TUESDAY,
APRIL 15, 2008
10:18 MECCA TIME, 7:18 GMT
The
Ogaden National
Liberation Front
says it is fighting
for improved rights
for the region's
ethnic Somali
population
Ethnic Somali separatists
have been fighting
government forces in the
east of Ethiopia for more
than 13 years now, but the
long-running conflict has
been largely invisible as
Addis Ababa has restricted
access to the region.
There have been numerous
clashes between the Ogaden
National Liberation Army (ONLF)
and the military in recent
months, with both sides
claiming successes.
But with few journalists
in the vast and sparsely
populated region that
borders Somalia, it is
difficult to get an accurate
picture of how frequently
the fighting occurs and its
toll on human life.
However, Al Jazeera gained
exclusive access to the
region and found that
youths, angry at the
treatment of the local
ethnic Somali population the
government, were flocking to
join the separatists.
"I joined the militia in
2002. I'm ready to lose my
life for the sake of my
country, my people and my
religion," Hahdi Waa, one of
ONLF's fighters, said.
And die he did, apparently
killed in fighting with
Ethiopian troops just a few
day after Al Jazeera met
him.
Military crackdown
Ethiopia launched a
crackdown on the ONLF after
its fighters attacked a
Chinese oil exploration
project in the Somali region
in April last year. The
attack left at least 65
Ethiopians and nine Chinese
workers dead.
The
whole world can now
see what they are
doing to us. Killing
and starving us to
death"
Human Rights Watch says
that civilians have borne
the brunt of the military
response, with whole
villages razed to the ground
as well as public
executions, rapes and
torture.
"They also imposed a
commercial blockade on the
affected region and
confiscated livestock—the
main asset in this largely
pastoralist
region—exacerbating food
shortages," the group's
2008 world report says.
Tens of thousands of people
have reportedly fled since
the fighting intensified
last year.
"The whole world can now see
what they are doing to us.
Killing and starving us to
death," Elyaas, an ONLF
field commander, told Al
Jazeera.
The Ethiopian government
denies the accusations.
"I can assure you that the
government is not in the
business of killing people
and putting them in mass
graves," Bereket Simon, a
government spokesman, told
the Christian Science
Monitor newspaper in
February.
'Greater Somalia'
The ONLF was formed in 1984,
but many of its members had
supported Somalia in a
failed war with Ethiopia
over the region in the
1970s.
The group's aims have varied
over time from increased
autonomy in Ethiopia
to outright independence to
joining a "Greater Somalia".
The Ethiopian embassy in
London told Al Jazeera that
the region already has a
sizeable degree of autonomy
and is the focus of several
development initiatives.
It also said that there was
no policy of refusing entry
to the media.
"The ministry of foreign
affairs is always ready to
welcome journalists on
legitimate news gathering
assignments, journalists who
are prepared to display the
responsibility, integrity
and truthfulness we would
expect from employees of a
newspaper," it said in a
statement.
Eritrea connection
Addis Ababa says the ONLF is a
terrorist organisation that
it has little support among
the people of the Somali
region.
It also says that regional
rival Eritrea is
providing the separatists with
assistance.
However, the ONLF rejects
the claims, telling Al
Jazeera that rather than
being supplied by Asmara,
most of their own clothes
and weapons were taken from
dead soldiers.
Aid agencies have said that
people are suffering severe
food and medical shortages
in Ogaden.
"There is the possibility of
a very serious humanitarian
crisis in the region as a
consequence of the security
situation," John Holmes, the
UN humanitarian chief, said.