Statement by Senator Leahy on the the Senate floor today.
After the overthrow of Ethiopia’s brutal former Prime Minister Mengistu, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi ushered in a period of hope and optimism. On May 15, 2005, Ethiopia held its first open multi-party elections. The international community praised the people of Ethiopia for an astounding 90 percent voter participation rate, an encouraging beginning to a new political process. The Ethiopian people deserve a democratic process in which opposition parties can organize and participate, and journalists can publish freely, without fear of arrest or retribution. Unfortunately, as it turned out, the 2005 election was not the turning point many had hoped for.
Early polls suggested the opposition Coalition for Unity and Democracy Party would make gains in the Ethiopian Parliament that could threaten the control of Prime Minister Meles’ ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front. These reports were followed by credible allegations of manipulation of the vote-counting process. When the government finally announced results that assured its continued hold on power, thousands of people took to the streets in protest. The police arrested over 30,000 people and some 193 people were killed. Although most of the protestors were released soon after their arrest, 70 opposition leaders and journalists remained in prison.
Following these events, I wrote to Ethiopia’s Ambassador Kassahun Ayele and officials at the State Department to express my concern with the imprisonment of the Ethiopian politicians. Human rights organizations and other international figures condemned the detentions and urged Prime Minister Meles to release them. These efforts were to no avail.
Some detainees remained in jail for over two years before being brought to trial in a manner that was incompatible with international standards of justice. Last month, they were convicted of such vague charges as “outrage against the constitution” and “inciting armed opposition.” They were stripped of their rights to vote and to run for public office. Several were sentenced to life in prison. Nothing was done to prosecute the police officers who fired on the protesters. The situation had gone from bad to worse.
Then suddenly, less than two weeks ago, the Ethiopian Government announced the pardon and release of 38 opposition leaders. I am pleased that Prime Minister Meles heeded the pleas of the Ethiopian people and the international community and released these prisoners. The fact is, none of them should have been arrested or tried in the first place. Their release was long overdue and is welcome.
I hope the government acts expeditiously to release the remaining political detainees, and bring to justice police officers who used excessive force. I also hope the negotiations that resulted in the prisoners’ release will lead to further discussions between the government and the leaders of the opposition, to ensure that their political rights are fully restored and that future elections are not similarly marred.
While this news is positive, it comes at a time when journalists and representatives of humanitarian organizations report human rights abuses of civilians, including torture, rape and extrajudicial killings, by Ethiopian security forces, including those trained and equipped by the U.S., in the Ogaden region.
Congressman Donald Payne, Chairman of the Subcommittee on Africa and Global Health, and a vocal defender of human rights and democracy in Ethiopia, inserted into the Congressional Record a June 18, 2007, New York Times article that described these abuses.
This situation is also addressed in the Senate version of the Fiscal Year 2008 State, Foreign Operations Appropriations bill and report, which were reported by the Appropriations Committee on July 10. The Appropriations Committee seeks assurance from the State Department that military assistance for Ethiopia is being adequately monitored and is not being used against civilians by units of Ethiopia’s security forces.
We need to know that the State Department is investigating these reports. We also want to see effective measures by the Ethiopian Government to bring to justice anyone responsible for such abuses.
Unfortunately, it appears that the Bush administration has made little effort to monitor military aid to Ethiopia. It is no excuse that the Ethiopian military has impeded access to the Ogaden, as it has done. In fact, this should give rise to a sense of urgency. If we cannot properly investigate these reports, and if the Leahy Law which prohibits U.S. assistance to units of foreign security forces that violate human rights is not being applied because the U.S. Embassy cannot determine the facts, then we should not be supporting these forces.
As if the allegations of human rights violations were not enough, the New York Times reported on July 22 that the Ethiopian military is blocking food aid to the Ogaden region. The article also claimed that the military is “siphoning off millions” of dollars intended for food aid and a UN polio eradication program. A subsequent article on July 26 indicated that the World Food Program and the Ethiopian Government have reached agreement, after weeks of discussions, on a process for getting food aid through the military blockade to civilians in the Ogaden region. But the same article also reported that regional Ethiopian officials have expelled the Red Cross.
