By Tesfa-Alem Tekle,
ADDIS ABABA - The Ethiopian government has dismissed
reports of violence in the country’s South Western region that allegedly
forced civilians flee into South Sudan’s Jonglei State.
A new humanitarian report released by the United Nations Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that hundreds of
ethnic Anuak Ethiopians have crossed into South Sudan to escape an
alleged hostility between the government forces and little known Anuak
opposition forces in the horn of Africa country’s Gambella region.
The Ethiopian government has dismissed the reported clashes between
government forces and Anuak insurgents that allegedly occurred during
the past few weeks. “There wasn’t such an incident. Our forces didn’t engage in any clash
with whatsoever opposition force in the reported vicinity” Ethiopian
government spokesperson, Shimeles Kemal, told Sudan Tribune on Tuesday.
Kemal said the reports - which originally were published in OCHA’s
Weekly Humanitarian Bulletin 4-10 May 2012 - are “unfounded” and further
termed them as “white propaganda”. According to the Ethiopian official, the areas in question are quite
peaceful and there were no grounds for the Anuak people to flee to
neighbouring South Sudan.
However, he said that people residing along the shared Ethiopia-South
Sudan border move frequently between the two territories for trade and
other purposes. In the past, there were few reports that an Anuak armed group had
been launching small-scale attacks from South Sudan, while it was still
part of Sudan, targeting government forces and partly non-Anuak
civilians as well.
The Ethiopian government argues that currently there exists no active Anuak opposition force operating in the region. According to the latest OCHA report, most of the Ethiopian refugees
reportedly came from Ethiopia’s Abobo district and from Jor area where
clashes were reported on 6 May. The refugees have arrived in the Alari camp, in Pochalla County of Jonglei State where they sought shelter.
Although access to Alari camp is difficult because of heavy rainfall,
humanitarian aid agencies in collaboration with the Government of South
Sudan’s Relief and Rehabilitation Commission (RRC) are reportedly
paying visit to the Ethiopian refugees to start registration and
identify humanitarian aids needed for the new arrivals.
Shelter and household goods were the most urgent needs, according
primary assessment by aid agencies. A nutritional assessment made to 100
children at the site found no malnutrition. UNHCR Representative in Addis Ababa, Natalia Prokopchuk told Sudan tribune
that her office in Ethiopia has no knowledge about the Anuaks fleeing
to Jonglei State however she said that the UN refugee agency was aware
of some 2,000 Anuaks fleeing Akobo County into Gambella region of
Ethiopia.
According to Prokopchuk, the Anuaks are fleeing their area because of cattle-related inter-ethnic violence. The Anuak people roughly estimated to be around 60,000 populations
are one of the 84 ethnic groups in Ethiopia. The Anuak also live across
the border in South Sudan. International human right groups have been accusing the Ethiopian
military of committing systematic atrocities mainly targeting certain
ethnic minorities such as the Anuak.
Human Rights Watch’s 2005 report, “Targeting the Anuak: Human Rights
Violations and Crimes against Humanity in Ethiopia’s Gambella Region,”
revealed gross human rights violations against the Anuaks by Ethiopian
Army.
In 2003, over 400 Anuaks in Gambella were killed, the largest single
incident massacre, raising worldwide condemnation. International rights
groups hold the Ethiopian army responsible over the mass killings.
However, the Ethiopian government has denied any involvement over the
atrocities.
Source: Sudan tribune
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