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Ethiopia
forces thousands off land- Human Rights Watch
Many
Ethiopian farmers struggle to survive on what they can grow
Ethiopia's
government has been accused of forcing tens of thousands of people
off their land so it can be leased to foreign investors.
US-based Human Rights Watch says people are being forcibly relocated
to new villages that lack adequate food, farmland and facilities.
Ethiopia
has already leased out more than 3.6 million hectares (8.8m acres)
of land - an area the size of The Netherlands - HRW says.
Addis Ababa
rejects HRW's allegations.
"Human Rights Watch has wrongly alleged the villagisation programme
to be unpopular and problematic," government spokesman Bereket Simon
told Reuters news agency.
"There is no evidence to back the claim. This programme is taking
place with the full preparation and participation of regional
authorities, the government and residents," he said.
'Weaker and weaker'
HRW says it has evidence that some 70,000 indigenous people in the
western Gambella region were relocated against their will to new
villages that "lack adequate food, farmland, healthcare and
educational facilities".
The group said it spoke to more than 100 people in
May and June
last year for the report.
"My father was beaten for refusing to go along [to the new village]
with some other elders," a former villager told HRW.
"He said: 'I was born here - my children were born here - I am too
old to move so I will stay'. He was beaten by the army with sticks
and the butt of a gun.
"He had to be taken to hospital. He died because of the beating - he
just became weaker and weaker."
HRW says that the residents of Gambella have never had formal title
to the land they lived on and used - and the government often
claimed the areas are "uninhabited" or "under-utilised".
That claim, HRW says, enables the government to bypass
constitutional provisions and laws that would protect these
populations from being relocated.
The government in Addis
Ababa
has said in the past that all the moves are voluntary, the new
villages will have adequate infrastructure and everyone who moves
will be given assistance to help their transition to a new
livelihood.
But HRW says many of the new villages have no access to government
services at all, and people are arriving at the worst time of year -
the beginning of the harvest - to find the land has not been cleared
and prepared for growing.
"The government failure to provide food assistance for relocated
people has caused endemic hunger and cases of starvation," HRW says.
Magn Nyang, who lives in Minneapolis
in the US, says his
mother was forcibly re-settled from a village close to Gambella town
to a camp.
"When the investors came in they took over the land and they [the
villagers] were kicked out," he told the BBC World Service.
"They were relocated under the pretext that they were going to get
clean water, health clinics built for them, schools for their
children - but none of that happened."
Food crisis
The Oakland Institute, a US
think tank that released a report last year about foreign firms
acquiring land in Africa, described the situation as a "land rush".
"Hundreds of investors from all over the world rushing to Africa -
lured by cheap land prices, availability of land - all for the sake
of taking over these productive lands to be able to grow foods for
exports," Anuradha Mittal, Oakland Institutue's executive director,
told the BBC.
"Our research - and reports by other human rights organisations -
shows that this is happening at the expense of the most vulnerable
people," she said.
BBC business reporter Duncan Bartlett reported in June 2011 that
Saudi Arabia and China planned to acquire large
tracts of land, particularly in Gambella, to grow more than one
million tonnes of rice to take back to their own countries.
Ethiopia's
Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs Hailemariam
Desalegn told him the arrangement was an advantage to the country.
He said the area being leased is lowland, where farmers are not
willing to go and plough the land. It is often infested with malaria
and the climate made it unsuitable for small holder farmers.
And he denied it would lead to food shortages and higher prices in a
part of the world already suffering from a food crisis.
"Small holder farmers feed themselves first and sell when there is a
marketable surplus," he said, adding that government subsidies
helped those in urban areas.
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