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| Ethiopia war gets little attention |
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| SURVIVOR:
Ridwan Hassan Sahid says Ethiopian troops rounded up people in her
village, accusing them of being rebels. All were killed but Sahid,
who survived among a heap of corpses. |
Hundreds have died as ethnic Somali rebels
fight for autonomy for the Ogaden region. Government troops are accused of
indiscriminate killings.
By Edmund Sanders, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
March 23, 2008
NAIROBI, KENYA -- The teenager awoke under
a pile of corpses to a pricking sensation on her face. Ants were biting her
eyelids and the inside of her mouth.
The pain, however, brought relief to the 17-year-old.
"I thought, 'I'm alive,' " Ridwan Hassan
Sahid remembers. She felt blood oozing from rope burns around her neck and
the weight of a body against her back. But fearing that the Ethiopian
soldiers who had left her for dead in a roadside ditch would return, she
quickly brushed away the ants and shut her eyes, then slipped back into
unconsciousness.
The brutal assault and her miraculous escape mark one of the most chilling
stories to emerge from an unfolding tragedy in eastern Ethiopia that has
largely escaped the attention of a world transfixed by the humanitarian
crisis in neighboring Sudan's Darfur region.
Ever since exiting colonialists arbitrarily stuck a triangle-shaped wedge of
land with 4 million ethnic Somalis inside Ethiopia's border, violence and
suffering have plagued the region. Now, many of them have been caught up in
a war between the Ethiopian government and a separatist group known as the
Ogaden National Liberation Front.
Hundreds of civilians have been killed and tens of thousands were displaced
in the last year alone, though exact figures are unknown because the area is
remote and Ethiopian officials restrict access for humanitarian groups and
journalists.
Survivors such as Sahid offer the only glimpse of the tragedy. The petite
young woman, who lives at a secret location, shared her story recently with
The Times.
Now 18, Sahid at times seems to be an average teen, picking absent-mindedly
at her henna-stained fingernails and blushing when strangers express
interest in her.
But behind her soft brown eyes is a weariness that belies her age, and a
necklace of scar tissue rings her throat where the rope cut into her skin.
She recounts her ordeal without emotion. Only occasionally does her veneer
crack long enough for a tear to roll down her check, which she
self-consciously laughs off and wipes away.
"I wonder sometimes," she says, "what kind of life I can have now."
She grew up in the village of Qorile with eight siblings. The family, like
most everyone else in the area, were semi-nomadic cattle and sheep herders.
Ever since she can remember, Ethiopian authorities have been seen as the
enemy.
"We feel as if we are living under occupation," she says. "We grew up afraid
of them."
The Ogaden conflict dates to the 1940s, when, after World War II, European
nations lost or began to relinquish their colonies in the Horn of Africa.
After some years under British administration, Ogaden and surrounding areas
were placed under Ethiopian control, but the decision was never accepted by
the ethnic Somalis living there, spurring two wars between Ethiopia and
Somalia and spawning a string of rebel movements seeking autonomy or
unification with Somalia.
Ethiopian officials accuse the Ogaden rebels of using terrorist tactics,
including bombs, land mines and harassing the civilians it claims to
represent. In April 2007, the rebels killed more than 70 people at a
Chinese-run exploration facility in the region.
The attack prompted what aid groups and witnesses call a heavy-handed
response by the Ethiopian government. Troops are accused of burning down
villages believed to be rebel havens, raping women, forcibly recruiting
young men into government militias and imposing a commercial blockade that
sent food prices and malnutrition rates soaring.
"They used mass indiscriminate measures to collectively punish the entire
population," Human Rights Watch researcher Leslie Lefkow said.
Ethiopian officials deny any widespread human rights abuses and blame rebels
for the violence. "They are working with internationally known terrorists,"
said Zemedkun Tekle, spokesman for Ethiopia's Information Ministry.
Sahid says her family always tried to stay
out of the fray: "We are not political people."
