Contact  E- Mails
onlfpress@onlf.org
foreign@onlf.org
webmaster@onlf.org
 

The ONLF is a grassroots social and political movement founded in 1984 by the Somali people of Ogaden who could no longer bear the atrocities committed against them by successive Ethiopian regimes. Today, the ONLF as both an advocate for and defender of the people is dedicated to restoring the rights of Somalis in Ogaden to self-determination, peace, development and democracy

  

FRONT PAGE

Past Present

History Of The ONLF

Policy Of ONLF

Political Objectives

Media Reports

ONLF Interviews
Information BUREAU
ONLF Membership
Discussion Forum

International news links

  • BBC World service
  • BBC Network Africa
  • BBC FocusOnAfrica
  • CNN World
  • AL JAZEERA
  • DEUTSCHE WELLE
  • OGADEN ONLINE
  • ORAMIA ONLINE
  • SIDAMA CONCERN
  •  

    Amnesty Intl: Ethiopian troops commit atrocities in Somalia

    NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) — A leading human rights group on Tuesday accused Ethiopian troops in Somalia of killing civilians and committing atrocities, including slitting people's throats, gouging out eyes and gang-raping women.

    In a new report, Amnesty International detailed chilling witness accounts of indiscriminate killings in the Horn of Africa country and called on the international community to stop the bloodshed.

    Ethiopia's government said the report was unbalanced and "categorically wrong."

    The London-based rights group said testimony it received suggested all parties to Somalia's conflict have committed war crimes. But it singled out Ethiopian troops, who are in the country to back Somalia's U.N.-sponsored government, for some of the worst violations.

    Somalia's shaky transitional government invited Ethiopian forces into the country to help it battle Islamic insurgents. Somalia has been torn apart by years of violence between the militias of rival clan warlords.

    The rights group said it obtained scores of reports of killings by Ethiopian troops that Somalis have described as "slaughtering like goats." In one case, "a young child's throat was slit by Ethiopian soldiers in front of the child's mother," the report says.

    Ethiopia's Information Minister Berhanu Hailu said the report was "totally unfounded."

    "Normally when they report they do not balance it out. They have to go and see the reality for themselves. They shouldn't report from abroad saying this is happening," he told The Associated Press in the Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa.

    Amnesty said some 6,000 civilians were reported killed and more than 600,000 were forced to flee their homes in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, last year.

    "The people of Somalia are being killed, raped, tortured. Looting is widespread and entire neighborhoods are being destroyed," Michelle Kagari, Amnesty's deputy director for Africa, said in a statement from Nairobi that accompanied the report.

    The report quotes testimony from some 75 witnesses as well as scores of workers from non-governmental organizations. People are identified only by their first names to protect them from retaliation.

    In one testimony, Haboon, 56, said her neighbor's 17-year-old daughter was raped by Ethiopian troops. The girl's brothers tried to defend their sister, but the soldiers beat them and gouged their eyes out with a bayonet, Haboon was quoted as telling Amnesty.

    "The testimony we received strongly suggests that war crimes and possibly crimes against humanity have been committed by all parties to the conflict in Somalia and no one is being held accountable," Kagari said.

    Somalia has been mired in chaos since 1991, when warlords overthrew longtime dictator Mohamed Siad Barre and then turned on each other. Last year, Islamist militants took control of most of southern Somalia, including Mogadishu. Troops from neighboring Ethiopia deployed in December 2006 and ejected the Islamists from the capital.

    But since then, Mogadishu has been caught up in a guerrilla war between the government and its Ethiopian allies and the Islamist insurgents.

    Amnesty urged the U.N., African Union and others to act to halt the violence

     
     
     
     

    Radio Xoriyo

    BBC Somali

    11:00 GMT
    13:00 GMT
    18:00 GMT
     

    VOA Somali

    16 GMT (7 PM )

    17 GMT (8 PM)

    Barnaamijkii Radio Xoriyo iyo Wararka Ogadeniya
    Jaaliyada Ogadenia ee Minnesota oo qabatey shir ay ku sagootinaysay Madaxda JWXO.
     
    Halkan Riix  Radio Xoriyo >> Aroornimadii sabtida ahayd ee taariikhdu ku beegnayd 13 Oct. 2007, wuxuu maamulka Woqooyi Galbeed ku wareejiyay taliska dhiigya-cabka ah ee Addis Ababa 7 nin oo shacab ah oo u dhashay dalka Ogaadeenya oo sababo kala duwan u joogay magaalooyinka Hargaysa iyo Burco.
     
