In
the last 10 days persecution of Ethiopian migrant workers in Saudi
Arabia has escalated. Men and women are forced from their homes by
mobs of civilians and dragged through the streets of Riyadh and
Jeddah. Distressing videos of Ethiopian men being mercilessly beaten,
kicked and punched have circulated the Internet and triggered
worldwide protests by members of the Ethiopian diaspora as well as
outraged civilians in Ethiopia. Women report being raped, many
repeatedly, by vigilantes and Saudi police. Ethiopian Satellite
Television (ESAT), has received reports of fifty
deaths and states
that thousands living with or without visas have been detained
awaiting repatriation. Imprisoned, many relay experiences of torture
and violent beatings.
Earlier
this year the Saudi authorities announced plans to purge the kingdom
of illegal migrants. In July, King Abdullah extended the deadline for
them to “regularize their residency and employment status [from 3
rd July] to November 4th. Obtain the correct visa documentation, or
risk arrest, imprisonment and/or repatriation. On 6th November, Inter
Press Service (IPS) reports, Saudi police, “rounded up more than
4,000 illegal foreign workers at the start of a nationwide
crackdown,“ undertaken in an attempt (the authorities say), to
reduce the 12% unemployment rate “creating more jobs for locals”.
Leading
up to the “crackdown” many visa-less migrants left the country:
nearly a million Bangladeshis, Indians, Filipinos, Nepalis,
Pakistanis and Yemenis are estimated to have left the country in the
past three months. More than 30,000 Yemenis have reportedly crossed
to their home country in the past two weeks,” and around 23,000
Ethiopian men and women have “surrendered to Saudi authorities”
[BBC].
The
police and civilian vigilante gangs are victimizing Ethiopian
migrants, residing with and without visas; the “crackdown” has
provided the police and certain sectors of the civilian population
with an excuse to attack
Ethiopians. Press TV reports that “Saudi
police killed three Ethiopian migrant workers in the impoverished
neighborhood of Manfuhah in the capital, Riyadh, where thousands of
African workers, mostly Ethiopians, were waiting for buses to take
them to deportation centers.” Hundreds have been arrested and
report being tortured: “we are kept in a concentration camp, we do
not get enough food and drink, when we defend our sisters from being
raped, they beat and kill us,” a migrant named Kedir, told ESAT TV.
Women seeking refuge within the Ethiopian consulate tell of being
abducted from the building by Saudi men and raped. ESAT, reports that
several thousand migrants have been transported by trucks to unknown
destinations outside the cities.
Whilst
the repatriation of illegal migrants is lawful, the Saudi authorities
do not have the right to act violently; beating, torturing and raping
vulnerable, frightened people: people, who wish simply to work in
order to support their families. The abuse that has overflowed from
the homes where domestic workers are employed onto the streets of the
capital reflects the wide-ranging abuse suffered by migrant workers
of all nationalities in Saudi Arabia and throughout the Gulf States.
Trail
of Abuse
This
explosion of state sponsored violence against Ethiopians highlights
the plight of thousands of migrant workers in Saudi Arabia. They tell
of physical, sexual and psychological abuse at the hands of
employers, agents and family members. The draconian Kafala
sponsorship system, (which grants ownership of migrants to their
sponsor), together with poor or non-existent labour laws, endemic
racism and gender prejudice, creates an environment in which extreme
mistreatment has become commonplace in the oil-rich kingdom.
There
are over nine million migrant workers in Saudi Arabia, that’s 30%
of the population. They come from poor backgrounds in Sri Lanka, the
Philippines, Indonesia and Ethiopia and make up “more than half the
work force. The country would grind to an embarrassing stand still
without their daily toil. “Many suffer multiple abuses and labor
exploitation [including withholding of wages, excessive working hours
and confinement], sometimes amounting to slavery-like conditions”,
Human Rights Watch (HRW) states.
The
level of abuse of domestic workers is hard to judge: their isolation
combined with total control exerted by employers, together with
government indifference, means the vast majority of cases go
unreported. Until August this year there was no law covering domestic
abuse. Legislation has been passed: however, the authorities, HRW
reports “are yet to make clear which agencies will police the new
law…without effective mechanisms to punish domestic abuse, this law
is merely ink on paper.” All pressure needs to be exerted on the
rulers of Saudi Arabia to ensure the law is implemented and enforced
so victims of domestic violence feel it is safe to come forward.
Ethiopian
Governments Negligence
Whilst
thousands of its nationals are detained, beaten, killed and raped,
the Ethiopian government hangs its negligent head in silence in Addis
Ababa, does not act to protect or swiftly repatriate their nationals,
and criminalises those protesting in Addis Ababa against the Saudi
actions.
Although
freedom to protest is enshrined within the Ethiopian constitution (a
liberal minded, largely ignored document written by the incumbent
party), dissent and public demonstrations, if not publicly outlawed,
are actively discouraged by the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary
Democratic Front (EPRDF) regime. In response to the brutal treatment
meted out by the Saudi police and gangs of vigilantes in Riyadh and
Jeddah, outraged civilians in Addis Ababa staged a protest outside
the Saudi Embassy, only to be confronted by their own police force,
wielding batons and beating demonstrators. Al Jazeera reports that
police “arrested dozens of people outside the Saudi embassy [in
Addis Ababa] in a crackdown on demonstrators protesting against
targeted attacks on Ethiopians in Saudi Arabia.” A senior member of
The Blue Party, Getaneh Balcha was one of over 100 people arrested
for peacefully protesting.
The
government’s justification, rolled out to defend yet another
suppressive response to a democratic display, was to assert that the
protest “was an illegal demonstration, they had not got a permit
from the appropriate office”: petty bureaucratic nonsense, hiding
the undemocratic truth that the government does not want public
protests of any kind on the streets of its cities: effectively,
freedom of assembly is banned in Ethiopia. The protestors, he said,
“were fomenting anti-Arab sentiments here among Ethiopians.”
Given the brutal treatment of Ethiopians in Saudi Arabia, anger and
anti-Saudi sentiment (not anti Arab) is, one would imagine
understandable, and should be shared by the Ethiopian government.
The
people of Ethiopia are living under a duplicitous highly repressive
regime. The EPRDF consistently demonstrates it’s total indifference
to the needs and human rights of the people. Freedom of expression,
political dissent and public assembly is denied by a regime that is
committing a plethora f human rights violations in various parts of
the country, atrocities constituting in certain regions crimes
against humanity. In fact, according to Genocide Watch, the
Ethiopian government is committing genocide in the Somali region, as
well as on the “Anuak, Oromo and Omo” ethnic groups (or
tribes).Freedom of expression, political dissent and public assembly
is denied by a regime that is committing a plethora f human rights
violations in various parts of the country, atrocities constituting
in certain regions crimes against humanity.
The
recent appalling events in Saudi Arabia have brought thousands of
impassioned Ethiopians living inside the country and overseas onto
the streets. This powerful worldwide action presents a tremendous
opportunity for the people to unite, to demand their rights through
peaceful demonstrations and to call with one voice for change within
their beloved country. The time to act is now, as a wise man has
rightly said, “nothing happens by itself, man must act and
implement his will”.
Graham
Peebles is
director of the Create
Trust. He can be reached at: graham@thecreatetrust.org
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