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Oct 03 2008
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Investigating Reports
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More Blowback from the War on Terror Image
By Jennifer Daskal, senior counterterrorism counsel, published in Salon

The U.S.-backed Ethiopian military has secreted away scores of "suspects" – including pregnant women and children – and fueled anti-American rancor in Africa.

Ishmael, a 37-year-old shepherd from the Ogaden region in Ethiopia, looked at me with tears in his eyes. Ethiopian forces – who had already killed his mother, father, brothers and sisters – murdered his wife days after they were married. They then slaughtered his goats, beat him unconscious, and slashed his shoulder to the bone, he said.

In December 2006, Ishmael crossed through Somalia into Kenya, heading for the nearest refugee camp in search of medical care. But when he didn't have enough money to pay a 1,000 shilling ($15) bribe, the Kenyan police bundled him into a car and took him to Nairobi. Less than a month later, he was herded onto an airplane with some 30 others, flown to Somalia and handed over to the Ethiopian military – the same forces that he previously fled. 
 
Ishmael is a victim of a 2007 rendition program in the Horn of Africa, involving Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia and the United States. There are at least 90 more victims like him. Most have since been sent home. A few – including a Canadian and nine who assert Kenyan nationality – remain in detention even now. The whereabouts of 22 others – including several Somalis, Ethiopian Ogadenis, and Eritreans – remain unknown. 
 
In late 2006, the Bush administration backed a full-scale Ethiopian military offensive that ousted the Islamist authorities from Somalia's capital, Mogadishu. The fighting caused thousands of Somalis, including some who were suspected of terrorist links, to flee across the Kenya border. 
 
Kenyan authorities arrested at least 150 men, women and children from more than 18 countries – including the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada – in operations near the Somali border, and held them for weeks without charge in Nairobi. In January and February 2007, the Kenyan government then unlawfully put dozens of these individuals – with no notice to families, lawyers or the detainees themselves – on flights to Somalia, where they were handed over to the Ethiopian military. Ethiopian forces also arrested an unknown number of people in Somalia. 
 
Those rendered were later transported to detention centers in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa and other parts of Ethiopia, where they effectively disappeared. Denied access to their embassies, their families and international humanitarian organizations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross, the detainees were even denied phone calls home. Several detainees have said that they were housed in solitary cells, some as small as two meters by two meters, with their hands cuffed in painful positions behind their backs and their feet bound together any time they were in their cells. 
 
An unknown number of them – likely dozens – were questioned by the Central Intelligence Agency and Federal Bureau of Investigation agents in Addis Ababa. From February to May 2007, Ethiopian security officers daily transported detainees – including several pregnant women – to a villa where US officials interrogated them about suspected terrorist links. At night the Ethiopian officers returned the detainees to their cells. 
 
For the most part, detainees were sent home soon after their interrogation by US agents ended. Of those known to have been interrogated by US officials, just eight Kenyans remain. (A ninth Kenyan in Addis Ababa was rendered to Ethiopia in August 2007, after US interrogations reportedly stopped.) These men, who have not been subjected to any interrogation since May 2007, would likely have been repatriated long ago but for the Kenyan government’s longstanding refusal to acknowledge their claims to Kenyan citizenship or to take steps to secure their release. 
 
Recently I spoke by telephone to several of the still-detained Kenyans. They described water-soaked mattresses, insufficient food and inadequate healthcare. Two said they have trouble walking, following beatings by Ethiopian officials, and a third said he can no longer use his left hand. 
 
“I can’t sleep here. I miss my family. Please, I need you to help us to go home,” one detainee pleaded with me. 
 
In mid-August 2008, Kenyan authorities visited these men for the first time. The officials reportedly told the detainees they would be home within a few weeks. But more than a month and a half has passed with no apparent follow-up. 
 