    International News
    Ethiopia bill faces Bush backlash. The US House of Representatives has set itself at loggerheads with the Bush administration by backing a bill that would force Ethiopia, a US military ally, to improve its record on democracy and human rights or risk losing substantial aid.
     
    Ethiopian rebels warn "African genocide" unfolding in Ogaden
    NAIROBI (AFP) — Ethiopian rebels on Thursday urged the world to bring an end to an army crackdown in the restive Ogaden region, warning that another "African genocide" is unfolding.
     
    Ethiopia's Ogaden rebels warn of "African genocide" Thu 13 Sep 2007 - NAIROBI (Reuters) - Rebels from Ethiopia's troubled Ogaden region said on Thursday an "African genocide" was unfolding there while a U.N. fact-finding mission had only visited areas sanctioned by the government.
     
    Ethiopia: Ogaden Leaders Accuse Govt of 'Genocide' Leaders of the Ogaden National Liberation Front (OLNF), a rebel group fighting against the Ethiopian government, have accused the Ethiopian army of committing crimes "tantamount to genocide."
     
    Rebels say continuing war crimes in Ogaden, cause civilian displacement. Thursday 13 September 2007 - Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) O.N.L.F Statement On Civilian Displacement & Continuing War Crimes In Ogaden
     
    Ethiopia chides MSF charity for Ogaden reports. Wed 5 Sep 2007 - ADDIS ABABA, Sept 5 (Reuters) - State authorities in Ethiopia's Ogaden on Wednesday denied reports by Medecins Sans Frontieres of a growing humanitarian crisis in the region where government forces and rebels have been fighting for months.
     
    Humanitarian crisis hits Ethiopia
    · Government accused of blockading rebel region
    · Charity says 400,000 are being denied medical aid
     
    Villages deserted, burned in Ethiopia's Ogaden - MSF
    Tue 4 Sep 2007, NAIROBI (Reuters) - Villages are burned and deserted, locals are fleeing to the bush, and basic health needs are going unmet during conflict in Ethiopia's Ogaden region, an international aid agency said on Tuesday.
     
    Ethiopia blocking civilian access to medicine in conflict zone, agency says. NAIROBI, Kenya: Ethiopian soldiers have chased women and children from wells in the desert and blocked civilians from getting medical care in an eastern Ethiopian region where a rebellion is brewing, the aid agency Medecins Sans Frontieres said Tuesday. AP
     
    Ethiopian Rebels to Refrain From Attacks. KHARTOUM, Sudan, Sept. 2 — A powerful rebel group in the Ogaden desert of Ethiopia has declared a temporary cease-fire to allow a United Nations fact-finding team to gain access to the war-torn region, a rebel spokesman said Sunday. By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN New York Times, United States
     
    Ethiopia rebels call ceasefire for U.N. mission. NAIROBI, Sept 2 (Reuters) - Ethiopian rebels announced a ceasefire on Sunday while a U.N. mission assesses their claims of human rights abuses in the remote eastern Ogaden region. Reuters
     
    Ethiopia rebels 'agree UN truce. Rebels in south-eastern Ethiopia say they will observe a ceasefire for the week-long visit of a UN delegation.The team is probing rights violations and humanitarian issues in the conflict between troops and the Ogaden National Liberation Front in the Somali region. BBCNEWS
     
    Ethiopia 'blocking MSF in Ogaden. International aid agency Medecins Sans Frontiers has accused Ethiopia of denying it access to the country's eastern Ogaden region. BBCNEWS
     
    Ethiopian Rebels Declare Cease-Fire. NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) - Rebels in Ethiopia's volatile east declared a unilateral cease-fire Sunday so the United Nations can investigate their claims of human rights abuses by the government in the region. Associated Press Writer
     
    UN Assessing Needs of Civilians in Ethiopia's Ogaden Region. A United Nations fact-finding mission is in Ethiopia's restive Ogaden region to assess the food, water and health needs of civilians caught amid a military campaign against local separatist rebels. Human rights groups accuse the government of committing serious human rights violations against the civilians. VOA
     
    UN delegation in Somalia promised protection. A UN delegation in Somalia has been told rebels in south-eastern Ethiopia will observe a ceasefire for the next week while they are visiting the country. Malaysia Sun
     
     
         
     
    Copyright © 2001-2007 Infobureau@onlf.org All Rights Reserved.
     This site is owned by ONLF.  Copying, duplication, or reproduction of any material on this site is prohibited without express permission of the site owner, copyright or trademark owner