BY CONOR GAFFEY
Oromo people mourn a suspected protester who was allegedly shot dead by Ethiopian security forces, Oromia region, Ethiopia, December 17, 2015. Oromos have been protesting against plans to expand the capital Addis Ababa since November 2015.
Oromo people mourn a suspected protester who was allegedly shot dead by Ethiopian security forces, Oromia region, Ethiopia, December 17, 2015. Oromos have been protesting against plans to expand the capital Addis Ababa since November 2015.
Since the Ethiopian government announced
plans to expand the territory of the capital Addis Ababa in April 2014, the
country’s largest region, Oromia, has been racked with protests that have led
to hundreds of deaths.
Oromia, which completely surrounds the
capital of the Horn of Africa country, is home to the Oromo ethnic group.
Oromos constitute the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, yet members of the
community claim to have suffered
systematic discrimination and oppression at the hands of Ethiopia’s
federal government.
Newsweek explains who the Oromo are, why they are
protesting and how the Ethiopian government is responding.
Who are the
Oromos?
More than one in three Ethiopians hails
from the Oromo ethnic group: Oromos constituted more than 25
million of the total 74 million population at the last census in
2007 (the population of Ethiopia has since grown to almost 100 million). The
Oromo have their own language and culture distinct from the Amharic language,
which is employed as Ethiopia’s official dialect.
The Oromo have been subject to human rights
violations and discrimination under three successive regimes in Ethiopia,
according to a 2009 report
by U.S.-based Advocates for Human Rights group: the Abyssinian Empire under
Haile Selassie, dissolved in 1974; the Marxist Derg military junta that seized
power in 1974 and ruled until 1991; and the Federal Democratic Republic of
Ethiopia, established in 1991 and existing until the present.
Oromo language was sidelined and not taught
in schools for much of the 20th century and Oromo activists were often tortured
or disappeared. A 2009 report
by the United Nations Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) stated that 594
extra-judicial killings and 43 disappearances of Oromos were recorded between
2005 and 2008 by an Oromo activist group. The ethnic group have clashed with
the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), in power
since 1991; an Amnesty International report in October 2014 stated that at least 5,000
Oromos were arrested between 2011 and 2014 on the basis of
opposition to the government.
Why have Oromos protested against the Addis
Ababa master plan?
According to the Ethiopian government, the
Addis Ababa Integrated Master Plan proposed to expand the capital’s territory
in order to bring better services and greater economic opportunities to the
rural areas surrounding Addis. For the Oromos, however, the plan constituted an
attempted land grab that could result in the forced eviction of Oromo farmers
and the loss of valuable arable land in a country regularly
plagued by drought.
Protests began in Oromia immediately after
the plan was announced—at least nine students were killed
in April and May 2014, according to the government, although eyewitnesses said
the total was at least 47. The most recent round of protests began in November
2015 and have spread across the entirety of the vast Oromia region. Human
Rights Watch (HRW) reported in January that at least 140 protesters
had been killed in demonstrations after heavy-handed crackdowns by
security forces.
The Ethiopian government announced later in
January that it was abandoning the
Addis expansion plans after the Oromo People’s Democratic
Organization (OPDO)—the ruling party in Oromia and a member of the governing
EPRDF coalition—dropped its support for the scheme. Yet despite that, the
crackdown has continued: HRW’s latest update on February 22 cited claims from
activists that more than 200
protesters had been killed, with security forces allegedly firing on
peaceful protesters and thousands detained without trial.
Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, pictured addressing a U.N.
summit in New York, September 25, 2015, has vowed to crack down on
"destructive forces" the government says are hijacking Oromo
protests.Andrew Kelly/Reuters
How have the government responded to Oromo
protests?
The EPRDF has come down hard on protesters,
claiming that “destructive forces”—including groups designated as terrorist
organizations by the Ethiopian government—are hijacking the protests for their
own means. Hailemariam Desalegn, the Ethiopian prime minister, said in December
2015 that protesters had burned down government properties and killed security
forces, and that “merciless
legitimate action” would be taken against those causing disorder.
In a statement sent to Newsweek on
February 23, the Ethiopian embassy in London said that the claims made in HRW’s
February report were based on “malicious statements, false accusations and
unsubstantiated allegations from opposition propaganda materials.” The embassy
claimed that the Addis expansion plans were dropped after “extensive public
consultations” and an investigation into killings and destruction of property
was underway.
Are Oromos seeking secession from Ethiopia?
One of the designated terrorist
organizations accused of involvement in the protests by the Ethiopian
government is the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF). The group was established in 1973 to
campaign for the Oromo’s right to self-determination. The OLF is now based out
of Washington, D.C. and any accusations of its involvement in the Oromo
protests is a means of “criminalizing protesters,” according to Etana Habte,
Ethiopian author and PhD candidate at SOAS University of London. “I don’t
believe the OLF has very significant influence on this protest,” says Habte.
“[Claims the OLF is involved] have not any relevance or grain of truth within
itself. Oromo protests are fundamentally peaceful and it carries a legitimate
question.”
Habte claims that what the Oromo are
seeking is self-determination, not secession. Article 39 of
Ethiopia’s 1994 constitution affords “every nation, nationality or
people in Ethiopia” the “unrestricted right to self-determination up to
secession.” What the Oromo are asking for, says Habte, is a greater say in how
their region is governed. “Oromos understand Oromia as their own territory where
they have an absolute and constitutional right to self-rule,” says Habte. “The
Oromo protests don’t ask for anything more than [what is provided by] the
constitution.”
Source: europe.newsweek
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