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Ethiopia: Protest Crackdown Killed Hundreds.

(Nairobi, June 16, 2016) – Ethiopian security forces have killed more than 400 protesters and others, and arrested tens of thousands more during widespread protests in the Oromia region since November 2015,Human Rights Watch said in a report released today. The Ethiopian government should urgently support a credible, independent investigation into the killings, arbitrary arrests, and other abuses.

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Free Wrongfully Held Detainees, Independent Inquiry Needed

The 61-page report. “‘Such a Brutal Crackdown’: Killings and Arrests in Response to Ethiopia’s Oromo Protests,” details the Ethiopian government’s use of excessive and unnecessary lethal force and mass arrests, mistreatment in detention, and restrictions on access to information to quash the protest movement. Human Rights Watch interviews in Ethiopia and abroad with more than 125 protesters, bystanders, and victims of abuse documented serious violations of the rights to free expression and peaceful assembly by security forces against protesters and others from the beginning of the protests in November 2015 through May 2016.

“Ethiopian security forces have fired on and killed hundreds of students, farmers, and other peaceful protesters with blatant disregard for human life,” said Leslie Lefkow, deputy Africa director at HumanRights Watch. “The government should immediately free those wrongfully detained, support a credible, independent investigation, and hold security force members accountable for abuses.”

Human Rights Watch found that security forces used live ammunition for crowd control repeatedly, killing one or more protesters at many of the hundreds of protests over several months. Human Rights Watchand other organizations have identified more than 300 of those killed by name and, in some cases, with photos.

The November protests were triggered by concerns about the government’s proposed expansion of the capital’s municipal boundary through the Addis Ababa Integrated Development Master Plan. Protesters feared that the Master Plan would displace Oromo farmers, as has increasingly occurred over the past decade, resulting in a negative impact on farm communities while benefiting a small elite.

As protests continued into December, the government deployed military forces for crowd-control throughout Oromia. Security forces repeatedly fired live ammunition into crowds with little or no warning or use of non-lethal crowd-control measures. Many of those killed have been students, including children under 18.

The federal police and military have also arrested tens of thousands of students, teachers, musicians, opposition politicians, health workers, and people who provided assistance or shelter to fleeing students. While many detainees have been released, an unknown number remain in detention without charge and without access to legal counsel or family members.

Witnesses described the scale of the arrests as unprecedented. Yoseph, 52, from the Wollega zone, said: “I’ve lived here for my whole life, and I’ve never seen such a brutal crackdown. There are regular arrests and killings of our people, but every family here has had at least one child arrested.”

Former detainees told Human Rights Watch that they were tortured or mistreated in detention, including in military camps, and several women alleged that they were raped or sexually assaulted. Some said they were hung by their ankles and beaten; others described having electric shocks applied to their feet, or weights tied to their testicles. Video footage shows students being beaten on university campuses.

Despite the large number of arrests, the authorities have charged few individuals with any offenses. Several dozen opposition party members and journalists have been charged under Ethiopia’s draconian anti-terrorism law, while 20 students who protested in front of the United States embassy in Addis Ababa in March were charged with various offenses under the criminal code.

Access to education – from primary school to university – has been disrupted in many locations because of the presence of security forces in and around schools, the arrest of teachers and students, and many students’ fear of attending class. Authorities temporarily closed schools for weeks in some locations to deter protests. Many students told Human Rights Watch that the military and other security forces were occupying campuses and monitoring and harassing ethnic Oromo students.

There have been some credible reports of violence by protesters, including the destruction of foreign-owned farms, looting of government buildings, and other destruction of government property. However, theHuman Rights Watch investigations into 62 of the more than 500 protests since November found that most have been peaceful.

The Ethiopian government’s pervasive restrictions on independent human rights investigations and media have meant that very little information is coming from affected areas. The Ethiopian government has also increased its efforts to restrict media freedom. Since mid-March it has restricted access to Facebook and other social media. It has also restricted access to diaspora television stations.

In January, the government announced the cancellation of the Master Plan. By then, however, protester grievances had widened due to the brutality of the government response.

While the protests have largely subsided since April, the government crackdown has continued, Human Rights Watch found. Many of those arrested over the past seven months remain in detention, and hundreds have not been located and are feared to have been forcibly disappeared. The government has not conducted a credible investigation into alleged abuses. Soldiers still occupy some university campuses and tensions remain high. The protests echo similar though smaller protests in Oromia in 2014, and the government’s response could be a catalyst for future dissent, Human Rights Watch said.

