Skip to content

Making exceptions for Ethiopia

Meles Zenawi thinks the west’s attitude to Africa is unbalanced and unfair. But his country is being torn apart by human rights abuses

By Tom Porteous, Guardian Unlimited

Western policy towards Africa is ill-informed and inconsistent. That’s the message of Ethiopia’s prime minister, Meles Zenawi, in his interview in the Guardian last week. And there’s some truth in what he says. But Meles should be careful what he wishes for.

If the west was better informed about the war crimes and human rights abuses committed by Meles’ military forces in Somalia and Ogaden, western taxpayers might balk at the thought that their governments are providing Ethiopia with hundreds of millions of dollars of military and economic aid.

And if western governments were more consistent and less selective in their reaction to human rights abuses around the world, they might be less inclined to turn a blind eye to Ethiopia’s failure to abide by international norms in pursuit of its military objectives in Somalia and Ogaden.

Last year, Human Rights Watch documented a disturbing pattern of abuses by all sides, including Ethiopia, in the dangerous armed conflict which erupted after Meles sent his army into Somalia to dislodge the Islamic Courts Union, a group which many say has links to international terrorists. In its subsequent struggle with Somali insurgents, Ethiopia has committed serious violations of the Geneva conventions including the carpet-bombing of residential districts of Mogadishu, the deliberate targeting of hospitals and arbitrary executions.

Human Rights Watch has also documented abuses by Ethiopian forces in its simultaneous counter-insurgency campaign against the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) in the Somali region of southeastern Ethiopia. These include the systematic use of rape, torture and execution as a means of terrorising and collectively punishing the civilian population, a partial trade blockade of districts deemed sympathetic to the rebels and the destruction of villages.

There are good reasons why Ethiopia’s western backers do not jump to condemn Meles with the same speed with which they rightly condemn, say, Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe or Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir. In his almost 20 years in power, Meles, a former rebel leader, has transformed Ethiopia from a war-torn, famine-prone dictatorship into a relatively stable state which combines elements of both democracy and authoritarianism. He has won plaudits from donors for poverty reduction and good economic stewardship.

Meles’ supporters also make allowances for the fact that he is the key regional player operating in a tough neighbourhood. Somalia is a failed state; Eritrea is a closed dictatorship that has picked fights with most of its neighbours; Sudan defies the UN and the international criminal court in their efforts to secure peace and accountability in Darfur; and now Kenya is slipping into its worst political crisis since independence.

But above all western politicians and diplomats warm to Meles, because they concur with his analysis that he is a bulwark against the spread of Islamist militancy in the Horn of Africa. Meles plays this card well. He is helped by the fact that the influence of political Islam is strong and growing among the large Muslim populations of the region. Furthermore, Islamist militants, some with links to international terrorist organisations, are operating in Somalia, Kenya and elsewhere in the Horn.

But, while these considerations can help to nuance the west’s diplomatic, economic and military relations with Meles, they can be no excuse for the war crimes and gross violations of human rights that Human Rights Watch has documented in Somalia and Ogaden. These unjustifiable acts are not only morally repugnant; they are also counterproductive. They serve to undermine international respect for the rule of law and they are likely to sharpen radicalisation and conflict in what is already one of the most dangerous parts of the world.

The west’s failure to acknowledge the reality of what is going on in these remote and inaccessible places and its failure to call for full investigations and accountability leaves the impression that when it comes to counter-terrorism, anything goes. It is a shortsighted policy that is already backfiring in Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iraq and Lebanon – and it will backfire here too.
__________________
Tom Porteous has been the London director of Human Rights Watch since October 2006. As a journalist he worked for the Guardian (as Cairo correspondent from 1986-88) and for the BBC World Service. Between jobs in journalism he participated as a political officer in UN peacekeeping operations in Somalia and Liberia in the mid 1990s. He joined the UK Foreign Office in 2000 as conflict prevention adviser for sub-Saharan Africa but resigned in March 2003 over the Iraq invasion. He has written extensively on Africa and the Middle East.

5 thoughts on “Making exceptions for Ethiopia

  1. One thing which strikes me is the expectation you my fellow Ethiopian citizens have on Foreign forces like this jornalis.. Only Ethiopians can save Ethiopia and no one from overseas can make it..All nations in Ethiopia have been suffering lots and lots to the extent history before never witnessed in the region.. The Gambella Massacre, the Awassa Massacre, The Addis Ababa Massacres, The Oromia Massacres, and The Amhara Massacres seem not getting any attention from nations at other corners of this globe….. Dear my fellow Ethiopians, we all as one should say no more tyrany, no more killings.

    Down with TPLF Weyanes!

  2. Abbabbu,
    I guess you have overshadowed thousands of problems in Ethiopia by mere “election 2005”. That is a tip of an ice-berg brother. In Ethiopia tens of thousands are murderd by Meles, hundreds of thousands are indiscreminately imprisoned and others perished. It is this what Tom needs to bring to our attention. Though you can claim that the analysis is not comprehensive, it is by no means biased.

    Thank you

  3. We believe the incumbent PM Melese is and will continue to be a controversial and irreplaceable leader for the West, unless something happens in the horn of Africa. The democratic countries allowed him to rule by the gun for the last 18 years, without any meaningful criticism for his human rights abuses. Ethiopia is now completely under his dictatorship, it became a country without free press, meaningful opposition and no freedom of assembly etc., which are the pillars of a free democracy. Strong opposition figures are either serving their terms in jail or have to face the daily intimidations of the security forces. It is no surprise that most are now scattered in various part of the world. Seeing all these, no country has dared to really challenge Melese, why? The answer is simple..as this man Tom Porteous said it, PM Melese is exceptional.

Leave a Reply