ILAAH magiciisa ayaan ku bilaabayaa, ALLAHA mahad oo dhan is kaleh...
I think we ( Somalian people) have no other option today but to unite and prepare for  long fight with the Tigrey. Brothers please wake up and look around and  look who you are??  “ when Ethiopians ware  superior then Somalians??! I always bileaved that I am superior then any Ethiopian and indeed we are, don’t accept the unfair, unbalance situation which civil war created in or country. We have to do what ever we could to re- liberate our country. SO BROTHER ASK YOUR SELF WHAT IS YOUR POSTION TODAY.
Mosal1 @ 1/25/2008 10:33 AM EST
 ILAAH magiciisa ayaan ku bilaabayaa, ALLAHA mahad oo dhan is kaleh...
I think we ( Somalian people) have no other option today but to unite and prepare for  long fight with the Tigrey. Brothers please wake up and look around and  look who you are??  “ when Ethiopians ware  superior then Somalians??! I always bileaved that I am superior then any Ethiopian and indeed we are, don’t accept the unfair, unbalance situation which civil war created in or country. We have to do what ever we could to re- liberate our country. SO BROTHER ASK YOUR SELF WHAT IS YOUR POSTION TODAY.
Gaadh-haye @ 1/25/2008 8:10 AM EST
 "Man is Yes, Yes to life. Yes to love. Yes to generosity. But man is also a no. No to scorn of man. No to degradation of man. No to exploitation of man. No to the butchery of what is most human in man: FREEDOM.” (Fanon 1967).

We are suffering today immensely in a disproportionate way under the hands of our colonizers. But that suffering will not last for ever. There are signs of good things to come: FREEDOM.
Let us put up the pain now in order to enjoy the fruits of freedom tomorrow.

Freedom to Ogaden. Long life the heroic fighters and their golden legacy
amina_samajecel @ 1/25/2008 6:54 AM EST
 It is an extremely sad situation. The Somalis are suffering
in Ethiopia and they are also suffering in Somalia.
The whole world is watching passively the atrocities committed
by the Meles Zenawi's regime. What Zenawi is doing is unacceptable.
The International media failed to reported the facts in Ethiopia.
They (media) should have insisted to go to the destroyed villages and
report to the world the untold stories.
Hashi you are right Somalis must unite to protect ourselves from
the Addis Ababa regime. Somalia is for Somalis. Insha Allah we will win.
axyaa @ 1/25/2008 3:36 AM EST
 RUNTII WAA WAX   LAGA NAXO  WAXA LUGU HAYA DADKA SOOMALLIYEED  EE KU HOOS  NOOL  DAWLAD  KU SHHEGA  ETHIOPIA  DHIBKA  DILKA  DHACA  BOOBKA   KUF SIGA  IYO TACDIGA KALE  OO MAR WALIBA AAN MAQALNO  MARKA WAXAN RABAA  IN AAN DADKA SOMALIYEED  USHEEGO  KUWA  AMIN SAN  IN  DAWLAD  KU SHEEGA  ETHIOPIA   INAAY  SOMALIYA  UTAGEEN NAXARIIS  IYO INAAY  SOMALI  CAAWIYEEN  WAXAN  IDIIN SHEGAYAA   TALISKAA  TIGREEGA  WAXA  UU DOO NAYAA  IN  UU NOO   CUNO  GOBAL  GOBAL  QABIIL  QABIIL  KADINA  QOF QOF  WALEE  NINKII   TAGREE DAWALAD  SOMALI  INUU DHISO KASUGAAW  ADIGAA CIRKA ROOB KU  OG   ILOVE  ALL SOMALI
raamsade @ 1/24/2008 8:47 PM EST
 It is everywhere we remain hunted people by the Adisababa regime. WE better fight and give it what we got with teqnigues.
May Allaah show as the bath to peace and freedom amiin amiin
hashi86 @ 1/24/2008 4:28 PM EST
 Somalis will never win against Ethiopia Until they
United under the name of islam and remove the dark
views to others

 
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