Ethiopia’s brutal crackdown warrants a much stronger, united response from concerned governments and intergovernmental organizations, including the United Nations Human Rights Council, Human RightsWatch said. While the European Parliament has passed a strong resolution condemning the crackdown and a resolution has been introduced in the United States Senate, these are exceptions in an otherwise severely muted international response to the crackdown in Oromia. The UN Human Rights Council should address these serious abuses, call for the release of those arbitrarily detained and support an independent investigation.

“Ethiopia’s foreign supporters have largely remained silent during the government’s bloody crackdown in Oromia,” Lefkow said. “Countries promoting Ethiopia’s development should press for progress in all areas, notably the right to free speech, and justice for victims of abuse.”

Source: HRW

 


Migrants, including children, found dead in Niger desert.

The bodies of 34 migrants, including 20 children, have been found in the Niger desert near the Algerian border. They were abandoned by their smugglers.

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In a statement read on national television on Wednesday, the Niger government said the migrants died between June 6 and 12.

Of the adult migrants, nine were women and five were men, Interior Minister Bazoum Mohammed said, adding that President Mahamadou Issoufou expressed his condolences to their families.

“Thirty-four people of whom five were men, nine were women and 20 children, died as they tried to cross the desert,” Mohammed said. “They probably died of thirst, as is often the case, and they were found near Assamaka,” a border post between Niger and Algeria.

 The migrants “were abandoned by people smugglers,” the statement added. Only two of the bodies have so far been identified: a man and a 26-year-old woman, both from Niger.

A dangerous route

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Assamakka is a small town in northern Niger at the only official crossing point between Niger and Algeria, 450 kilometers (280 miles) north of Agadez. This is the largest city in central Niger and the point at which buses end their routes and migrants are at the mercy of smugglers for the desert crossing to the Mediterranean coast.

Thousands of illegal migrants have arrived in Algeria in recent years, mostly from neighboring Mali and Niger. The route through Libya has become even more dangerous for migrants because of local disputes and conflict.

Despite the dangers, Arezo Malakooti, senior researcher at the Global Migration Data Analysis Centre of the International Organization for Migration, said migrants are using the Libya route as it is now impossible to cross into Spain from Morocco:

Using data from it Displacement Tracking Matrix, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) has estimated that 120,000 people crossed through Agadez last year and 60,000 between February and April this year.

Earlier this year, IOM Chief of Mission in Niger Giuseppe Loprete said: “Collecting data in these areas remains a challenge, but for the first time we now have reliable information and estimations on the migratory flows.

The analysis of these trends is key to address the drivers of the migration through West Africa to North Africa and Europe, and we will continue to reinforce our activities, especially in the most remote areas of Niger.”

On the southern edge of the Sahara desert, smugglers are believed to charge up to 500 euros for the trip from Agadir across the desert, often in the back of an open pick-up truck, towards the Mediterranean coastline of Algeria or Libya some 3,000 kilometers away.

Frequent sand storms change the appearance of the landscape and many people get lost.

There is also the threat of attacks from rival smugglers who may steal the vehicle and leave the migrants to die in the desert.

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Somalia Moves to Shore Up Government Ahead of National Elections

The Somali parliament approved amendments to the constitution Wednesday that will allow the House to continue to function should the country’s leaders fail to meet the deadline set for the election of government institutions.The parliament’s move fuels anxiety that legislative elections scheduled for August and presidential polling set for September may not take place. The Somali leaders are already behind schedule for agreeing on details of the election procedures, the status of Mogadishu (whether it will be a capital or a federal state), and constitutional amendments that allow government institutions to function beyond the end of their current mandate.

Matt Bryden, director of Sahan Research and a leading regional analyst, said the leaders can still hold the elections on time to maintain the existence of the internationally recognized government institutions in the country.

“It is still possible to hold an electoral process in Somalia whether or not that happens is going to be a question of political will on the part of the various actors concerned,” he said. “I think we have seen the federal government, the president, the prime minister and leaders of the federal member states committed to taking the electoral process forward. Parts of the parliament has objected to the process as its taking shape, they objected the lead role of the National Leadership Forum “NLF”, and I think we could anticipate attempt by some MPs to interfere with process,” he said.

