By Cultural Survival Press Release, (CAMBRIDGE, MA)
On-the-ground
reports from Ethiopia reveal the government is stepping up its violence
against Indigenous Anuak people. In the past week, sources say the
military has attacked civilians in the Gambella region and poisoned
water sources, forcing thousands of Indigenous people to leave their
homelands. Wild animals are dying as they drink the poisoned water.
The Ethiopian government is
forcibly removing some 200,000 Anuak people from their ancestral lands
and then leasing their forests and farms to foreign agro-industrial
companies. Human rights organizations, including Cultural Survival,
charge that Ethiopia’s “land grabbing” from its own people increases
poverty and hunger, even as the country continues to receive more U.S.
and foreign relief aid than any other African nation.
Cultural Survival, a nonprofit organization that
defends the rights of Indigenous people, is asking citizens of donor
nations—the United States, the United Kingdom and countries of the
European Union—to take action today to urge their governments to
persuade Ethiopia to halt this forced relocation program. Concerned U.S.
citizens can send letters to the U.S. State Department via Cultural
Survival’s website, www.culturalsurvival.org/take-action.
The Ethiopian government’s
programs of land grabbing and forced relocation of Indigenous people in
the Gambella region violate Ethiopia’s constitution and international
human rights laws, according to Cultural Survival Executive Director,
Suzanne Benally. Driven from their forests, fertile river valleys, and
farmlands with no compensation, Anuak families are forced into
government-built villages where they have no means of survival; the
promised jobs, farmland, healthcare and schools have not appeared. The
relocated Anuak families must depend on the government for food aid,
most of which comes from Western governments. Foreign companies’
bulldozers are not only destroying Indigenous people’s farms, they are
also destroying Gambella’s last remaining forests and wetlands, even
inside Gambella National Park.
Now, new reports indicate that
the government has deployed more than 20,000 troops to Gambella.
Cultural Survival has received reports of extra-judicial killings of
unarmed Anuak youth. Hundreds of young people are fleeing to neighboring
South Sudan and Kenya, fearing that another genocide like the one that
occurred in 2003 may be coming. Obang Metho, an Anuak refugee who
directs the Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia, based in Canada,
says the Anuak people are subjected to increased military harassment,
reminding them of a similar escalation of violence that culminated in
the 2003 massacre of more than 400 Anuak men.
“We are very alarmed by these reports of increasing state repression
in the context of land-grabbing and forced relocation of Indigenous
people,” says Paula Palmer, director of Cultural Survival’s Ethiopia
campaign. “It is shameful that U.S. tax dollars could be directly or
indirectly supporting such devastating human rights violations,” she
says.
Cultural Survival is monitoring
the situation in Ethiopia. For updates or to send letters to
governments of the U.S., the U.K., and the E.U, visit
www.culturalsurvival.org/take-action. Cultural Survival is a nonprofit
organization that has partnered with Indigenous Peoples for 40 years to
defend their lands, languages and cultures.
Contact:
Paula Palmer, Director, Global Response Program, culturalsurvival.org paula@culturalsurvival.org; 303.444.0306 and 303.335.8629 (cell)
Paula Palmer, Director, Global Response Program, culturalsurvival.org paula@culturalsurvival.org; 303.444.0306 and 303.335.8629 (cell)
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