SemahagnG. Abebe, an O’Brien Fellow in Residence at the Centre for Human
Rights and Legal Pluralism in the Faculty of Law at McGill
University, wrote the following compelling atrocities against Ethiopian migrant workers by Saudi Arabia government and the apathy of TPLF led government to the suffering of its thousands of nationals in that hell-hole country called Saudi Arabia.
Unarmed Ethiopians vs Brutal Saudi Police and thousands of Vigilante Young Men
The
Saudi government certainty didn’t waste any time. As soon as the
seven-month warning period for expatriate workers expired in
November, officials rounded up tens of thousands of illegal
immigrants, many of them facing violence, rape and torture at the
hands of police and vigilante groups throughout the crackdown.
Images
circulated on social media that showed Saudi citizens lending support
to their police force, participating in vigilantism, or simply
cheering and watching the drama unfold from a distance. Ethiopian
migrants were mercilessly beaten, tortured and raped
by Saudi police
and civilians during the crackdown. At least three Ethiopians were
brutally killed and hundreds more beaten by Saudi security forces.
Tens of thousands of workers, including children, were held in
detention centers without adequate food, shelter or medical care,
before being sent home.
By
the beginning of this year, almost 150,000 Ethiopians had been
expelled from Saudi Arabia. This is economically catastrophic not
only for the workers, but for the extended families that had been
supported by their remittances.
The
pretext of the Saudi government for the barbaric crackdown against
foreign workers is to combat high levels of unemployment among Saudi
citizens by opening jobs previously filled by undocumented workers.
Those targeted include people without the proper residency or work
permits, and those caught working for an employer who is not their
legal sponsor. The crackdown hit Ethiopians particularly hard, as
they had stayed behind as nationals of many other countries had been
helped to leave Saudi Arabia by their own governments during the
warning period.
The
accounts of the victims are extremely distressing. A 26-year-old
undocumented day labourer told Human Rights Watch that he was among a
group of 23 Ethiopians in a private home when a group of 20 young men
armed with machetes and pistols broke down the door and attacked the
people inside. He and five other Ethiopians escaped by climbing to
the roof, but he does not know what happened to the other 17 men.
When your "own" government becomes an Adversary
Despite
it all, the Ethiopian government has paid precious little attention
to the suffering of Ethiopian immigrants in the Middle East, and the
response of the international community and western media to the
crisis in Saudi Arabia has been inadequate. The silence of powerful
governments, multilateral organizations and major media outlets
perpetuates the message that it is acceptable for Saudi authorities
to continue the violent treatment of foreign workers.
TPLF harassed Ethiopian Protesters in front Saudi Embassy in Addis |
Tens
of thousands of Ethiopians flee their country every year because of
worsening living conditions and the repressive regime. According to
Ethiopia’s Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, approximately
200,000 women sought employment abroad in 2012, the vast majority of
them in the Middle East. The real figure could be more than double
that, considering that most of the illegal immigrants cross the
borders without passing through any documentation process. For years,
the Ethiopian government has completely failed to take such steps as
creating jobs and ensuring good governance in the country, which
would curb the surge in emigration.
The
suffering of Ethiopian immigrants at the hands of Saudi authorities
was made worse by the failure of Ethiopian diplomatic offices to
provide effective protection. Not only has the Ethiopian government
failed to denounce the violent crackdown in the strongest terms, but
police arrested dozens of demonstrators outside the Saudi embassy in
the capital Addis Ababa as they protested against attacks on
Ethiopian immigrants in Saudi Arabia.
It
is time for the international community to urge Saudi authorities to
treat immigrant workers in accordance with international human rights
standards. Saudi authorities should cease all forms of violence
against immigrant workers, investigate assaults on Ethiopian and
other migrant workers, and bring perpetrators to justice.
The
international community should condemn this barbaric act in the
strongest possible terms and pressure the Saudi government to improve
the way in which immigrant workers are treated in the country. In
addition, international organizations and the donor community should
respond urgently to appeals by humanitarian organizations for
financial assistance to help resettle and rehabilitate returnees.
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