FILE - Children displaced by fighting in South Sudan wait to be registered into the Kule 1 and 2 camps for Internally Displaced People at the Pagak border crossing in Gambella, Ethiopia, July 10, 2014.
Ethiopia is facing renewed ethnic conflict along its
Western border. Since late January, what began as a dispute over land rights
between the Nuer and Anyuak ethnic groups has spread, claiming dozens of lives.
The
clash is, in part, a result of the influx of thousands of ethnic Nuer who have
been displaced in the civil war in South Sudan and were forced to move into the
Gambella region of Ethiopia.
Some
of the displaced Nuer allegedly brought arms across the border, destabilizing
an already tense region.
According
to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), there are about
280,000 South Sudanese refugees in the region. About 84 percent live in six
refugee camps, and 16 percent live in host communities within the Gambella
region.
A refugee child from South Sudan feeds on food supplements at a health center at the Kule refugee camp in Ethiopia's Gambella region, April 1, 2015
Obang Metho, executive director of the Solidarity Movement
for a New Ethiopia, a nonprofit organization promoting change in Ethiopia, said
more than 50 people have died in the fighting.
‘Revenge
after revenge’
He
believes it began with a dispute over land rights between an Anyuak who is the
driver of the regional leader and a Nuer who is the deputy chairman of a local
university. Metho said the Nuer man shot and wounded the Anyuak man, causing
some university students of both ethnicities to fight.
"That
tension was very hard to control and, as a result of that, there were some
Anyuak who heard this and that their family members were killed, and in other
rural areas there were Anyuak who revenged on the Nuer," Metho said.
"And this really became revenge after revenge."
Getachew
Reda, Ethiopia's communications minister, said the violence escalated when
armed people — including local police and some who were part of the regional
government — tried to take advantage of the crisis for personal gain.
"Now,
upon the request of the regional government, the federal government has
intervened with the national defense forces, disarming members of the special
police forces," he said. "So, yes, dozens of lives are lost, but the
situation is totally under control now."
The
ethnic tension comes on the heels of a protracted dispute with the Oromo ethnic
group over a plan to expand the municipal borders of the capital, Addis Ababa.
FILE - A woman and her children displaced by fighting in South Sudan sit outside her tent at the Kule camp for Internally Displaced People at the Pagak border crossing in Gambella, Ethiopia, July 10, 2014.
The Anyuak people have also complained of mistreatment,
alleging that the Ethiopian government used World Bank funds to push farmers
off their land in Gambella.
Getachew,
however, rejected the notion that Ethiopia has a larger problem with ethnic
divisions.
"Ethnic
clashes are the result of people, or government officials, not being able to
address governance issues at every level, and what normally is a political
problem ends up becoming [an] ethnic problem," he said.
"The
overall solution for this challenge is not so much to write off the reality
that there are so many ethnic groups, but to make sure that our development
records actually benefit all aspects of society and, of course, all ethnic
groups in this country should see a light at the end of the tunnel because the
development dividend, the growth dividend, should equally benefit all our
people."
Fallout
from South Sudan
Movement
across the South Sudan-Ethiopia border is not a new phenomenon.
Close
ties and tensions between the Nuer and Anyuak date back centuries, and the
modern border between the two nations does not delineate where either group
lives.
The
civil war in South Sudan between Nuers and Dinkas is now having a cascading
effect on the region, leading to instability in Gambella, where most Nuers have
fled, Metho said.
FILE - Flooding is seen after heavy rains at the Lietchuor refugee camp in the Gambella region of Ethiopia.
"I think some of the Anyuaks feel threatened by the
refugees, and the United Nations also didn't [handle its] responsibility
because some of the refugees — they came carrying their guns with them, and
usually the refugees are not supposed to have guns," he said.
Thowat Pal, the chairman of the Ethiopian Patriotic Front,
an opposition group working to change leadership in Ethiopia, blamed South
Sudanese leaders for destabilizing the region.
"The instability of South Sudan is the cause of these
illegal arms because when [former opposition leader and present South Sudanese
Vice President] Riek Machar was mobilizing people, he was mobilizing tribal
youth to fight for the interest of a plan which he has concocted in order to
capture power by force," Pal said.
Pal fears that too many disputes in both Ethiopia and South
Sudan fracture along ethnic lines.
"There's regionalization which is based on
ethnicity," he said. "Some Ethiopians, nowadays, after the fall of
the Derg, they don't consider themselves as Ethiopians. They consider
themselves as ethnic communities of their own areas."
No comments:
Post a Comment