Dokument #1226693
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
Information on a specific treatment by the
government of members of the Issa clan could not be found among the
sources consulted by the DIRB. However, please find attached some
articles that may be of interest.
One 1994 article attached to this Response
refers to the Issa and Gurgura Liberation Front (IGLF), an armed
opposition group (Indian Ocean Newsletter 22 Jan. 1994). The
precise ethnic breakdown of this group or the extent of its support
among a particular clan could not be found among the sources
consulted. Additional, less recent information on this group can be
found in Response to Information Request ETH11384 of 14 August 1992
and other Responses available through the Refinfo database.
Other documents attached to this Response
refer to recent (1995) political conditions in Ethiopia, with
references to Region 5, the Somali region of Ethiopia, and Somali
political groups.
One attachment describes, in general terms,
the government and the human rights situation in Ethiopia as of
late-1994 (Africa Report Nov.-Dec. 1994, 31-34). The text
states that "all credible representatives of ethnic groups other
than the Tigrayans have either resigned or been expelled from the
government" (ibid., 31-32). The source adds that "in many parts of
the country, there is open hostility between local residents and
the TPLF [Tigrayan People's Liberation Front] army," noting that in
the Somalia region "TPLF soldiers are considered an occupation
force" (ibid., 32). The article then mentions clashes between the
TPLF and the Ogadeni National Liberation Front (ONLF), and the
disappearance of leaders and sympathizers of the latter (ibid.).
However, it is not clear from the source the affiliation or extent
of support, if any, of the ONLF among members of the Issa clan.
A more recent attachment includes a
reference to the creation of an Ethiopian Somali Democratic
Movement (ESDM), sponsored by the ruling EPRDF party (Africa
Confidential 14 Apr. 1995, 3). The ESDM reportedly "brings
together all Somali clans (except the Ogaden)" (ibid.).
More recent references to the relationship
between the government or ruling party and specific Somali clans
could not be found among the sources consulted.
Another document attached to this Response,
which could be relevant to the situation of some Muslim Somalis in
Ethiopia and is also included for your reference, reports on
Islamic fundamentalist movements that "could seek control of
frustrated elements disappointed by the way the opposition has been
politically marginalized in new bodies" (Indian Ocean
Newsletter 20 May 1995, 2). The source states that these
movements are "already working on Ethiopia's Muslim community,"
adding that the community's "composition by numbers is a taboo
subject" (ibid.). The report refers briefly to proselytism in Addis
Ababa.
An October 1994 report of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees on the refugee situation in
Ethiopia states the following:
Despite the improved security situation
throughout the country, there have been clashes between the EPRDF
and Somali groups affiliated with the Ogadeni National Liberation
Front (ONLF) and the Islamic fundamentalist groups (ITEHAD),
causing occasional suspension of relief efforts in Ogaden.
Additionally, sporadic banditry attacks in eastern and southern
Ethiopia are threatening relief operations in remote areas (31 Oct.
1994, n.p.).
The report, however, does not contain a
specific reference to members of the Issa clan. The full text of
the cited document can be found in the HCRViews database of the
UNHCR, available through the IRB network and Regional Documentation
Centres.
Other documents available at your Regional
Documentation Centre, such as the yearly Amnesty International
reports and the United States Department of State Country
Reports, also refer to members and supporters of
ethnically-based armed opposition groups, but do not contain
specific references to members of the Issa clan. The most recent
Country Reports provides in its section on Ethiopia the
following statement on ethnic groups:
Ethiopia has more than 80 different ethnic
groups. Although all of these groups have had some influence on the
political and cultural life of the country, Ahmaras and Tigrayans
from the northern highlands have traditionally dominated this
process. Some ethnic groups, such as Oromos, the largest single
group, claim to have been dominated for at least a century by the
Amharas and Tigrayans. In an attempt to rectify this problem, the
Government has supported a loose federal system and in 1994 changed
regional boundaries to encompass more completely entire (major)
ethnic populations (Feb. 1995, 87).
