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A development project
funded by the UK government and run by the World Bank could be facilitating a
violent resettlement program in Ethiopia that has been dogged by allegations of
forced displacement, physical assaults and rape, a leaked report suggests.
RT.com reports Britain’s Department for
International Development (DfID) is the primary sponsor of the World Bank’s
foreign aid initiative, supposedly set up to improve basic health, education
and public services in Ethiopia. It has attracted over £388 million in UK
taxpayer’s money to date.
According to a leaked
report, obtained by the International Consortium for Investigative Journalists,
the seemingly benign aid program is facilitating a controversial resettlement
scheme driven by the Ethiopian government.
The scathing report,
carried out by the Bank’s in-house watchdog, warns of poor oversight,
inadequate auditing and a failure to adhere to its own regulations which has
bred links between the development program and the forced displacement of the
Anuak people.
The Anuaks are a
marginalized minority Christian group in Ethiopia.
Severe human rights abuses
The Ethiopian
government’s resettlement program has been condemned by human rights groups
worldwide who warn it has led to the destruction of thousands of Ethiopians'
livelihoods.
The initiative, known as
‘villagization’, aims to relocate 1.5 million rural families from their
homesteads to villages across Ethiopia.
Since its launch in 2010,
the program has been the centre of allegations of rape, physical assaults,
forced evictions and disappearances.
Many of those who are
uprooted from their homes and resettled elsewhere are forced to reside in
substandard living conditions in refugee camps in Southern Sudan.
While the World Bank’s
top brass have long denied any links to the Ethiopian government’s
villagization program, an inquiry conducted by the Bank’s internal watchdog
indicates otherwise.
The inquiry’s leaked
findings, which surfaced this week, said the Bank’s inadequate auditing
controls created a situation whereby over £300m of the DfID’s foreign aid
funding could have been siphoned directly into the contentious resettlement
scheme.
The report did not
examine allegations the resettlement program is responsible for human rights
abuses in Ethiopia, however, stressing that such an inquiry was not within its
remit.
Nevertheless, it
uncovered a slew of failures in the planning and implementation of the World
Bank’s foreign aid program, particularly the Bank’s failure to carry out risk
assessments.
The watchdog also found
the Bank did not adopt necessary safeguards to protect marginalized indigenous
peoples.
Uneven economic development
Anuradha Mittal, founder
of the Oakland Institute, a Californian development NGO that is active in
Ethiopia, said the DfID participated in the World Bank’s development
initiative, and should therefore take responsibility for the scheme’s failings.
“Along with the World
Bank and other donors, DfID support constitutes not only financial support but
a nod of approval for the Ethiopian regime to bring about ‘economic
development’ for the few at the expense of basic human rights and livelihoods
of its economically and politically most marginalized ethnic groups,” she told The Guardian.
David Pred of Inclusive
Development International, an NGO that works to defend the rights of the Anuak
people, said the World Bank has facilitated the forced displacement of “tens of thousands of indigenous people
from their ancestral lands.”
“The Bank today just
doesn’t want to see human rights violations, much less accept that it bears
some responsibility when it finances those violations,” he told the Guardian.
A spokesman for the World
Bank declined to comment on its internal watchdog’s leaked report.
Probed on the watchdog’s
findings, the DfID also declined to comment.
A marriage of convenience?
In March 2014, an
Ethiopian farmer secured legal aid to sue the British government following his
claim UK taxpayers' funds were sponsoring Ethiopia's resettlement scheme.
He said murder, rape and
torture were employed by Ethiopian authorities, as part of the forced
displacement program. The 34 year-old farmer,
known as Mr. O, had been forced to flee Ethiopia after he was tortured and
beaten for trying to protect his land. He said the British
government were contributing to the devastation of some of Ethiopia’s poorest
people rather than assisting them.
In June, Britain’s DfID
faced a judicial inquiry over its alleged funding of human rights abuses in
Ethiopia.
A High Court judge ruled
at the time that Mr. O had a case against the British government, and his legal
challenge was upheld. His lawsuit is still ongoing.
Ethiopia's single-party
government is a core ally in the West’s war on terror.
It is also a leading
recipient of UK aid, despite human rights groups' repeated allegations the
funding is used to crush dissent in the troubled state.
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