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Ethiopia’s Rights Abuses ‘Being Ignored by US and UK Aid Agencies’DfID and USAid accused of overlooking complaints of human rights abuses by Ethiopians caught up in ‘villagisation’ scheme The UK Department for International Development (DfID) and USAid, the American aid agency, have been accused of ignoring evidence of human rights abuses allegedly linked to their support for a multibillion-dollar social services programme in Ethiopia.A report published on Wednesday by the US-based thinktank the Oakland Institute details
a long list of grievances presented to aid officials from the UK and US
by communities in the Lower Omo Valley in southern Ethiopia. They claim
they suffered intimidation, beatings, rape, forced evictions and other
abuses as a result of the government’s controversial “villagisation” resettlement programme, which seeks to clear land to make way for commercial investments. “Donor agencies were given highly credible first-hand accounts of serious human rights violations during their field investigation, and they have chosen to steadfastly ignore these accounts,”
says the report, written by Will Hurd, an NGO worker who served as a
translator for a team of DfID and USAid officials on a visit to the
region in January 2012.Transcripts of parts of these meetings, which have been made public alongside the report, show community members ignored aid officials’ questions about the state of education, development and health clinics, and repeatedly tried to bring the conversation back to the subject of abuse.According to the transcripts, one of the two DfID representatives
present told community members:“[O]bviously we agree that it’s
unacceptable – beatings and rapes and lack of consultation and proper
compensation … [I] would raise very strongly with the government as the
wrong way to do this. It just simply is wrong. It simply is wrong.
Obviously, we totally agree and it’s worrying to hear about those
things.”The allegations linking claims of abuse to aid funding centre around
the relationship between Ethiopia’s Protection of Basic Services (PBS)
programme and the government’s Voluntary Resettlement programme
(villagisation).PBS, which has the support of several large international donors, is a
multibillion-dollar social services project described as “expanding
access and improving the quality of basic services in education, health,
agriculture, water supply and sanitation”. Human rights campaigners
have attacked donor support for PBS on the grounds that funds are also
being used to plan and implement the villagisation programme as aid
money is being spent on health, education and other services in the
resettlement sites.“The problem is that these services will not be provided unless the
people accept resettlement,” says the Oakland Institute report, which
insists the two programmes are connected and cannot be neatly separated
by donors who do not want their funding to appear tainted.Leigh Day & Co, the London-based law firm that last September
took up the case of an Ethiopian farmer, “Mr O”, who claims he was
forcibly evicted from his farm in Gambella, in the west of the country,
argues that through its support for PBS, DfID helps finance the
infrastructure and salaries required under villagisation.Another report, also published by the Oakland Institute on Wednesday, adds: “It
is difficult not to conclude that DfID and USAid have decided to
support the current policy of the Ethiopian government, their strategic
ally in the Horn of Africa, despite the major human rights abuses this government is perpetrating in the Lower Omo Valley.“By doing so, they are willful accomplices and supporters of a
development strategy that will have irreversible devastating impacts on
the environment and natural resources and will destroy the livelihoods
of hundreds of thousands of indigenous people.”The UK spent £261.5m on aid to Ethiopia in 2012-13. In DfID’s annual report,
it said: “Ethiopia has experienced impressive growth and development in
recent years, but remains poor and vulnerable. The UK government
continues to track and raise concerns about limitations on civil and
political rights. The government of Ethiopia’s approach to political
governance presents challenges.”Last November, the development secretary, Justine Greening, said DfID
had not been able to substantiate allegations of human rights abuse
received during its visit to Lower Omo in January 2012, and that it
would return to the area to examine these further. This has yet to
happen, though there are plans for a visit this year.A DfID spokesperson said on Wednesday: “It is completely wrong to
suggest that British development money is used to force people from
their homes. Our assistance has helped millions of people in Ethiopia, a
country that has suffered famine and instability over many decades. We
condemn all human rights abuses and, where we have evidence, we raise
our concerns at the very highest level …“To suggest that agencies like DfID should never work on the ground
with people whose governments have been accused of human rights abuses
would be to deal those people a double blow.”Meanwhile, the World Bank has decided to undertake a full investigation into allegations that its support for the PBS programme has financed human rights abuses in Ethiopia.The bank has previously denied any connection between PBS and
villagisation, but its internal watchdog, the Inspection Panel, argues
that this is not a “tenable position”, saying: “The two programmes depend on each other, and may mutually influence the results of the other.”The panel had recommended an investigation earlier this year after
receiving a complaint from indigenous communities in Gambella describing
incidents of intimidation, beatings, arrest and torture.
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