Exclusive:
documents seen by the Guardian detail £13 – £15m government funding for
'special police' in Ogaden region
The Guardian, Ben Quinn, Thursday 10 January 2013
The Ethiopian army withdrew from teh Ogaden region after compalints againts soldiers'' conduct - to be replaced by the 'special police'. Photograph: Peter Delarue/AFP/Getty Images |
Millions of
pounds of Britain's foreign aid budget are to be spent on training an Ethiopian
paramilitary security force which stands accused of numerous human rights
abuses and summary executions.
The
Guardian has seen an internal Department for International Development document
forming part of a tender to train security forces in the Somali region of
Ogaden, which lies within Ethiopia, as part of a five-year £13 – 15m
"peace-building" programme. The document notes the "reputational
risks of working alongside actors frequently cited in human rights violation
allegations".
Dfid
insists that the training will be managed by NGOs and private companies with
the goal of improving security, professionalism and accountability of the force
but Human Rights Watch has documented countless allegations of human rights
abuses.
The Ethiopian
government's counter-insurgency campaign in Ogaden is spearheaded by the
"special police", also known as the "Liyu police", which
was created after federal security institutions effectively withdrew from the
region following strong condemnation of the Ethiopian army's conduct. The force
is commanded by Abdullahi Werar, vice-president of eastern Ethiopia's Ogaden
region, who visited London this week.
The
document says of the Liyu police: "The special police is a force of some
10-14,000 young Somalis mostly recruited from within the conflict zone (aka the
Ogaden sub-region) using recruitment methods similar to those of insurgent
groups.
"Training
is minimal and loyalty within the force closely linked to personalities in
leadership positions, of whom the president is paramount. Human rights abuses
committed by the special police are believed to be more widespread and severe
than those committed during the military campaign. However, having a Somali
paramilitary force lead operations in the region is convenient for the federal
government, who have been able to frame the conflict as internal regional
politics rather than a government-led crackdown."
Human
Rights Watch has said that the Liyu police have been implicated in serious
abuses against civilians throughout the Somali region of Ethiopia. It also
reports one case in which 10 men were summarily executed by the force in march last year.
Amnesty
International's Ethiopia researcher Claire Beston said it was highly concerning
that the UK was planning to engage with the special police. "There have
been repeated allegations against the Liyu police of extrajudicial killings,
rape, torture and other violations including destruction of villages and there
is no doubt that the special police have become a significant source of fear in
the region."
The army
also stands accused of orchestrating a mock execution of one of two Swedish
journalists jailed in Ethiopia in 2011.
DFID's
assistance for Ethiopia, geopolitically a crucial ally for the UK and others
against islamic militancy in east Africa, is the aid body's largest country
programme, with a spend of £390m per year by 2014/15
The DFID
document sets out the terms and reference of a "security and justice
component" for Ethiopia's Somali region. It states that the goal of the
programme, which will be managed by a DFID team, is "to build a more
peaceful and inclusive Somali region".
It adds:
"The primary recipients of the services will be DFID for the design
element and for the implementation the regional government of the Somali
Regional State, specifically state and non-state security and justice service
providers."
A DFID
spokesperson said: "The peace and development programme will be delivered
in partnership with NGOs and UN organisations and no funding will go through
the government of Ethiopia."
Martin
Schibbye, one of the two Swedish journalists jailed after illegally entering
Ethiopia and meeting with ethnic Somali rebels, told the Guardian about his
encounter with the army. "We were shot and arrested in June 2011 and then
we were first kept in the desert for two days ," said Schibbye, who was
freed along with his colleague, Johan Persson, after serving more than 400 days
of an 11-year sentence."
He
described being subjected to a mock execution in which soldiers walked him into
the desert. "They raised their rifiles and … said that if you don't tell
the truth we will shoot you here and blame it on the rebels."
The
Ethiopian embassy did not respond to queries about the special police and the
alleged treatment of Schibbye and Persson. Instead, a spokesperson referred to
a briefing that rejected allegations by Human Rights Watch of abuses in the
Ogaden region.
"Investigations
by the Donor Assistance Group, as well as repeated visits by embassies
including several members of the European community, the UK and the US, and by
a raft of NGOs working in the area have all failed to substantiate Human Rights
Watch claims – which are as usual drawn largely, if not exclusively, from
people outside the country, members of externally based armed opposition
movements and other dissidents," it said.
It added
that the Ethiopian government was actively engaged in discussions with the
Ogaden National Liberation Front, a rebel group in the region, "to
encourage it to lay down its arms".
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