Somalia: War Crimes Devastate Population
Outside
Powers Exacerbate Crisis Through Failed Policies.
(Nairobi, December 09, 2008 Ceegaag Online)
All parties
in the escalating conflict in Somalia have regularly
committed war crimes and other serious abuses during the
past year that have contributed to the country's
humanitarian catastrophe, Human Rights Watch said in a
report released today. Human Rights Watch urged the
United States, the European Union, and other major
international actors to rethink their flawed approaches
to the crisis and support efforts to ensure
accountability.
The 104-page
report, ”So Much to Fear: War Crimes amd the
Devastation of Somalia.” describes how the Somali
Transitional Federal Government (TFG), the Ethiopian
forces that intervened in Somalia to support it and
insurgent forces have committed widespread and serious
violations of the laws of war. Frequent violations
include indiscriminate attacks, killings, rape, use of
civilians as human shields, and looting. Since early
2007, the escalating conflict has claimed thousands of
civilian lives, displaced more than a million people,
and driven out most of the population of Mogadishu, the
capital. Increasing attacks on aid workers in the past
year have severely limited relief operations and
contributed to an emerging humanitarian crisis.
"The
combatants in Somalia have inflicted more harm on
civilians than on each other," said Georgette Gagnon,
Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "There are no
quick fixes in Somalia, but foreign governments need to
stop adding fuel to the fire with misguided policies
that empower human rights abusers."
Somalia has
been without a functioning government since 1991, and a
UN peacekeeping operation withdrew in failure in 1995.
The years since have been violent and chaotic. In
December 2006, Ethiopian military forces intervened to
back Somalia's weak TFG against a coalition of Islamic
courts that had won control of Mogadishu. In the past
two years, the conflict has escalated dramatically, and
internationally backed peace talks have failed to make
any impact on the ground.
The report
draws on interviews with more than 80 witnesses and
victims of abuses, who described attacks by all the
warring parties in stark detail.
Each party to
the conflict has indiscriminately fired on civilian
neighborhoods in Mogadishu on an almost daily basis,
leveling homes without warning and killing civilians in
the streets. Insurgent forces have regularly carried out
ambushes and roadside bombings in markets and
residential areas, and launched mortars from within
densely populated neighborhoods. Ethiopian forces have
reacted to insurgent attacks with indiscriminate heavy
rocket and artillery fire, with devastating impact on
civilians.
TFG security
forces and allied militia have tortured detainees, and
killed and raped civilians and looted their homes,
sometimes in the context of house-to-house joint
security operations with Ethiopian troops. Ethiopian
forces, who were relatively disciplined in 2007, have
been more widely implicated in acts of violent
criminality this year. Insurgent forces have threatened
and murdered civilians they view as unsympathetic to
their cause and have forcibly recruited civilians,
including children, into their ranks.
The full
horror of these abuses can be captured only through the
stories of Somalis who have suffered through them. Human
Rights Watch interviewed teenage girls raped by TFG
security forces, parents whose children were cut to
pieces in their own homes by Ethiopian rockets, and
people shot in the streets by insurgent fighters for
acts as trivial as working as a low-paid messenger for
TFG offices. One young man described watching a group of
Ethiopian soldiers rape his mother and sisters in their
home. "And I was sitting there helpless," he said. "I
could not help my mother or help my sisters."
For many, the
worst of it is being caught between all three sides at
once. One young man was given an ultimatum by radical
Islamist Al Shabaab fighters in his neighborhood to join
them or face retribution. Days later, he came home from
school to find that his mother had been killed and his
house destroyed in an unrelated artillery bombardment.
"The world
has largely ignored the horrors unfolding in Somalia,
but Somali families are still left to confront violence
that grows with every passing day," Gagnon said. "Even
those who try to flee find that the violent abuses
follow them."
Hundreds of
thousands of Mogadishu's poorest residents, lacking the
money to travel further, have congregated in sprawling
displaced persons camps along the Mogadishu-Afgooye
road, but the indiscriminate fighting they fled has
followed them there.
Tens of
thousands of Somali refugees have also fled the country
this year. Kenya's Dadaab refugee camps are now the
largest concentration of refugees anywhere in the world,
with nearly 250,000 inhabitants. But the journey itself
is perilous. Human Rights Watch interviewed many
refugees who had been robbed, raped, or beaten by
freelance militias as they fled Somalia. Kenya's border
with Somalia is closed, leaving refugees at the mercy of
abusive smugglers and corrupt Kenyan police.
Hundreds of
Somalis have drowned trying to cross the Gulf of Aden to
Yemen, often after being forced overboard or abandoned
at sea by traffickers.
The United
States, the European Union, and governments in the
region have taken few positive steps to address the
worsening situation in Somalia, and have too often taken
actions that have made it worse.
Ethiopia is a
party to the conflict, but has done nothing to ensure
accountability for abuses by its soldiers. The United
States, treating Somalia primarily as a battlefield in
the "global war on terror," has pursued a policy of
uncritical support for transitional government and
Ethiopian actions, and the resulting lack of
accountability has fueled the worst abuses. The European
Commission has advocated direct support for the
transitional government's police force without insisting
on any meaningful action to improve the force and combat
abuses.
In recent
months, the conflict has increasingly spread into
neighboring regions and countries in the form of
bombings and other attacks - precisely what Ethiopia's
military intervention in 2006 sought to prevent. During
the latter half of 2008, there have been suicide
bombings in the previously more stable semi-autonomous
regions of Somaliland and Puntland, as well as rampant
piracy on the high seas, and kidnappings across the
border in Kenya.
"The Somali
crisis is not just a nightmare for its people, it is a
regional threat and a global problem," Gagnon said. "The
world cannot afford to wait any longer to find more
effective ways of addressing it."
Human Rights
Watch called for a fundamental review of policy toward
Somalia and the entire Horn of Africa in Washington,
where the Obama administration will have an opportunity
to break with the failed policies of its predecessor,
and in European capitals. It also called for the
establishment of a UN-sponsored Commission of Inquiry to
investigate violations of international law, map the
worst abuses, and lay the groundwork for accountability
Source: Human
Rights Watch
webmaster@ceegaag.com |