Friday, November 4, 2011

Ethiopia - government crackdown in Omo region intensifies

Ethiopia - government crackdown in Omo region intensifies
Survival International, November 3, 2011

Survival has received disturbing reports of a crackdown on tribal people
opposed to Ethiopia's program to remove them from their lands in the Omo
region and force them to resettle in villages.

The authorities have organized community meetings to inform people of
their controversial plans to lease out tribal lands to state and private
companies for conversion into large-scale sugar cane, cotton and
biofuels plantations.

After one such meeting, a group of Bodi and Chirim tribal people were
shown where they are to be resettled. However, after seeing the place,
they refused to be moved. The government responded by calling on the
security forces to attend a follow-up meeting. When they still refused
to move, four young men were rounded up and jailed.

Some Bodi felt so intimidated that they said the government could take
the land for sugar, because they 'could see that death was very near for
them if they said no.'

Members of the Suri tribe have also been arrested in the town of Tum for
opposing a plantation run by a Malaysian company, which has swallowed a
large part of their land where they graze their cattle.

Many Suri say the arrests are a show of force, to intimidate them into
not opposing the plantation. 'We lived there in peace, in the heart of
Suri land, the place where all of the Suri cattle were grazing during
both the rainy and dry seasons. Now, in this place there is a
plantation, owned by a rich Malaysian company.' said one young Suri man.

'The Malaysian investors and the government trained 130 soldiers who
were given 130 machine guns. If Suri become aggressive towards the farms
the soldiers are to kill Suri men, our sons,' said a Suri woman.

Meanwhile part of Mursi land has been cleared for a site to house
plantation workers, with a second camp currently under construction.
Officials reportedly told the Mursi that they will soon look for Mursi
elders and young men who oppose the plantation plans and imprison them.

It is estimated that there are up to 200 Bodi, 28 Mursi and 20 Suri in jail.

Many now fear that the security forces may start killing people.

Up to 300,000 hectares of tribal lands and national parks have been
earmarked for plantations in the Lower Omo Valley.

The plantations will be viable only because the controversial Gibe III
dam, currently under construction, will regulate the flow of the Omo
River and enable irrigation of the plantations. The dam will, however,
end the annual, natural flood on which all the Lower Omo Valley tribes
depend to grow their crops.

One Bodi sent out this message to Survival supporters: 'Please help
these people. This plantations project brings these people no peace.'

Another indigenous person appealed, 'Please stop this government from
terrorizing the indigenous people.'
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