For Immediate Release
World Bank: Investigate ‘Development’ Project Abuses
Rigorously Apply Social Safeguards in Ethiopia
(Washington, DC, March 18, 2013) – The World Bank’s board should
support an internal investigation into allegations of abuse linked to a
World Bank project in Ethiopia, Human Rights Watch said today.
The Inspection Panel, the World Bank’s independent accountability mechanism, has recommended an investigation into
whether it has violated its policies in a project linked to the
Ethiopian government’s resettlement program, known as “villagization.”
Villagization involves the forced relocation of some 1.5 million
Ethiopians, including indigenous and other marginalized peoples, and has
been marred by violence. The board is scheduled to meet on March 19,
2013, to consider the Inspection Panel’s recommendation.
“The World Bank’s president and board need to let the Inspection
Panel do its job and answer the critical questions that have been raised
by Ethiopians affected by this project,” said Jessica Evans,
senior international financial institutions advocate at Human Rights
Watch. “If the World Bank doesn’t support this investigation, its
Ethiopia program will continue to be shadowed by controversy.”
On September 24, 2012, several Ethiopians brought a complaint to
the Inspection Panel, pressing the World Bank to apply its safeguard
policies in an Ethiopia project. The safeguard policies are designed to
prevent and mitigate undue harm in World Bank projects, including
protecting the rights of indigenous peoples and preventing abuses
related to involuntary resettlement.
The World Bank went ahead and approved the project the next day and has not applied its safeguard policies to the project.
The Inspection Panel, which reports directly to the World Bank’s
board of executive directors, subsequently found that the complaint
warranted a full investigation. This recommendation would have been
endorsed by the board in February, but action has been delayed because
the executive director representing Ethiopia has requested a discussion
of the panel’s finding and recommendation.
Human Rights Watch research has found that
many of the largely indigenous communities being moved in Gambella, one
region where “villagization” is being carried out, have not been
consulted about the resettlement process and that the government
responded with violence and arbitrary detentions when people have not
agreed to move.
A 20-year-old Ethiopian man who escaped to Kenya told Human
Rights Watch, “Soldiers came and asked me why I refused to be
relocated.… They started beating me until my hands were broken … I ran
to tell [my father] what had happened, but the soldiers followed me. My
father and I ran away.… I heard the sound of gunfire.” He heard his
father cry out, but he kept running and hid from the soldiers in the
bushes as he was “full of fear.” When he returned the next day, he
learned that the soldiers had killed his father.
Once forced into new villages, families have found that the promised
government services often do not exist, giving them less access to
services than before the relocation. The government has also failed to
provide compensation. Dozens of farmers in Ethiopia’s Gambella region
told Human Rights Watch they are being moved from fertile areas where
they survive on subsistence farming, to dry, arid areas. Many villagers
believe that the fertile land from which they have been removed is being
leased to multinational companies for large-scale farms.
The project in question is known as the Promotion of Basic Services
(PBS) and is intended to improve education, health care, water and
sanitation, agriculture, and rural roads. But, through this project, the
World Bank is contributing to the salaries of local government staff
who have been required to assist in implementing “villagization.”
Despite the human rights risks that “villagization” presents for the
World Bank’s project, it has not applied its own safeguard policies. Its
policy to protect indigenous people has not been applied in Ethiopia
because the government does not agree that it should apply. Nor has the
World Bank applied its policy on involuntary resettlement, which
requires consultation and compensation when people are resettled.
The Inspection Panel recommended that it undertake a full
investigation after a preliminary assessment that included interviewing
Ethiopian refugees who have fled “villagization” and meeting with the
Ethiopian government and donors. The Inspection Panel found the links
between the World Bank’s basic services program and “villagization” to
be plausible and to warrant investigation.
“Ethiopia is in great need of development aid, and its people have
urgent social and economic needs that the World Bank should work to
address,” Evans said. “But development by force is not development at
all and Ethiopia should not be an exception to the World Bank’s
commitment to upholding its own policies.”
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