Ethiopian refugee women wait to receive relief from the Kenya Red Cross
at a newly built Somare camp in Moyale border town on March 19, 2018.
The refugees escaped ongoing Ethiopian military attacks. AFP PHOTO |
BRIAN OTIENO
Over 9,000 Ethiopians, many of them women and children, have
fled into Kenya’s Marsabit County over the past 10 days, escaping
ongoing Ethiopian military attacks. Sadly, more may follow as Ethiopia
continues its two-and-a-half-year descent into further instability.
On
March 10 Ethiopian soldiers opened fire on a group of community members
in Moyale, Ethiopia, killing at least 10 people. The defence minister
announced that the killings were a “mistake.”
He said
that the soldiers had acted on bad intelligence, which had indicated
that the civilians were members of the banned Oromo Liberation Front, an
armed opposition group, a faction of which is active around the Moyale
area.
Ethiopia’s security forces have targeted
civilians expressing critical views of the government for harassment,
arrest, and in many cases, torture for many years. Countrywide,
Ethiopia’s military have killed over 1,000 civilians in response to
protests since late 2015.
Kenya should pay close
attention to what is happening in Ethiopia right now. In addition to the
potential for further insecurity spilling across the border, the
humanitarian consequences of increased conflict in Ethiopia could be
devastating for both countries.
Over eight million
Ethiopians are in need of food aid. Many of them live in southern
Ethiopia, close to the Kenyan border. If conflict in Ethiopia increases,
many of its most vulnerable citizens will be looking for safety.
Kinship connections, established trafficking routes, and relatively
stable security all make Kenya an attractive destination.
Until
late 2015, the Ethiopian government’s ruthless approach to governance —
criminalising speech critical of the government and detaining members
of the opposition, the media and civic groups — suppressed growing
anger, but these tactics are no longer working.
Since
the prime minister resigned a month ago, it remains unclear when a new
one will be chosen. [A new prime minister was picked on March
27.]Ethiopia is under its second countrywide state of emergency in two
years, managed by its ruthless military.
If a new prime
minister is not given the room to make key political reforms, Ethiopia
may well continue to descend further into disorder. Sadly, there aren’t
many positive signs that a new prime minister will have such latitude.
Some
of Ethiopia’s staunch Western allies, fearful of what a destabilised
Ethiopia would mean for their interests, have spoken openly of their
concerns and urged a change in tactics.
If Ethiopia
continues on its current path, neighbouring states like Kenya will
likely bear the brunt of what could be significant migration and
humanitarian crises. But, so far, the Kenyan government has been silent.
Ethiopia’s intolerance of dissent has also been exported across the border in the past.
For
years, Ethiopian intelligence officials, sometimes in co-operation with
Kenyan police, have harassed, threatened, and on occasion kidnapped
Ethiopian asylum seekers in Nairobi and elsewhere in Kenya.
Ethiopia’s
military has often punished civilians in and around Moyale on both
sides of the border for alleged support of Oromo Liberation Front
fighters. When the group attacked military targets inside of Ethiopia in
2015, Ethiopia’s response was to unilaterally move its soldiers into
Kenyan territory on no fewer than five occasions.
Kenyan
communities near the border told Human Rights Watch at the time that
the Ethiopian military harassed and beat citizens, and eventually
marched at least four Kenyan citizens to detention in Ethiopia.
In
the process the Ethiopian military killed three Kenyan police officers.
This was all because the military believed these Kenyan communities
supported the banned opposition group.
If thousands
more Ethiopians move into Kenya fleeing government repression, will
Ethiopia’s military continue its pattern of moving into northern Kenya
in pursuit of those who oppose them, using the spectre of the banned
group as a justification?
Kenya can and should take
the lead within the East African Community in encouraging Ethiopia to
embark on key domestic reforms that would prevent further abuses –
including allowing political parties to operate freely and media and
nongovernmental groups to operate independently.
And
Kenyan leaders should publicly voice their concern over the increased
military aggression that causes Ethiopians to flee into Kenya.
Kenya,
and East Africa more broadly, need a stable and prosperous Ethiopia.
Adding the voice of a trusted ally like Kenya to the many tens of
millions of Ethiopians demanding change will be an important
contribution toward stability in the region.
Felix Horne is the Ethiopia researcher at Human Rights Watch, Kenya.
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