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May 29, 2008
A Genocide Planner to Meet His Minnesota Survivors By Douglas McGill The McGill Report ROCHESTER, MN -- An Ethiopian government official named as a primary architect of a genocide in western Ethiopia will visit Minneapolis this Saturday, to directly confront members of the African tribe his government has targeted for destruction. ![]()
The official’s impending visit has thrown the
Minnesota community of Anuak into a state of alarm and intense internal
argument.
The Anuak, an African tribe based in western Ethiopia and southern Sudan, have been immigrating to Minnesota and elsewhere outside of Africa since the Ethiopian Army began ethnically cleansing them in the mid-1990s. Some Minnesota Anuak believe the official’s visit on Saturday should be boycotted while others want the chance to meet him face-to-face. Still others, saying the official has perpetrated genocide, are working through the U.S. State Department to block the official’s entry into the country. The official, Omot Obang Olom, is the governor of
the western Ethiopian state of Gambella, which embraces much of the
Anuak homeland. Olom was the chief of security in Gambella in December
2003, when over a three-day period some 425 Anuak men were killed by the
Ethiopian Army. A Human Rights Watch report in 2005, "Targeting
the Anuak," and earlier reports by human rights groups including
Genocide Watch, have detailed Mr. Olom’s role in the massacre of
December 13, 2003, and in a subsequent bloody crackdown lasting months
against Anuak insurgents and civilians. The Human Rights Watch report
called these events a "crime against humanity."
“This man is a killer,” said one Anuak Minnesotan,
who asked not to be named because he said relatives in
A U.S. State Department official said that Minnesota
Anuak community members had called him about the official’s visit. “I’ve
looked into this and he sounds like a really bad guy,” the official
said. "There is a lot of smoke but we don't have the evidence to
deny him a visa.”
Civilian Targets
The State Department has walked a tightrope on the
Anuak case since it exploded with the massacre of December 13, 2003.
Privately, officials in
Mr. Olom “has taken an exceptionally hard-line
approach to stamping out the threat to regional security posed by Anuak
shifta,” the Human Rights Watch report stated. "Shifta" is
an Ethiopian word for “bandits” but in reality it very often includes
ordinary Anuak civilians killed by soldiers, the report said.
“Unarmed young men have been frequently shot at and
in many cases killed while traveling between villages, and many [Army]
patrols seem to view any Anuak civilian who runs away from them a
legitimate target,” the Human Rights Watch report said.
Arrest for Crimes
The purpose of Mr. Olom’s visit to Minneapolis is
among the points vigorously debated by Minnesota Anuak, who form the
largest Anuak diaspora community outside of
The Anuak Community Association of North America (ACANA), based in
“We wanted the Gambella leadership to come so that
people could ask questions,” said Akway Cham, the president of ACANA. “A
lot of Anuak are going through life as refugees. People are still
suffering and they want to ask ‘What are you guys up to and how will you
prevent a future incident like 2003?'”
But many Anuak angrily reject ACANA's rationale,
saying that attempting to arrest Olom for crimes against humanity -- not
giving him a platform for reconciliation -- is the more appropriate
course.
Frustrating Q&A Olom's visit, they say, is part of a deliberate Ethiopian propaganda campaign to divide the Anuak diaspora and to convince the world that far from committing genocide in Gambella, Ethiopia warmly welcomes the Anuak.
Indeed, last April 26, two high-ranking Ethiopian
officials met in
But for much of the meeting the officials spoke in
Amharic, the Ethiopian language, and not in Anuak, so many in the
audience didn’t fully understand what was said. Even more frustrating,
people who attended the meeting said, the officials stonewalled during
the question-and-answer period when Anuak
audience members demanded to know if the Ethiopian
government planned to offer reparations for the 2003 massacre.
No Answer on Graves
More specifically, many Anuak asked the officials
where the 425 people who were killed in the December 13 massacre are
buried, so that they may be exhumed and given a proper burial. But the
Ethiopian government insists the massacre never occurred, and no answer
was given.
