Rapidly After the New PM Came to Power
HRLHA Statement
Ethiopians and the friends of Ethiopia have recently witnessed two major
changes taking place in the country particularly in relation to
honoring and protecting human rights. One is the replacement of Mr.
Meles Zenawi, whose government tightly restricted fundamental human
rights and severely punished those who attempted to exercise some of
their basic freedoms, by another prime minister. The other change is
Ethiopia’s election to the United Nations’ Human Rights Council.
Following those changes, again Ethiopians and their friends expected
some kinds of improvements in terms of human rights situations in the
country. There have been reasons why improvements were expected in both
cases. Firstly,
the new prime minster, Mr. Hailemariam Dessalegn, was believed to be
much more and well educated person than Mr. Meles Zenawi, who was just a
rebel leader and a first-year university drop-out before coming to
power. Besides, contrary to Mr. Meles’ underlying political principles
of racism and regionalism, Mr. Hailemariam was expected to be far from
racial partiality, discrimination and political biases. Secondly,
membership to the UN Human Rights Council comes with such obligations as
holding the highest standards in the promotion and protection of
human rights around the globe (UN General Assembly Resolution 60/251).
Unfortunately, the expected improvements haven’t happened. Instead, we
are witnessing the worsening of the human rights situations in the
country. Good most recent cases in point are the Suri massacre in the
Omo Valley, south-western Ethiopia, and racially motivated brutal
crackdown against the students of Addis Ababa, Arat Kilo University,
almost all of whom were Oromo nationals.
The massacre of members of the Suri tribe took place in December 2012,
when a heavily armed national army was sent to the area to silence the
Suri people’s protest against evictions and displacements from their
ancestral land, properties, and all forms of livelihoods against their
will and out of their consent. According to the report obtained from a
Human Rights researcher called Doglas Burji[1],
147
Suris were killed in a one time attack by the national army at an
area called Beyahola in Suri village; and their dead bodies were buried
in a mass grave deep in the Dibdib forest not far from the village.
The Oromo students of Addis Ababa University were severely attacked,
apprehended, and sent to detentions simply because they attempted to
express their anger and opposition to racial attacks. In the incident,
more than 130 students (most of them Oromos) were arrested[1].
Among the detainees, one student was severely beaten by security forces
and died in a hospital where he was taken to for a pretentious
treatment. From among the 130 detained students, many were released
during the first week of their detention; while 35 Oromo students are
still in prison. Both cases were not the first of their kinds to happen.
They were exact duplication of previous similar incidents that took
place for the same purposes of promoting political and economic
interests of the group in power.
Not only the international documents and/or treaties that Ethiopia has
so far ratified, but also a lot of legal and constitutional documents
issued at different times by different regimes of Ethiopia, including
the ones currently in power talk a lot about the protection and
promotion of fundamental human rights. But, all remained on paper. As a
result, Ethiopians from all walks of life, age, and gender, religious
and ethnic groups have been paying so dearly including in their lives.
It is still not too late to reverse the current harmful approach to
human rights in Ethiopia and, by so doing, to prevent the worst from
happening. Therefore, the HRLHA calls up on all local, regional, and
international human rights and diplomatic agencies to renew, under the
new leadership, their commitment to encouraging and supporting the
protection and promotion of fundamental rights in Ethiopia. We also call
up on those agencies to put all necessary pressures on the Ethiopian
Government so that it abides by all laws and constitutional provisions
of the country that apply to human rights as well as the international
human rights instruments it has adopted.
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