Mr. President, during the Cold War we supported some of the world’s most brutal, corrupt dictators because they were anti-communist. Their people, and our reputation, suffered as a result. Now the White House seems to support just about anyone who says they are against terrorism, no matter how undemocratic or corrupt. It is short sighted, it tarnishes our image, and it will cost us dearly in the long term.
Prime Minister Meles has been an ally against Islamic extremism in the Horn of Africa, for which we are grateful. But there are serious concerns with Ethiopia’s U.S.-supported military invasion of Somalia. It has led to some of the same problems associated with the Bush Administration’s misguided decision to invade Iraq without a plan for leaving the country more stable and secure than before the overthrow of Saddam. Iraq’s partition now seems only a matter of time, and it is hard to be optimistic that Somalia a year from now will be any more secure, or any less of a threat to regional stability, than before the influx of Ethiopian troops.
Ethiopia is also a poor country that has faced one natural or man-made disaster after another, and the U.S. has responded with hundreds of millions of dollars in humanitarian and other assistance. We have a long history of supporting Ethiopia and its people, and we want to continue that support. But our support to the government is not unconditional. We will not ignore the unlawful imprisonment of political opponents or the mistreatment of journalists. We will not ignore reports of abuses of civilians by Ethiopian security forces.
Addis Ababa (Ethiopia) One person was killed and three others injured when a mortar exploded in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa, APA learnt here on Friday.
Police said the mortar exploded in Merkato, one of the largest open markets in Africa.
“The four people were trying to use the mortar for another purpose unknowingly, and it immediately resulted in the death of one person while it injured the three people seriously,” police said.
The incident occurred in one place of Merkato mainly known for the sale of second hand and used metals and other materials.
Police are investigating how the mortar came into the hands of the people who are said to be used materials sellers.
Addis Ababa (Reuters) – About 50 000 Somalis have crossed into neighbouring Ethiopia in the past six months of instability in their homeland, and most are living without humanitarian aid, the United Nations said on Wednesday.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said a majority of the would-be refugees were women and children fleeing fighting in Somalia where an Islamist movement took control of most of the south in June but fell over the New Year.
“Most of these people are being taken care of by family and clan members in Ethiopia, with no assistance from humanitarian agencies thus far,” the UNHCR statement said.
“UNHCR will need to conduct a screening and registration to be able to extend the necessary protection to identified refugees,” it added, without saying when that could take place.
UNHCR said the 50 000 new arrivals were on top of 17 000 Somali refugees already at the Kebribeyah camp near Jijiga in the northeast.
At the peak of the Somali influx into Ethiopia in 1997, there were 628 000 Somali refugees in the country, but most were repatriated back to Somalia, according to UNHCR.
Shimeles Gessesse (August 06, 1954 – July 23, 2007)
KEIZER, OREGON – Shimeles Gessesse (Shimmy) was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on August 6, 1954. He came to the United States in 1975 to attend Oregon College of Education (now WOU) in Monmouth, Oregon. He married his wife of 27 years, Juli Hinkley, on August 30, 1980, and they graduated from OCE in 1981. Shimmy played soccer of OCE and later coached the men’s soccer team, as well as helped to start a women’s soccer team.
While Shimmy worked for the Department of Corrections in Salem for 21 years, he also actively supported the growth of the Ethiopian/African community in Portland. He helped many refugees successfully rebuild their lives in America. He also established the Abyssinia Soccer Club, which he built to be an outstanding team that participates in a local Portland soccer league. He was also a founding member of the Ethiopian Sports Federation in North American (esfna.org), whose annual soccer tournament is a highlight of Abyssinia Soccer Club season.