But she found herself caught in the middle in July, when several hundred
Ethiopian troops surrounded her village. Her father was away tending animals
in the fields and her mother was shopping in a nearby town. Sahid was
washing her face when soldiers kicked in the door that morning.
"You are guerrillas," they shouted as they
ransacked the house, stealing food and supplies, Sahid remembers. She
escaped through a back door and huddled with other frightened villagers.
Soon soldiers gathered them all at a well and read names from a list of
"spies" and rebel sympathizers.
"Nobody knew who would be selected, but you knew if your name was called,
you would be killed," says Fathi Abdulla, 22, a cousin of Sahid who lives in
the same village. Sahid froze when she heard her name called. She and 10
others were taken to the school, which became a makeshift prison for
interrogation and torture.
"They took us one by one," Sahid says.
Soldiers accused her of taking supplies to rebels. They tied her hands and
legs together behind her back.
"They kicked me and stepped on my back," she says. "I told them that in my
whole life, the only person I've ever helped was my mother."
The next morning, Sahid and the other prisoners were marched for hours to
another village.
"They beat us like animals when we couldn't keep up," she says. "Mentally, I
was already dead. I was just waiting to die."
Arriving at the village, Sahid says, she watched as soldiers looted the town
and burned down all the huts. That night, none of the prisoners slept,
fearing what the next day would bring.
At daybreak, without explanation, soldiers began executing them, Sahid says.
Two villagers were hanged from trees. Two others were choked with metal rods
and rope.
Sahid was the last attacked. She remembers hearing the others scream and beg
for mercy, but couldn't move or make a sound herself.
"At that point, I was like a tree. I had no feeling. I was like a statue."
Two soldiers ordered her into the ditch, but she refused. Finally one
pounced, choking Sahid with a metal rod used to clean guns. They struggled
for a minute, but she did not lose consciousness and the soldier gave up.
Next, two exasperated soldiers grabbed the girl and tied a rope around her
neck. They pulled in different directions until she collapsed into the
ditch.
The next thing Sahid recalls are the ants. The midday sun was beating down
and she felt disoriented. Blood flowed from her nose and neck. Her legs were
trapped under a man's naked body. She says she closed her eyes again,
uncertain whether she would live or die.
Back in her village, friends and family formed a search party, following the
soldiers' footprints. They expected to recover nothing more than bodies.
After several hours of walking, they encountered a group of nomads who told
them about a nearby field with some bodies. Remarkably, they said, a young
girl was still alive.
"We rushed to the place," Abdulla says. The scene was grisly. Two men hung
from nooses in a tree. Other victims lay naked, with belts and ropes still
around their necks.
Sahid was in the ditch, under two bodies.
"As we came closer, she opened her eyes and looked at us! We were so
shocked."
They moved her under a tree, but feared she would soon die. They buried the
bodies and awaited help. Eventually camels were brought and friends began a
weeks-long journey to secretly move Sahid out of the country.
She remembers little of the escape or her recovery. She still can't use her
right hand because of nerve damage from the beatings.
With an uncertain future, Sahid spends most days indoors. Venturing outside
sometimes brings panic attacks.
She says the quiet moments are the hardest to bear.
"Whenever I sit for even a minute, I draw my mind back to those events. And
I start to cry."
edmund.sanders@latimes.com |
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Radio Xoriyo |
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BBC Somali |
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11:00 GMT |
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13:00 GMT |
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18:00 GMT |
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VOA
Somali |
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16 GMT (7 PM ) |
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17 GMT (8 PM) |
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Barnaamijkii Radio Xoriyo iyo Wararka Ogadeniya |
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Jaaliyada Ogadenia ee Minnesota oo
qabatey shir ay ku sagootinaysay Madaxda JWXO. |
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| 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. |
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International News |
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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. |
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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. |
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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. |
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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." |
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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 |
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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. |
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Humanitarian crisis hits Ethiopia
· Government accused of blockading rebel region
· Charity says 400,000 are being denied medical aid |
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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. |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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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 |
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