“It was just propaganda,” said Apee Jobi, an Anuak
who lives in
“They are trying to say that nothing ever happened,
it is okay now to come back," said Okuch Kwot, an Anuak living in
Obang Metho, an Anuak activist from Canada who
travels frequently to Minnesota, says that the April meeting marked the
first time that the Ethiopian government began plying Anuak immigrants
with “gifts and favors,” as it has been doing with other Ethiopian
diaspora populations for several years.
“The government-sponsored delegates thought they
could buy, flatter and persuade the Anuak in the diaspora into
forgetting about the Anuak massacre of 2003,” Metho recently
wrote. “These ‘ambassadors bearing gifts’ from the regime have been
trying to silence their critics for the last year by offering
invitations, opportunities and investments in the country.”
Omot’s visit to
Oil and Gold The Anuak territory in Gambella is fed by several rivers and has both oil and gold deposits, which makes their land coveted by the Ethiopian government. Racial tensions between the dark-skinned Anuak and lighter-skinned “highlander” Ethiopians, as well as rights claim battles over Gambella’s oil deposits, are at the root of conflicts dating back several decades.
In the 2003 massacre, Ethiopian soldiers rampaged
through the Anuak town of Gambella, burning down over a thousand homes,
gang-raping women and girls and slaughtering all but a handful of the
Anuak men who comprised the educated leadership of the small tribe of
only 100,000 members.
Around 12,000 Anuak refugees fled the massacre on
foot through the African bush to seek safety in refugee camps in
southern
Four years later, most of those refugees are still struggling to survive in the desert or in those slums, their educations and careers permanently disrupted. Many refugees say they fear returning to Gambella because Mr. Olom, a widely feared figure before and during the 2003 massacre, now serves as the governor of the state. Cell Phone "Earwitnesses"
This reporter interviewed dozens of Anuak Minnesotans
in the days following December 13, 2003. Many of them had heard the
sounds of gunshots, screaming and crying over cell phones with friends
and family members who were caught in the midst of the slaughter.
In April 2004, I also traveled to the Pochalla refugee camp in southern
In those interviews, and in several human rights
reports published in 2004 and 2005, Omot Obang Olom was frequently named
as a government official who prior to the 2003 massacre had ordered
arbitrary arrests of Anuak.
A
second report on the massacre published by Genocide Watch, based on
interviews with eyewitnesses, reports accusations that Mr. Olom provided
the Ethiopian army with a list of Anuak leaders to be targeted for
killing.
An Execution List The Anuak governor of Gambella at the time of the massacre, Okello Akway, fled for his life to In a telephone conversation this week, Akway confirmed that he had seen Mr. Olom pass a list of educated Anuak men to the Ethiopian army.
Akway says he met with Omot Obang Olom and
“Omot had a paper in his hand,” Akway said. “That
paper was for selecting the people to be killed.” After the killing
began, Akway said that he begged Omot and Beyene to stop the massacre,
and was threatened by Omot.
“Omot said ‘If you are talking like this, you will be killed like Agwa.” Agwa Alemo was an Anuak leader and resistance fighter who was assassinated in 1992 and is considered a hero by many Anuak. Typical and Intentional
Rosa Garcia-Peltoniemi, a clinician with the
Center for Victims of Torture
in Minneapolis, says that the arguments now dividing the Minnesota Anuak
are typical of what happens to diaspora populations when the political
figures responsible for their exile suddenly reappear in their
midst in Minnesota.
“It’s typical and it’s intentional,” she said.
“Governments that engage in ethnic cleansing do this deliberately. They
want to create dissension and conflict and distrust between people. It’s
divide and conquer.”
“These conflicts more and more are quite global,” she
added. “The exile communities become very important because they have
economic power. They send money back home and people also travel back.
Even after they leave their countries for the U.S., it isn't a complete
cut-off.”
Olom will meet with Minnesota Anuak on Saturday at
noon at the Four Points by Sheraton Hotel in Minneapolis at 1330
Industrial Boulevard. |