Document #1329986
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
The Oromos got more seats (27) on the 32
member Council of Representatives than any other ethnic group, but
they are divided because several Oromo organizations claim to speak
for all Oromos (Gilkes July 1992, 15). These groups include the
Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) the Oromo People's Democratic
Organization (OPDO), the Islamic Front for the Liberation of Oromia
(IFLO), the Oromo Abo Liberation Front (OALF), and the United Oromo
People's Liberation Front (UOPLF) (Ibid.; Political Handbook of
the World: 1992 1992, 248). There are other Oromo groups
outside the council, including the Jarso Democratic Front (JDF),
the United Oromo Organization (UOO), the United Oromo Democratic
Organization (UODO) and the Oromo Students Association of Finfine
University (OSAFU) (Ibid., 80; Horn of Africa Bulletin
July-Aug. 1992, 22).
Although all of these groups claim to have
the achievement of Oromo interests as their primary objective, they
disagree on the appropriate methods for achieving this goal (Gilkes
July 1992, 15; Political Handbook of the World: 1992 1992,
248; Country Reports 1992 1993, 84; Human Rights Watch 1992,
10-14). As a result, taking control of the Oromo struggle has
become important to these groups (Ibid.). The main players in this
struggle for control of the Oromo leadership are the OLF and the
OPDO (Gilkes July 1992, 15-20). The OPDO was created by the EPRDF
to counter the OLF claim to speak for the people of Oromo
(Political Handbook of the World: 1992 1992, 248; Gilkes
July 1992, 15). Each of these groups has at one time or another
entered into agreements to improve relations with the other Oromo
groups but they make little effort to improve their relations with
each other (Ibid.).
In June 1992 the OLF withdrew from the
EPRDF government and the Council of Representatives claiming
electoral fraud, harassment of its members and inadequate
representation of Oromos on the council (Political Handbook of
the World: 1992 1992, 248; Gilkes July 1992, 18-19; Country
Reports 1992 1993, 84; Human Rights Watch 1992, 10-14). The OLF
and the EPRDF subsequently declared war on each other (Ibid.). The
EPRDF gained the upper hand in this war and negotiations to bring
the OLF back into the Transition Government (TG) coalition have
failed (Ibid.).
While there have been disagreements among
the Oromo groups, the only reported cases of fighting or open
hostility have been between the OLF and the OPDO (Gilkes July 1992,
18). The hostility has mostly taken the form of propaganda
statements, but there have also been attempts to solve the
differences between the two (Ibid.). However, these agreements did
not last and soon the EPRDF was closing down OLF offices and the
OLF was also blowing up bridges and attacking the OPDO and
government forces and trucks (Ibid.). There was speculation that
these attacks might have been the work of another Oromo group, the
IFLO (Ibid.). The same source states that the IFLO has been
critical of the OLF and has clashed with the OLF for control of
Oromo areas (Ibid., 19). However, relations between the two have
reportedly improved since the OLF has moderated its radical views
and the two groups have realized that their common enemy is the
EPRDF/OPDO alliance (Ibid., 20).
None of the sources consulted indicates
that any specific class of Ethiopians is victimized by EPRDF
policies or activities. According to the sources, ethnicity rather
than social class appears to be the primary form of social
identification in EPRDF-controlled Ethiopia. The sources stated
that human rights abuses have occurred on both the EPRDF and OLF
sides. Country Reports on Human Rights 1992 states that
freedom of speech, assembly, association, religion and travel are
more respected now than they were under the Mengistu government
(1993,85). This new climate of freedom has resulted in the creation
of several ethnically-based political organizations and groups.
These organizations have been established not only by returning
Ethiopian exiles, but by those who remained (Ibid.; Gilkes July
1992, 15-20).
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.
Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1992. 1993. United States Department of State.
Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office.
Gilkes, Patrick. July 1992. "Ethnic And
Political Movements in Ethiopia and Somalia." London: Save the
Children Fund.
Horn of Africa Bulletin [Newark,
NJ]. July-August 1992. Vol. 4, No. 4. "Ethiopia."
Human Rights Watch. December 1992.
Human Rights Watch World Report 1993. New York: Human Rights
Watch.
Political Handbook of the World:
1992. 1992. Edited by Arthur S. Banks. Binghamton, NY: CSA
Publications.
Gilkes, Patrick. July 1992. "Ethnic And
Political Movements in Ethiopia and Somalia." London: Save the
Children Fund.
Horn of Africa Bulletin [Newark,
NJ]. July-August 1992. Vol. 4, No. 4. "Ethiopia."
Human Rights Watch. December 1992.
Human Rights Watch World Report 1993. New York: Human Rights
Watch.
Political Handbook of the World:
1992. 1992. Edited by Arthur S. Banks. Binghamton, NY: CSA
Publications.