Obama Urged to Reassess Ethiopian Relations Over Land Evictions
By William Davison | Bloomberg News
The U.S. should reassess its support for the government of Ethiopia, amid concern that more than half a million people are being evicted to make land available for foreign investment in agriculture, advocacy groups including the Oakland Institute said.
A meeting tomorrow between President Barack Obama and Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, among other African leaders, presents an opportunity for the U.S. to address the issue, the California-based group said in a joint statement with the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia, or SMNE. The U.S. has provided aid worth more than $1 billion a year since 2007 to Ethiopia, according to the statement.
Foreign investment in commercial farming may be the “single largest man-made contributor to food insecurity on the continent today,” they said. “We hope that you will take leadership in responding to an international call asking you to put the brakes on this impending and present-day catastrophe.”
Ethiopia, Africa’s second-most populous nation, is leasing out land to investors to grow cash crops and generate foreign exchange. The government leased 350,096 hectares (865,106 acres) of land to 24 companies, including 10 foreign ones, according to the Agriculture Ministry’s website. Oakland puts the amount of leased land at 3.6 million hectares.
The government denies any connection between land leasing and resettlement programs. The relocation of about 20,000 households in the southwestern Gambella region last year was voluntary and aimed at providing people with access to farmland and public services, Federal Affairs Minister Shiferaw Teklemariam said in an interview in March.
Ambassador Criticized
Oakland and SMNE criticized U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia Donald E. Booth, citing him as saying people in Gambella benefit from the government’s policies.
“Mr. Booth seems unwilling to acknowledge any of the abuse, violence, or coercion that human rights groups and the media have reported,” they said. The U.S. Embassy in Ethiopia is awaiting approval from Washington for its response to the statement, Diane Brandt, a spokeswoman for the embassy, said by phone today from Addis Ababa.
SMNE, which has branches in the U.K., the U.S. and Canada, advocates “rule of law, respect for human rights, equal opportunity and good governance” in Ethiopia, according to its website. The group’s executive director, Obang Metho, is being tried in absentia in Ethiopia for terrorism.
Horizon Plantations, an Ethiopian company majority owned by Saudi billionaire Mohamed al-Amoudi, criticized Oakland’s association with SMNE. Horizon has leased 20,000 hectares in Ethiopia’s western region of Benishangul-Gumuz to grow groundnuts for edible oil.
“All of the land being given to international investors is the land which is not developed at all,” Horizon General Manager Jemal Ahmed said in a phone interview. “Oakland Institute does not care for Ethiopia. They are doing their best to stop the development taking place by allying themselves with violent and hate-advocating diaspora opposition.”
To contact the reporter on this story: William Davison in Addis Ababa via Nairobi at [email protected].
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Antony Sguazzin in Johannesburg at [email protected].
3 thoughts on “Oakland Institue asks Obama not to support Ethiopia land grab”
What a joke, foreing investors attacking the diaspora opposition.
Well, what we saw Mohammed Al-Amoudi doing is being repeated by Jemal Ahmed of Horizon. We Ethiopians have to note this
zenawi’s white lie
Zenawi has been lying and getting his way for 21 years. He is a perrenial liar like any dictator before him:
Hitler once said in “Mein Kampf” that if you tell a lie for the purpose of propaganda, tell a big one! Because the bigger the lie is, the more people are apt to believe it, because they can’t possibly believe you would dare to tell such a big lie unless it was the truth!
Evicting the poor Ethiopian farmers and selling land to indians or arabs does not benefit Ethiopian farmers. The only beneficiaries are the woyane and their cadres.
What TPLF is doing is selling off its birth right; unbeknownst to them, their action writes their non-existent future in Ethiopia. TPLF might as well bought Facebook stocks with all the money it stole from the poor people of Ethiopia. Bono, of the Irish rock band, U2, reaped a $750 million profit on a $10 million investment in Facebook. The two Russians who invested $900 million in the newly minted IPO saw their investment jump to $6 billions and a 10% control of the $104 billion public company. If TPLF had invested the $20 to $35 billions it extorted in Facebook, it would have reaped some $200 billion this day, Friday 18, 2012. TPLF’s ill-gotten gains will always remain a bad karma and a curse because it was stolen by force and deception from other tribes of Israel, which are a covenant people of God. So, theft by receiving by foreigners has dire consequences as well.