Ethiopian troops
cut throats in Somalia: Amnesty
(Nairobi, May 06,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
Ethiopian troops in
Somalia are increasingly resorting to throat-slitting
executions, Amnesty International (AI) said Tuesday in a new
report on the killing of civilians in Somalia.
The report by the rights
watchdog said the blame for civilian deaths was shared by
all parties in the conflict, but highlighted an "increasing
incidence" of gruesome methods by Ethiopian forces.
"The people of Somalia
are being killed, raped, tortured; looting is widespread and
entire neighbourhoods are being destroyed," Michelle Kagari,
the group's Africa Programme deputy director, said in a
statement.
In a chapter on
violations by Ethiopian forces, the report quoted several
interviews conducted by Amnesty staff in Somalia.
In Mogadishu's Holwadag
neighbourhood, 15-year-old Barni recounted how she found her
father with throat cut when she came back from school and
the rest of her family gone following an operation by
Ethiopian forces.
Ceeblaa, a 63-year-old
woman from the capital's Wardhigley district told AI she saw
three men from her neighbourhood being rounded up by
Ethiopian troops.
"The next morning, she
saw the bodies of the three men on the street," the report
said.
"One was strangled with
electrical wire. The second had his throat cut. The third
had been chained ankle to wrist, and his testicles had been
smashed."
The rights group had
recently accused Ethiopian forces of killing at least 21
people inside a Mogadishu mosque on April 19, seven of whom
had their throats slit. The Ethiopian government denied the
allegations.
Ethiopian forces came to
the rescue of Somalia's embattled transitional government in
late 2006 and soon defeated an Islamist militia which had
taken control of large parts of the Horn of Africa country.
The remnants of the
militia have since waged a deadly guerrilla battle against
government forces, its Ethiopian allies and African Union
peacekeepers, mainly in Mogadishu.
According to Amnesty, at
least 6,000 civilians have been killed in the fighting over
the past year. Hundreds of thousands have had to flee
Mogadishu, aggravating an already alarming nationwide
humanitarian crisis.
Source: AFP
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