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March 2007
ONLF rebellion.
Article by Jonathan Alpeyrie.
Ogadenia is a forgotten land
wrecked by war and very
harsh living conditions. The
region, which is still today
at the center of the
volatile Horn of Africa, has
seen little economic
progress since its first
taste of brief independence
in the first Ogaden war of
1977/78. In 1991, the Meles
government came into power.
The region remains to this
day a barren land with only
two main roads a few large
towns like Kabri Dahar,
Jijiga and Quabribayah,
which are controlled by
government forces trying to
tame the rebellion led by
the ONLF (Ogaden National
Liberation Front). However,
to fully understand the war
of today’s Ogadenia, one
needs to go back further in
history and take a look at
the European influence in
the region.
With the defeat of the
Somali forces and Ogaden
rebels in 1978 in the hands
of the Russian backed
Ethiopian army, Ogadenia was
reconquered entirely. Many
of the militia survivors
retreated to fight another
day. Three years later, the
ONLF was created to continue
the fighting to force the
Ethiopian government into
giving Ogadenia its long due
independence. The ONLF,
which was Founded in 1984 by
Abdirahman Mahdi, the
Chairman of the, Western
Somali Liberation Movement
Youth Union, systematically
recruited their own kin and
replaced WSLF in the Ogaden
as the WSLF support from
Somalia dwindled and finally
dried up in the late
eighties. By 1993, the ONLF
fully consolidated its
support among all of the
Ogaden Somalis in Somalian
territory under Ethiopian
rule. In 1994, the ONLF was
a fully functional military
force and Chairman Admiral
Mohammed Omar Osman was
reelected for a second term
in 2004.
The ONLF announced elections
in December 1992 for the
five Ogaden districts, and
won 80% of the seats of the
local parliament. When
Ethiopia tried to force ONLF
to accept a new constitution
and the ONLF refused: the
Meles government declared
war on them. The rebel
faction continues to operate
in the Ogaden as of 2006 and
is the target of full-scale
military operations by the
Ethiopian army after ONLF
stated that it would not
allow Malaysian oil company
Petronas to extract oil from
the Ogaden, let alone give
them independence.
In 2005, Ethiopia proposed
peace talks with ONLF, which
the rebel group accepted on
the condition that talks be
held in a neutral country
and with the presence of a
neutral mediator from the
international community. The
talks broke down due to
Ethiopia's insistence that
the two parties meet without
an arbitrator and held in
countries closely allied in
the Horn of Africa. ONLF
became a part of the
Alliance for freedom and
democracy on May 21st 2006,
fighting occurred alongside
OLF and smaller rebel groups
operating in the North like
TPDM.
Again in 2006, the Meles
government, with the full
support of US and UK
governments, has vowed to
crush the ONLF rebellion
once and for all,
reinforcing the 15 thousand
permanent men garrisoned in
Ogadenia with a further: 25
thousand troops, jet
fighters, armored cars and
some helicopters. Between
February and July 2006, the
army tried to destroy the
rebellion, but failed
completely, losing thousands
of troops in the process.
The ONLF remained
undefeated. Why did the
government, with such an
overwhelming force managed
to fail in its plan? They
didn’t face more than 5 to 7
thousand ONLF troops through
out the region. The answer
to this is complex. Above
all the ONLF’s strong
support base with the local
civilian population is key.
The systematic brutalization
of Ogaden civilians, and the
lack of military discipline
and cohesion within
government troops is another
reason they weren’t
defeated. Lastly, there were
totally inadequate
strategies and tactics
employed against the rebels.
Indeed, the government has
found itself in a sticky
spot. Its 250 thousand men
army is ill equipped to
fight a war on many fronts:
against the five active
rebel groups operating
within Ethiopia’s border,
the perpetual tensions on
the Eritrean border, and now
the rise of Islam in
Somalia. Furthermore, its
ranks are racked with
desertion, and lack of
discipline due to the
internal ethnic strife,
which reigns from within its
units.
Meles has given key
positions to his own ethnic
kin, the Tigray, both in the
government, and in the army,
making his policies
unpopular among lesser
Ethnic groups fighting
alongside the Tigrays. The
officer corps is
overwhelmingly from Tigray
“terroir”, leaving other
ethnic groups less
attractive positions within
the army. Therefore,
blocking any possibilities
for them to go up the
ladder, the officer corps
often uses same ethnic
groups to fight each other,
pitting Oromos against
Oromos, or Sidamas against
Sidamas. The poorly led
Oromo, Amhara soldier is
sometimes forced to desert,
finding it unbearable to
kill his own kin. As a
consequence, a
non-negligible amount of
government soldiers desert
their unit to escape the
grueling reality of the
Ogaden front.
