Statement of US Senator Feingold on
Ethiopia
Sen.
Russell Feingold [D-WI]: Mr.
President, Ethiopia has increasingly
been an active participant in the
international community and a leader on
the African continent--as a charter
member of the United Nations, a
cofounder of what are now the African
Union and Intergovernmental Authority on
Development, and a key partner in
combating international terrorism. After
decades, and some would say centuries of
civil strife, the 1994 Constitution and
election of the coalition Ethiopian
People's Revolutionary Democratic Front,
EPRDF, in 1995 seemed to herald the
beginning of an era of peace, democracy,
and development. Efforts to reform the
economy and political dynamics, while
slow, reversed the devastating impact of
the Derg and gave the people of Ethiopia
some hope that a robust democracy was
really taking root. In fact, in the
runup to the 2005 elections, there was a
deliberate and significant opening of
political space--which included broad
media coverage of opposition parties,
relatively unimpeded access for
Indeed, for years, the U.S. State
Department has reported "widespread
human rights abuses" in its annual
country report on Ethiopia. Among the
most consistent violations listed are
the intimidation, beating, abuse, and
arbitrary arrest and detention by
Government security forces of
journalists, opposition supporters,
union leaders, and others who dare to
challenge the ruling party. Some of the
more egregious examples associated with
the growing opposition began in 2005 and
include the arrest and prosecution for
capital offenses of 131 major opposition
leaders and the arbitrary detention of
30,000 to 50,000 civilians without
charge. The ruling party also forcibly
closed opposition political offices that
same year and kept them closed through
the eve of local elections this past
April. Such conduct is a clear violation
of regional and international human
rights laws, to which Ethiopia is a
signatory, and directly contradicts the
country's own Constitution, still only
12 years old.
Over the past year, I have become
increasingly concerned by reports coming
out of the Ogadan region of Ethiopia
regarding military attacks on civilians
and Government blockades of essential
humanitarian and commercial supplies.
National and international aid
organizations with field missions in the
area describe security forces burning
villages and Government officials
ordering entire village populations to
move to specific "resettlement"
locations that lack sufficient.
The aid organizations now struggling to
keep these Ethiopian civilians alive, as
well as national and international human
rights defenders, democracy advocates,
independent journalists, and
humanitarian organizations seeking to
consolidate and extend peace, democracy,
and development in Ethiopia, are already
facing cumbersome bureaucratic rules and
sometime succumb to self-censorship to
avoid Government reprisals. The
Ethiopian Government's new law, if
passed in its current format, would make
it almost impossible for these groups
and individuals to continue their
important efforts. Under the Charities
and Societies Proclamation,
non-Ethiopian organizations would be
prohibited from engaging in democracy,
human rights, good governance, or
conflict resolution activities, and
national civil society groups would have
to forgo foreign funding and submit to
strict Government regulation.
To reaffirm and facilitate Ethiopia's
commitment to and progress towards
democratic development, eliminating
extremism, good governance, combating
HIV/AIDS, improving agricultural
productivity, and reducing chronic
hunger, the U.S. Government has provided
billions of dollars worth of assistance
in recent years with more than $700
million already in fiscal year 2008. The
majority of this support is delivered
through U.S.-based nongovernmental
organizations that offer essential
services and supplies to civilians as
well as valuable technical assistance
and resources to strengthen Ethiopian
institutions and infrastructure. The new
restrictions and regulations would
severely limit or even prohibit much of
this assistance and should cause the
United States as well as other
international donors to reconsider
whether contributions to Ethiopia can
further democracy, development and
accountability.
The Ethiopian Government claims the new
regulations are aimed at improving the
accountability and transparency of civil
society organizations operating in
Ethiopia. But what the provisions would
actually do is erode the Government's
own accountability and transparency by
impeding these organizations' ability to
serve their essential watchdog
functions. This is not the time or place
for tighter controls. Instead, the
Ethiopian Government should support
improvements in the quality and capacity
of these groups, which are vital to the
country's continued political, economic,
and social development.
The United States needs to work with our
partners--both on the continent and off
it--and strongly oppose the imposition
of this new proclamation to protect the
gains Ethiopia has made in recent years
and pave the way for further
consolidation of growth and democracy.
If passed in its current format, this
bill would have a devastating impact on
our foreign policy objectives and
Ethiopia's development as a robust
democracy. And, even if revised and
amended, passage of this bill would
still send a negative message, that of a
government desperately seeking to hold
on to power and dismantle any groups
that might expose its failures or
limitations. We must stand with the
people of Ethiopia and with the
principles that Americans hold dear.
June 20, 2008