In addition to working with the US, the Ethiopians used the rendition program for their own ends. For years, the Ethiopian military has been trying to quell domestic Ogadeni and Oromo insurgencies that receive support from neighboring countries, such as Ethiopia's archrival, Eritrea. The multinational rendition program provided them a convenient means to continue this internal battle – and get their hands, with US and Kenyan support, on those with suspected insurgent links. 
 
Ishmael was one of their victims. 
 
The questions his Ethiopian interrogators asked were nonstop, and always the same: "Are you al-Qaida? Are you an Ogadeni rebel? Are you part of the Somali insurgency?" Each time he said no, he was beaten, sometimes to the point of unconsciousness. When he resisted answering, they targeted his testicles. 
 
Then, in February 2008 – some 14 months after his original arrest – the Ethiopians decided Ishmael was no longer worth the trouble. They dumped him, along with 27 others, just over the Somali border. The men were met by a Somali officer who told him that he was very sorry, that their arrest was a mistake and that they were all innocent. 
 
Now Ishmael is back in the refugee camp, limping and urinating blood. He is still waiting for the healthcare he came searching for nearly two years ago. 
 
Almost everyone I spoke with assumed – whether true or not – that the United States backed the arbitrary arrest and unlawful rendition of men like Ishmael and the still-detained Kenyans. Almost everyone assumed that the Ethiopians operate with America's blessing. Their stories have circulated, fueling anger and resentment. As one man, whose childhood friend became one of the rendition victims, told me, "Now when I go to the mosque, I pray to God to punish the Americans." 
 
To be sure, the United States is not the main culprit when the Kenyans unlawfully render suspects or the Ethiopians torture them. But when US officials interrogate rendition victims who are being held incommunicado, the United States becomes complicit in the abuse. The U.S. is funding the Ethiopian military, supporting its activities in Somalia and training Kenyan security forces in counterterrorism – so as US-backed military and police forces in the region brutalize their domestic opponents in the name of fighting terrorism, the United States is often blamed. 
 
The United States could change those perceptions by demanding higher standards of its foreign partners and cutting off aid to abusers. It otherwise risks fueling the very problem – anti-American militancy – that it seeks to solve. For starters, the US could demand the release or fair trial of any rendition victims still stuck in Ethiopian custody. 
 
At the end of our interview, Ishmael looked at me with sad eyes. "I have suffered three times," he told me. "I lost my family; I was beaten and tortured, and then I was arrested and tortured again. Now I have nothing to lose."

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Comments (14)
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1. 04-10-2008 03:37
Sad Truth.
Jennifer, 
The sad truth is the US is complicit in so much human tragedy. 
And as great a tragedy is that the population of the US are kept from the truth, or maybe blinded to the truth. 
What can one say? 
 
Mike
Registered
2. 04-10-2008 06:30
Improvement of millitary
Kenya must improve on millitary activity as well as better and updated fire arms.The kenyan government must unite and fight internal and exeternal wars.
Guest
jomtech@yahoo.comNOSPAM! ">JOB MAGONDU
3. 04-10-2008 18:20
Improvement of millitary
A doctor by profession & dear brother of mine is in prison currently in Jigjiga, Ogaden with out any charges for two months. This is not the first time he was arrested, last time they (Ethiopian Government) arrested him, he was held for 90 days & released with out any charges or an explanation of why he was detained. & no doubt in mind he had his share of torture. People who live around Jigjiga whom we are in touch with informed us (my family) that there is a prison out side the city(Jigjiga) that is run or at least partially funded by U S dollars. Us Americans my think that they don’t know, but the fact is the other way, we may want to be wise with our tax dollars if we need to win the hearts & minds of those victims.
Guest
muumin26@yahoo.comNOSPAM! ">Abdi Muumin
4. 04-10-2008 18:27
Please see the link for more info.
To find out more about the real situation on the ground in Ogaden,; please visit the link below.  
 
