The human cost of Ethiopia’s “villagisation” programme is
laid bare by damning report from the California-based thinktank the Oakland
Institute. The victims of land grabbing and displacement are given a rare voice
in We Say the Land is Not Yours: Breaking the Silence against Forced
Displacement in Ethiopia
The east African country has long faced criticism for
forcibly relocating tens of thousands of people from their ancestral homes to
make way for large scale commercial agriculture, often benefiting foreign
investors. Those moved to purpose-built communes are allegedly no longer able
to farm or access education, healthcare and other basic services. Agriculture
makes up nearly half the GDP of Ethiopia, where four in five people live in
rural areas. But since the mid-2000s, the government has awarded millions of
hectares of land to foreign investors. The commune development programme, which
aims to move 1.5 million rural families from their land to new “model” villages
across the country, has faced allegations of violent evictions, political
coercion, intimidation, imprisonment, rapes, beatings and disappearances. Such
accounts threaten to dent the image of Ethiopia, a darling of the development
community that has enjoyed double digit economic growth for the best part of a
decade. The government has been criticised for brooking little opposition,
clamping down on civil society activism and jailing more journalists than any
country in Africa, except its neighbour Eritrea.
Opposition to the scheme is not tolerated, according to the
witness. “People are intimidated – we are forced to say positive things about
villagisation, but really we refuse to accept the programme. If you challenge,
the government calls you the mastermind of conflict. One of the government
officials was opposed to the government. They wanted to put him in prison. He
escaped and is now in Kenya, living as a political refugee.”
“My village refused to move,” says one, from the community
of Gambella. “So they forced us with gunshots. Even though they intimidated us,
we did not move – this is our land, how do we move? They wanted our land
because our land is the most fertile and has access to water. So the land was
promised to a national investor.
Last year, we had to move. The promises of food and other
social services made by the government have not been fulfilled. The government
gets money from donors but it is not transferred to the communities.
The land grab is not only for agriculture, the interviewee
claims, but the community has also seen minerals and gold being mined and
exported. “We have no power to resist. We need support. In the villages, they
promised us tractors to help us cultivate. If money is given to the government
for this purpose, we don’t know how it is used.
The government receives money from donors, but they fill
their pockets and farmers die of hunger.”
A witness from Benishangul laments: “This is not
development. Investors are destroying our lands and environment. There is no
school, [no] food security, and they destroy wild fruits. Bamboo is the life of
people. It is used for food, for cattle, for our beds, homes, firewood,
everything. But the investors destroy it. They destroy our forests. This is not
the way for development. They do not cultivate the land for the people. They
grow sorghum, maize, sesame, but all is exported, leaving none for the people.”
Another interviewee, from South Omo, says mandatory
resettlement has stoked conflict among different ethnic groups. “There was no
open consultation between the community and the government. If there was a
common agreement based on joint consultations, perhaps the community might
accept. But, the government dictates. We are scared that the highlanders will
come and destroy our way of life, culture, and pasture land. What will we do?
The government says we can keep two to three cattle, but this is a challenge.
Our life is based on cattle, and we cannot change overnight. I keep cows, oxen,
sheep, goats – where do we go? The investors take land in the Omo Valley. They
clear all land, choose the best place where trees are, leaving the area open.
They say it is for development, but they are clearing the forests. I wonder how
to reconcile development with forest destruction.”
A government employee told the researchers “There are three
dynamics that linger in my mind that explain today’s Ethiopia: villagisation,
violent conflict, and investment. They are intertwined and interrelated. It is
hard for outsiders to know what leads to what. When people are free, they talk.
When they are afraid of repercussion, they stop.”
Anuradha Mittal, executive director of the Oakland Institute
said: “The context in which we release this report is one of torture,
oppression, and silencing. A development strategy without ensuring its citizens
freedom of speech and expression is not a development strategy but a scheme to
benefit the ruling elites. Those basic human rights are not being upheld in
Ethiopia. It is therefore urgent to make voices of those impacted heard.”
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