Joint U.N. report on Ethiopia civil war atrocities blames all sides for violations
A joint investigation released on Wednesday
by the United Nations’ main rights body and Ethiopia’s state-appointed human
rights commission found that all sides in the year-long civil war had
“committed violations of international human rights, humanitarian and refugee
law, some of which may amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.”
The report was much anticipated because the
Ethiopian government has rejected the findings of previous investigations by
groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, which were based
on interviews with refugees fleeing the besieged northern Tigray region. The
government said it would heed this one and allow investigators access to the
war zone.
Ethiopia’s prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, said
in a statement that he would “recognize and accept” the report despite “serious
reservations” and claimed that the report vindicated the government as having
not committed genocide or used deliberate starvation as a war tactic, though
evidence of the latter has been unearthed by news outlets and corroborated by
the U.N. as the war progressed.
On Tuesday, President Biden announced his
administration’s intention to revoke long-standing trade benefits that enabled
Ethiopia to export to the United States without paying duties, citing “gross
violations of internationally recognized human rights.”
Ethiopia’s Trade Ministry responded in part
by alluding to the rights report, which it said demonstrated the government’s
seriousness to bring perpetrators to justice.
“Only a government that’s committed to the
highest standard of transparency and integrity would subject itself to this
kind of scrutiny,” the ministry’s statement said.
The conflict has displaced hundreds of
thousands, brought Tigray to the brink of famine and threatened to plunge the
country, Africa’s second-most populous, into a much broader civil war as the
government loses its grip on power in the face of rebel gains.
The U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa urged
American citizens to avoid travel to Ethiopia and for those already in the
country to leave.
The report’s authors acknowledged being
hampered in their ability to carry out a full investigation because of access
restrictions by both rebels and the government and a general lack of
cooperation from the warring parties, which include the Ethiopian and Eritrean
governments and militias from Ethiopian regions including Tigray, Amhara, Afar
and Oromia.
While describing heinous crimes committed
on all sides of the conflict including door-to-door executions based on
ethnicity, mass rapes and torture, the report did not discuss the proportion of
crimes committed by each side, and refrained from naming individual soldiers or
commanders who may have been implicated in the 269 interviews that form the
basis for the findings. It also did not mention that one of the U.N.’s main
investigators was deported from Ethiopia in September without explanation from
the government.
Tigrayan rebel leadership has also raised
concerns of the impartiality of a report that is co-authored by investigators
from a state-appointed institution, though it is headed by Daniel Bekele, who
formerly worked for Human Rights Watch.
“As the conflict expands with more reports
of violations and abuses, this report presents an opportunity for all parties
to acknowledge responsibility and commit to concrete measures on
accountability, redress for victims and the search for a sustainable solution
to end the suffering of millions,” Daniel said in a statement released along
with the report.
His counterpart at the U.N. human rights
body, former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet, said the report showed how
the conflict had been characterized by “extreme brutality.”
“As the conflict has escalated, with
civilians as ever caught in the middle, it is vital that all parties heed the
repeated calls to end hostilities and seek a lasting cease-fire,” she said.
Some of the worst crimes are ascribed to
Eritrean soldiers who allegedly carried out dozens of rapes and mutilations,
and kidnapped thousands of Eritrean refugees from Ethiopia and brought them
back to Eritrea, from where they had escaped the country’s draconian military
service and widespread political persecution.
Neither Ethiopia nor Eritrea is party to
the International Criminal Court but the report’s authors recommend a possible
alternative international justice mechanism that would have to be agreed upon
by the warring sides. The report alleged that Ethiopian investigations did not
always comply with international standards, and were not always transparent.
Eritrea has rejected accusations of war
crimes categorically. Ethiopia’s government has said that a handful of soldiers
are being tried in war-related murder and rape cases.
The cease-fire for which the report and
Western powers have been calling seemed a distant possibility on the day of the
report’s release, coming a day after Abiy declared a six-month state of
emergency and officials in Addis Ababa urged residents to take up arms to defend
their neighborhoods from a possible incursion by Tigrayan and Oromo rebel
groups that have recently taken numerous towns along the main highway heading
into the capital from the north.
The state of emergency means that the
government can impose a curfew, disrupt transport services, and travel and
detain indefinitely anyone suspected of having links with a terrorist group.
Local administrations in some areas could be disbanded and a military
leadership could be installed.
In a speech commemorating the war’s
one-year mark on Wednesday, Abiy aimed to rouse his supporters in the face of
battlefield losses.