Shimmy was greatly loved by countless people, whose lives were touched by his enduring kindness and generosity. Shimmy’s heart held an endless amount of compassion for friends and strangers, alike. He will be dearly missed by those of us he has left behind, as he takes his place with God in Heaven.
Shimmy was preceded in death by his father, Gessesse Shebeshi.
He is survived by his mother, Weynitu Yohannes; his wife, Juli; daughter, Abyssinia; son, Noah; and son, HaileGabriel. He is also survived by his brothers, Tedla, Adamassu, Tameru, Ayele, Ambacho, and Tewedros; and sisters, Kokebe and Mulumebet.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday, August 3 at the Maranatha Church, 4222 NE 12th Ave., Portland.
The burial will follow at 1:30 p.m. at the Rose City Cemetery, 5625 NE Fremont, Portland.
Shimeles Gessesse (August 06, 1954 – July 23, 2007)
KEIZER, OREGON – Shimeles Gessesse (Shimmy) was born in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on August 6, 1954. He came to the United States in 1975 to attend Oregon College of Education (now WOU) in Monmouth, Oregon. He married his wife of 27 years, Juli Hinkley, on August 30, 1980, and they graduated from OCE in 1981. Shimmy played soccer of OCE and later coached the men’s soccer team, as well as helped to start a women’s soccer team.
While Shimmy worked for the Department of Corrections in Salem for 21 years, he also actively supported the growth of the Ethiopian/African community in Portland. He helped many refugees successfully rebuild their lives in America. He also established the Abyssinia Soccer Club, which he built to be an outstanding team that participates in a local Portland soccer league. He was also a founding member of the Ethiopian Sports Federation in North American (esfna.org), whose annual soccer tournament is a highlight of Abyssinia Soccer Club season.
Shimmy was greatly loved by countless people, whose lives were touched by his enduring kindness and generosity. Shimmy’s heart held an endless amount of compassion for friends and strangers, alike. He will be dearly missed by those of us he has left behind, as he takes his place with God in Heaven.
Shimmy was preceded in death by his father, Gessesse Shebeshi.
He is survived by his mother, Weynitu Yohannes; his wife, Juli; daughter, Abyssinia; son, Noah; and son, HaileGabriel. He is also survived by his brothers, Tedla, Adamassu, Tameru, Ayele, Ambacho, and Tewedros; and sisters, Kokebe and Mulumebet.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday, August 3 at the Maranatha Church, 4222 NE 12th Ave., Portland.
The burial will follow at 1:30 p.m. at the Rose City Cemetery, 5625 NE Fremont, Portland.
GENEVA (Reuters) – The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has pulled out from Ethiopia’s restive Ogaden region following a government order, but still hopes to return, a spokeswoman said on Thursday.
Authorities in Ethiopia last week gave the Swiss-based humanitarian agency seven days’ notice to leave, accusing it of consorting with rebels, an accusation it has rejected.
“We have left the Somali region, our two offices there are closed,” ICRC spokeswoman Anna Schaaf said in Geneva.
Its 10 expatriate staff arrived in the capital Addis Ababa on Monday by road and remain on standby, she said.
“We are determined to have a good dialogue with authorities to see if we can return. We don’t know what will become of the people we were assisting, there will be a hole,” Schaaf said.
The expulsion shocked other humanitarian groups working in the desolate Ogaden area bordering Somalia, where a guerrilla group has accused the Ethiopian authorities of blockading food relief, choking commercial trade and risking “man-made famine”.
The ICRC, which has said it performed its aid work “impartially and on strictly humanitarian grounds”, carried out a variety of relief projects during its 12 years there.
Until the eviction, it provided medical supplies to hospitals and health care centres, trained livestock owners, carried out water and sanitation projects, and visited detention centres to evaluate conditions and treatment of prisoners.
On Wednesday, an Ethiopian rebel group, the separatist Ogaden National Liberation Front accused government troops of having killed two local aid workers in Ogaden on July 29.
The dry region, populated largely by nomadic camel herders, is effectively off-limits to most human rights workers and journalists.