(Op Ed by David Pred)
April 9, 2013 05:50 am By Leave
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ይህንን ጉዳይ
አስመልክቶ
ጎልጉል “ኢህአዴግ
አንገቱን
ታንቋል”
ዓለም ባንክ
ርምጃ ለመውሰድ
ጫፍ ደርሷል በሚል
እና ኢህአዴግ በ600 ሚሊዮን ዶላር አጣብቂኝ ውስጥ ገባ!!
ብያኔው
ከጸና
ኪሣራው
በቢሊዮን ዶላር
ሊደርስም
ይችላል! በሚል
ርዕስ
ሰፋ
ያለ
ዘገባ
ማቅረባችን ይታወቃል፡፡ የዓለም ባንክ እስካሁን
ውሳኔውን ይፋ በማድረግ ለኢትዮጵያ የሚሠጠውን ዕርዳታና ብድር ምርመራ እንዲደረግበት አለማስጀመሩ የብዙዎች ጥያቄ ከሆነ
ሰንብቷል፡፡ ኢህአዴግ ከዓለም ባንክ የሚሠጠውን ዕርዳታ ለፖለቲካ ተግባር ማዋሉ የመርማሪው ቡድን ቦታው ድረስ በመሄድ ምርመራ
አድርጎ ያረጋገጠ ቢሆንም ከየአቅጣጫው እየተሰነዘሩ ያሉት ተጸዕኖዎችም በከፍተኛ ሁኔታ እየተጠናከሩ መጥተዋል፡፡ የዚህ ጦማር
ዋንኛ ዓላማም በዚሁ ጉዳይ ላይ ያተኮረ ነው፡፡
A multi-billion dollar aid program administered
by the World Bank is underwriting systematic human rights abuses in Ethiopia.
Last September, Ethiopian victims submitted a
complaint about the program to the World Bank Inspection Panel, which is
tasked with investigating whether or not the Bank complies with its own policies
to prevent social and environmental harm. A meeting of the Bank’s board of
directors to discuss the Panel’s preliminary findings was postponed on March
19th due to objections from the Ethiopian government.
Ethiopia is one the largest aid recipients in the
world, receiving approximately US$3 billion annually from external donors. The
largest aid program, financed by the World Bank, the UK, the European Commission
and other Western governments, is called Promotion
of Basic Services (PBS). It aims to expand access to services in five
sectors: education, health, agriculture, water supply and sanitation, and rural
roads. The PBS program objectives are indisputably laudable and aim to meet a
number of dire needs of the Ethiopian population. There is evidence,
however, that it is contributing to a government campaign to forcibly resettle
an estimated 1.5 million people.
In the lowland region of Gambella, the
government’s principle means of delivering basic services is through the
implementation of the “Villagization Program”. The government claims that
“villagization” is a voluntary process, which aims to “bring socioeconomic and
cultural transformation of the people” through the resettlement of “scattered”
families into new villages. The services and facilities supported by PBS are
precisely the services and facilities that are supposed to be provided at new
settlement sites under the Villagization Program.
However, Gambellans, now amassing in refugee
camps in Kenya and South Sudan, report that the program has been far from
voluntary. When I visited the camps last fall, the refugees reported a process
involving intimidation, beatings, arbitrary arrest and detention, torture in
military custody and extra-judicial killing. Dispossessed of their fertile
ancestral lands and displaced from their livelihoods, Gambella’s indigenous
communities have been forced into villages with few of the promised basic
services and little access to food or land suitable for farming. Meanwhile,
many of the areas from which people have been forcibly removed have been awarded
to domestic and foreign investors for large-scale agro-industrial
plantations.
In September, Human
Rights Watch and my organization, Inclusive Development
International, arranged a meeting with the World Bank and five newly arrived
refugees in Nairobi. One by one, they gave chilling testimony of the abuses
that they and their families have experienced under the Villagization Program.
Their testimony corroborated detailed reports about the program by Human
Rights Watch and the
Oakland Institute.
Yet, despite these credible reports and
first-hand accounts that Bank staff heard in Nairobi, the Bank has continued to
deny the forcible nature of villagization. The Bank also insists that its
project is not linked to the Villagization Program, despite its acknowledgement
that it finances the salaries of public servants who are tasked with
implementing villagization. These arguments are wholly disingenuous.
Donors must accept responsibility for human
rights abuses they help make possible and do everything in their power to
prevent them. There are ways the Bank can support critical investments in human
development while ensuring that it is not underwriting human rights violations.
It could, for example, require that the Villagization Program comply with its
safeguard policy on resettlement as a condition of its $600 million concessional
loan for the latest phase of PBS. If this policy were applied, the government
would have to ensure, and the Bank would have to verify, that resettlement is
truly voluntary and that the program improves people’s lives.
Yet the Bank and bi-lateral donors have instead
chosen a strategy of denial. They have invested too much for too long in
Ethiopia to admit that things have gone horribly wrong, and they are too worried
about upsetting a critical military ally in a volatile part of the world to
start attaching human rights conditions to aid packages.
That is why the World Bank Inspection Panel is so
important. After undertaking a preliminary assessment, the Panel determined
that the link between PBS and villagization was plausible and it recommended to
the Board a full investigation in order to make definitive findings. However,
Ethiopia’s representative on the Board has stymied approval of the
investigation. A meeting to discuss the Panel’s report scheduled on March 19
was postponed due to resistance from the Ethiopian government, which is vying to
set the terms of the investigation.
The Inspection Panel was established as an
independent body that people harmed by World Bank lending practices can access
in order to hold the Bank to account. Bank managers and member states are not
supposed to interfere in the process. The Bank’s president, Jim Yong Kim,
should stand up for accountability and tell the Board to let the Panel do its
job. The truth that will come out of this investigation may be inconvenient for
the Bank and an important client government, but it will be a rare measure of
justice for the Ethiopian people
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