This is the case of Thomas
Gin Ernest an ethnic Hadiyan
from Southern Ethiopia,
drafted by force into
Meles’s army, who decided
after serving for six years
to desert with a few others
to the ONLF. “During our
walk to ONLF lines, half of
our party changed their
minds and returned to the
military camp. They were
shot for treason soon after”
He says this happy to have
made the right choice. When
captured, Mr. Gin Ernest was
given some money so he can
go home to his family and be
reunited. By treating the
prisoners with respect and
dignity, the rebels attract
more allies to their cause.
More importantly, government
forces have created their
own monster by using terror
tactics against the local
population. The government’s
military forces are known to
use violence and killings
against locals Ogadens.
These procedures show how
Meles’s forces underestimate
their enemy. Soldiers will
usually enter a village to
look for potential ONLF
rebels, helpers and
sympathizers pick people
randomly. In essence,
Ogadens sympathize with the
struggle and contribute to
it, either by joining the
fighting units, or supplying
them with food, water, and
guns, making them all
traitors to an angry eye.
Also, many civilians have
experienced repeated
violence, either personally,
or a relative. Alimo Ahment,
a 24-year-old Ogaden woman,
has a common story to tell.
She joined up like so many
before her, because her
relatives were accused of
helping the ONLF, her father
was put to jail and tortured
for three months These kinds
of terror tactics has had
the exact opposite results
than those expected by the
government: Thus, it has
increased the number of
Ogadens wanting to join up
with the ONLF in ranks, and
hatred against the
government persists within
the Ogaden
population--creating an
entire new generation of
freedom fighters in the
region.
The widespread tortures,
imprisonment, and killings
in the region, has seen
thousands of students and
locals put in jail. It is
said that in the main town
of Jijiga where 20 thousand
souls reside, 10% are
currently in military camps
or local jails. Most of them
are accused of helping the
ONLF. Many are put in
confinement without trial
for a minimum of three
months, which is the regular
torture period, unless the
prisoner is rich enough to
pay a bribe. Tortures are a
daily reality and a
well-orchestrated practice.
It starts at 6AM when guards
grab the prisoner into a
small room, or sometimes an
unusable bathroom. There,
the interrogation begins,
with the simple question. If
the prisoner is part of the
ONLF organization, and each
time the answer is no, he or
she is beaten, electrocuted,
or raped if the prisoner is
a woman. This torture is
repeated twice a day for
four hours each time.
Survivors have recorded
extreme examples of pregnant
women being tortured.
Shamaad Wali, a 29 year ONLF
female fighter recalls:
“During my time in prison, I
remember the guards throwing
in an eight month pregnant
woman. They repeatedly beat
her until she gave birth,
but the baby was already
dead. They just threw it
away like garbage”. She says
with tears in her eyes. The
government of course denies
such claims, but in each
village such stories of
tortures and killings are
quite common and widespread.
Thirdly, and lastly,
government forces have
failed to contain the
rebellion, which has gained
in strength and confidence.
On the ground, the heavily
burdened Ethiopian soldiers
are not able to catch or
kill large numbers of ONLF
troopers, who operate in
small band using hit and run
tactics; a pretty common
problem for a conventional
force. The ONLF has been
able to keep the initiative,
attacking on their terms,
ambushing reinforcing
convoys, infantry columns,
and villages held by enemy
forces. Ethiopian forces
lose thousands of troops
each year due to desertions
and ONLF attacks. To be sent
to Ogadenia is considered by
soldiers as a punishment.
Prisoners all agree that
fighting the Ogadens is the
worst enemy they can
encounter in Ethiopia. Known
for their warlike behavior
and fighting skills, they
are waging an efficient
insurgency in Ogadenia.
Governmental troops
do not control the land or
the local population.
For ONLF cadre, victory is
now within reach. From the
rebel’s point of view, the
situation in Addis is
quickly becoming
unsustainable, suggesting a
partition within the
country, due to the rise of
ethnic separatism. To put it
in one of the commander’s
words: “We started in 1994
with less than one hundred
soldiers, and now look at us
with seven thousand freedom
fighters willing to fight
and die for the liberation
of our people,” says proudly
the 50-year-old veteran
commander. As it is true
that Mr. Meles’s government
is fighting on many fronts,
and his army cannot defeat
these various rebellions
throughout the country.
Powerful Western allies,
such as the United Kingdom,
provide him with weapons and
money to sustain the war
effort, back him; while US
funding also contribute to
fight against terrorism in
Ethiopia and contain
Somalia’s Islamic rise.
However, it is well
established that no
terrorist operates in
Ethiopia, but for many of
his allies in the West,
Ethiopia is seen as a
Christian state with common
values. This can block the
spread of Islam in East
Africa. This kind of Western
strategies and political
thought will surely continue
to block any attempts by
rebels to challenge the
government, and its military
institutions leading to
their replacement.
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