Ethiopia and Eritrea: Human rights issues in a year of armed conflict

Ethiopia and Eritrea: Human rights issues in a year of armed conflict

Comments:
This is a report of the findings, updated to the present time, of investigatory visits by Amnesty International to Ethiopia and Eritrea in 1998 and 1999. Amnesty International was concerned about human rights issues in the armed conflict between Ethiopia and Eritrea which broke out in May 1998. It published a preliminary statement in January 1999, 'Amnesty International witnesses cruelty of mass deportations' (AI Index: AFR 25/02/9). The war between the two countries, formerly close allies, is still continuing, despite mediation efforts by the Organization of African Unity (OAU), the United Nations (UN) and others. The human rights issues examined by Amnesty International representatives visiting Ethiopia in October 1998 and Eritrea in January 1999 are still of urgent concern. These relate to violations by both sides of international human rights treaties and the Geneva Conventions. The report particularly examines allegations of human rights violations against Eritreans in Ethiopia and Ethiopians in Eritrea. There have been mass expulsions in cruel and inhuman conditions of Eritreans from Ethiopia. The Eritrean security forces ill-treated some Ethiopians but there was no evidence found of a systematic policy in Eritrea of deliberate expulsions or widespread ill-treatment of Ethiopians. The report covers indiscriminate or deliberate bombings of scores of civilians; displacement and ill-treatment of civilians; the denial of access for thousands of prisoners of war to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC); widespread internment and arbitrary detentions of civilians (in Ethiopia particularly, but with some cases in Eritrea too), and the mass expulsions of Eritreans from Ethiopia and the arbitrary removal of their Ethiopian citizenship. The mass expulsions of Eritreans from Ethiopia, however, were suspended by Ethiopia in February 1999 when the whole border became a war zone. The report concludes with appeals by Amnesty International to both the Ethiopian and Eritrean governments to respect and protect the human rights of civilians and prisoners of war. The organization also calls on the international community to speak out against all human rights violations committed in the conflict and to ensure that human rights monitoring and protection are made an integral part of any peace plan, as put forward by the OAU and UN.

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