by William Davison
Bloomberg
Addis Ababa
– Ethiopia’s government said it won’t cooperate with a probe into
whether the World Bank violated its own policies by funding a program in
which thousands of people were allegedly relocated to make way for
agriculture investors.
Ethnic Anuak people in Ethiopia’s
southwestern Gambella region and rights groups includingHuman Rights
Watch last year accused the Washington-based lender of funding a program
overseen by soldiers to forcibly resettle 45,000 households. The
Inspection Panel of the World Bank, an independent complaints mechanism,
began an investigation in October into the allegations, which donors
and the government have denied.
Ethiopia, Africa’s most-populous nation after Nigeria, has made 3.3 million hectares (8.2 million acres) of land available to agriculture companies. |
“We are not going to cooperate
with the Inspection Panel,” Getachew Reda, a spokesman for Prime
Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, said in a phone interview on May 22. “To
an extent that there’s a need for cooperation, it’s not going to be with
the Inspection Panel, but with the World Bank”
Ethiopia, Africa’s
most-populous nation after Nigeria, has made 3.3 million hectares (8.2
million acres) of land available to agriculture companies. Investors
include Karuturi Global Ltd. (KARG) of India, the world’s largest rose
grower, and companies owned by Saudi billionaire Mohamed al-Amoudi.
There
is a “plausible link” between the Promoting Basic Services program,
partly funded by the bank to pay the salaries of local government
workers, and a resettlement process also known as villagization in
Gambella, the panel said in a Nov. 19 report obtained by Bloomberg News.
The World Bank confirmed the authenticity of the report.
‘Potential Non-Compliance’
The
concurrent implementation of PBS and the resettlement program may raise
issues of “potential serious non-compliance with bank policy,”
according to the report.
“From a development perspective, the two
programs depend on each other, and may mutually influence the results of
the other,” the panel said.
Human Rights Watch, based in New
York, made similar allegations about the resettlement program in a
January 2012 report. Those findings and the Inspection Panel process are
part of a “propaganda campaign being waged against the government,”
Getachew said by phone from the capital, Addis Ababa. “It’s not a World
Bank inspection panel, it’s a panel that likes to impose its mostly
fictitious findings on the decision-making process of the World Bank.”
About
35,000 households voluntarily moved over the past three years in
Gambella and now have better access to public services and are growing
more food, State Minister of Federal Affairs Omod Obang Olum said in a
May 15 interview.
‘Unprecedented’
The complaint to the
panel was made on behalf of 26 Anuaks now living in South
Sudan andKenya. Refusal to cooperate with the panel by a World Bank
member state is “unprecedented,” said David Pred, a managing associate
at Inclusive Development International, or IDI, a California-based human-rights group that assisted with the complaint.
“I
don’t see how the bank could justifiably continue
supporting Ethiopia if the government simply rejects outright any
semblance of accountability,” he said in an e-mailed response to
questions.
The complaints should be investigated further “as they pertain to the bank’s application
of its policies and procedures,” the panel said. The probe should not
look at allegations of “specific human rights abuses” or the “underlying
purposes” of the resettlement program, it said.
Donor Aid
Donors provided $3.56 billion of aid to Ethiopia in 2011, which was 11.3 percent of gross national income, according to the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development.
The
World Bank said that while officials on PBS-funded salaries may have
“responsibilities related” to resettlement, this doesn’t mean the two
programs were “directly linked,” according to the panel.
There was
no evidence of “forced relocations or systematic human-rights abuses,”
according to reports by two fact-finding missions in 2011 and 2012 by
donors including the U.K. and U.S. aid agencies. “Half of the people
interviewed said they didn’t want to move” and some said public services
hadn’t been provided in new sites, the 2012 report found.
PBS
“does not build upon villagization, it is not synchronized with
villagization, and does not require villagization to achieve its
objectives,” the World Bank’s management said in response to the
complaint. “Furthermore the bank does not finance” villagization.
Election Violence
PBS began
in 2006 after donors stopped “direct budget support” to the federal
government because of violence following a disputed 2005 election. The
program provides block grants to regional governments that are mainly
spent on education, health, agriculture, water and road workers.
A
postponed March 19 discussion of PBS by the bank’s board has yet to be
rescheduled, Guang Chen, the bank’s Ethiopia director, said in an
e-mailed response to questions. “Staff are not authorized to comment
prior to the board discussion,” he said.
Since 2006, PBS has cost
donors and the government $13 billion, the panel said. The ongoing phase
is funded by the government, the World Bank, the African Development
Bank, the European Union, the U.K., Austria and Italy.
The panel also can’t comment at this stage, operations analyst Dilya Zoirova said in an e-mailed response to questions.
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