Bryden warned against delaying the elections or an extension as feared by many ordinary citizens. Some of the leaders though are privately accepting that there will be delays due to “technicalities”.

“Missing the deadline and moving into the dynamic of a delay of an extension of any kind is extremely risky. It could trigger a political crisis, it could trigger a constitutional crisis,” he said.

FILE – Wrecked cars burn at the scene of a terror attack at the Ambassador Hotel, after a car bomb exploded on June 1, 2016 at a top Mogadishu hotel that houses several MPs, killing several people, and followed by a gun battle.

“Beyond those dates there are opportunities for contestation to emerge for spoilers or even legitimate opposition to claim that the institutions are no longer legitimate. I think that is a risk that Somalia does not need to take,” he said.

Earlier this year the leaders of the federal government and the heads of regional administrations, known as NLF, agreed that direct elections to be held in the country were not feasible this year, as promised four years ago. Instead, the leaders agreed to hold indirect elections. They have agreed that more than 14,000 delegates will elect the 275-member lower house of parliament and that regional administrations will directly nominate the 54-member upper house. The two houses will elect a president.

Somali leaders are again promising another one-person, one-vote system in 2020. Bryden said the current process is unconstitutional but added there is no other option. He said it will only improve current institutions.

“For the first time the federal states or the interim regional admins will have representatives in the federal institutions, will participate in the legislative process, will be involved in the setting up of the transitional mechanism, and I think we are likely to see a much better relationship and cooperative relationship between the federal member states and the federal government in the next four years if this process is allowed to go forward.”

The government accepts it was unable to hold popular elections primarily because of the security challenges with the radical Islamist group al-Shabab still controlling vast land in the countryside and continuously launching ambushes against government and African Union peacekeeper supply lines. Bryden said al-Shabab is not the only problem.

“No, al-Shabab is not the problem. The elephant in the room I would say is not al-Shabab, it’s the failure of the government to exercise effective authority across Somalia’s territory, and al-Shabab is not the greatest impediment, the greatest impediment is the lack of capacity, it’s the failure to practice fully inclusive politics,” he said.

“Al-Shabab is disruptive but it’s no longer an existential threat to Somalia or to the States of the region but it thrives on local grievances, and it’s those grievance that the government has to work on reducing or eliminating if it’s effectively going to counter Al-Shabab,” he said.

FILE – Al-Shabab fighters are seen marching with their weapons during exercises on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia, Feb. 17, 2011.

The Somali government says al-Shabab is more than disruptive and blames the group for almost most of the problems in the country. When VOA recently asked the Somali prime minister if he supports drone strikes against the group’s leaders, Omar Abddirashid Sharmarke said the group is responsible for not only the security challenges but also for driving the Somali youth in despair.

“What brought this problem is al-Shabab, we would have moved on from 25 years of troubles, our kids are dying in the seas,” he said.

“The problem was brought by the people who are committing suicide against hotels who are behind this radical ideology that is massacring the Somali people that is preventing the country from development and peace and our children to go to schools.”

Sharmarke said al-Shabab brought the drones upon itself.

“We would not have needed foreigners, blame lies with the people who are against peace,” said Sharmarke.

15 Somalians Suffocate in a truck in Luapula Province (Imagery warning)

15 people suspected to be Somalian nationals have died in a containerised truck on the pedicle road in an apparent case of human trafficking gone wrong.

The Truck registered AFB 496 from Kasama was carrying over 50 Somalians suspected to be trafficked from Tanzania.

The final destination of the victims is unclear at this stage.

The Truck carrying bags of beans in front but had Somalians hidden behind.
Apparently passers-by are said to have forced the driver to open the truck when they heard noises coming from the truck.

At the scene, 20 Km from Levy Mwanawasa Bridge in Chembe, bodies were found strewn on the ground and over 30 survivors narrated that they were transferred from another truck and were picked from Kasama but the new truck had no ventilation which made their colleagues suffocate to death.

The driver is detained by Police on the Congo side.

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Bodies of suspected Somalians strewn on the ground

Bodies of suspected Somalians strewn on the ground
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Bodies of suspected Somalians strewn on the ground after the suffocated in a truck

Bodies of suspected Somalians strewn on the ground after the suffocated in a truck
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Lifeless bodies of suspected Somalians strewn on the ground

Lifeless bodies of suspected Somalians strewn on the ground
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