The Human Rights Watch World Report
1995 also refers to the regional reorganization of Ethiopia
along ethnic lines (1995, 19). The source refers to a decreasing
military presence in civilian communities that nevertheless caused
insecurity due to linguistic differences (ibid.). The report
mentions the Charter guarantee of "the right of every nation
(defined as a people living in the same geographic area with a
common language and identity) to self-determination" and of each
region to adopt their own language (ibid.). The report adds the
following:
Though ethnic-based hostilities decreased
in intensity and frequency after the adoption of this new policy,
they nevertheless continued. This was largely due to failure, on
the government's part, to expressly provide for the protection of
minorities and ethnic groups dwelling outside their home regions
[...] (ibid.).
The ongoing struggle for secession in the
ethnic Somali area of the Ogaden (now known as Region Five)
resulted in continuing bloodshed and threatened future peace and
stability in the country. It also provided a disturbing picture of
the problems which could face the country in the future if the
issue of secession is not settled. The Charter guarantees a right
to secession of a people if they are "convinced that their rights
are denied, abridged or abrogated." It remained unclear how
secession can be peacefully accomplished in Ethiopia under the new
policy.
The government had yet to review its
policies on land and language, which have contributed to loss of
life and enhanced ethnic tensions in the country. Nor had the
government adopted specific policies to protect ethnic minorities,
to define the rights of ethnic groups in divided communities or to
provide specific protection for dispersed groups and persons living
outside their ethnic base (ibid.).
The full text of the above-cited Human
Rights Watch report can be obtained at your Regional Documentation
Centre.
This Response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This Response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum. Please find below a list of
sources consulted in researching this Information Request.
Africa Confidential [London]. 14
April 1995. Vol. 36, No. 8. "Ethiopia: The Centre Holds."
Africa Report [New York].
November-December 1994. Makau Wa Mutua. "The Anointed
Leadership."
Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1994. February 1995. United States Department of
State. Washington, DC: United States Government Printing
Office.
Human Rights Watch World Report
1995. 1995. New York: Human Rights Watch.
The Indian Ocean Newsletter
[London]. 20 May 1995. No. 672. "Ethiopia: 'Twas a Famous
Victory."
_____. 22 January 1994. No. 607.
"Ethiopia: EPRDF Troops Engage Issa Militia." (NEXIS)
United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), Geneva. 31 October 1994. "Public Information Fact
Sheets - Africa: Ethiopia." (HCRViews)
Africa Confidential [London]. 26
May 1995. Vol. 36, No. 11. "Winner Takes All," p. 5.
_____. 14 April 1995. Vol. 36, No. 8.
"Ethiopia: The Centre Holds," pp. 2-3.
Africa Report [New York].
November-December 1994. Makau Wa Mutua. "The Anointed Leadership,"
pp. 31-34.
The Indian Ocean Newsletter
[London]. 27 May 1995. No. 673. "Ethiopia: The Home-Team ONLF," p.
4.
_____. 20 May 1995. No. 672. "Ethiopia:
'Twas a Famous Victory," p. 2.
_____. 25 March 1995. No. 664.
"Ethiopia: Government in Talks With CAFPD," p. 4.
_____. 22 January 1994. No. 607.
"Ethiopia: EPRDF Troops Engage Issa Militia." (NEXIS)
Africa Research Bulletin: Political
Series [London]. Monthly.
Current History [Philadelphia].
Monthly.
Foreign Broadcast Information Service
(FBIS) Reports. Daily.
Human Rights Watch/Africa [New
York]. Monthly.
Third World Quarterly [London].
Quarterly.
Material from the Indexed Media
Review (IMR) or country files containing articles and reports
from diverse sources (primarily dailies and periodicals) from the
Weekly Media Review.
Newspapers and periodicals pertaining to
the appropriate region.
On-line searches of news articles.
Note on oral sources:
Oral sources are usually contacted when
documentary sources have been exhausted. However, oral sources must
agree to be quoted in a publicly available Response to
Information Request. If they refuse, the Response will read "no
information currently available." Contacting oral sources is also
subject to time constraints; for example, there are periods of the
year when academics are unavailable.
Note:
This list is not exhaustive.
Country-specific books available in the Resource Centre are not
included.