http://www.channel4.com/news/articles/politics/international_politics/nomads%20blame%20ethiopian%20military%20for%20starvation/2459662
Guest
muumin26@yahoo.comNOSPAM! ">Abdi Muumin
5. 04-10-2008 20:57
Please see the link for more info.
people are living this way 24/7 and those who can help are just watching and saying nothing there are many other people from Ogaden region who have the same story as Ismael or even worse. Ogaden is the only region where it is Illegal for journalists to go and report what they see. for more info. about the settelite images of villages burnt by Ethiopian soldiers and 130 pages report by Human rights watch Click on this link.http://www.hrw.org/english/docs/2008/06/12/ethiop19029.htm
Guest
6. 05-10-2008 06:54
Please see the link for more info.
My own brother was kidnaped by Somaliland agents on October 2007, held in Hargeissa till the night of October 13th, 2007, where he was handed to Ethiopian genocidal agents at night. Along my brother Abdul, there were 7 Ogadenian boys who were taken hostages, to Ethiopia. I will search for him till the day I die!!. 
 
Rendition to Ethiopian regime is one of the worst form of genocides that was sponsored in our times. We must expose it and call all man kind to denounce it.
Guest
BEKE ESHI
7. 05-10-2008 12:58
Please see the link for more info.
is there anyone who wants to talk about thousands of innocent Ogadenis who are totured daily in across Ogadenia, and in Ethiopia.?
Guest
ogadeni@gmail.comNOSPAM! ">Abdirahman
8. 05-10-2008 13:56
Guest
Western voices are loudly heard for human rights of Darfur,East Timor and some other places. Those tortured, killed burned & burried in live in Ogaden may be are not human. Similar are those in Phalestine, Iraq and Afghanistan. 
 
Bashir of Sudan is callled by Hugue tribune while Meles Zanawi of Ethiopia is hero. 
 
Allah will when day soon or later judge the double standard of the west.
Guest
NOgob
9. 05-10-2008 13:57
the truth
america has really stuffed up here, thousands of somali civillians are confined to these dire conditions, the US's choice of ethiopia for its rendition program was thus deliberate considering there appalling human rights record, . we hope the downfall of this neo-nazi ethiopian regime is near for thousands have perished with western support been continually leveraged.
Guest
abaz
10. 06-10-2008 05:22
the truth
:cry :cry :cry  
Where is the international community? Wheree is the justise? 
Ogaden peapole need help right now
Guest
hirsi
11. 06-10-2008 14:42
the truth
Ethiopia can not even feed its own people let alone colinize/slave neighburing African Nations.The West is and has been financing Ethiopias effort to conquire Somalia in the name of Religion every step of the way.This is nothing new.This Genocide in Ogaden and Somalia is just another desprate attemp by this Cruseders to finish of one is left of the people.The sad thing is some of are asking help from those who are in fact hell bent on destroying us.
Guest
Genocide
12. 06-10-2008 17:33
the truth
when jandayo fraiza visited Godey, and asked what she saw the in Ogaden, she just described Ethiopia as a democratic government. and she kept saying there is no crimes against humanity, crime against Our will and Ethiopia does not treat Ogaden citizens abusively, 
 
we only asking Allah to help us, and we have a little power to fight for our freedom and rights.
Guest
ogadens@gmail.comNOSPAM! ">Ogadens
13. 08-10-2008 03:31
ETHIOPIA MILITARY WAR ON TERROR
THE USA GOVERN. INVENTED THE WAR ON TERROR AFTER 9/11 AND IT HAS LEGITIMIZED THE KILLING AND CONQUERING OF TERRORIST ORG.AND COUNTRIES IF THAT IS THE CASE FOR AMERICA THEN HOW IS THE CASE IN ETHIOPIA? ETHIOPIA WANT TO HIDE A 50(FIFTY) YEARS COLONIZATION ,TORTURE,MASSKILLING,STARVATION,DEHUMANIZATION,RAPING OF GIRLS AND CONTINUES TORTURE OF THE PROUD PEOPLE OF \\\'OGADEN\\\' TO CLEANSE THEIR HOMELAND.THEN,ETHIOPIA WANT TO CONVINCE THAT THEIR DICTATORIATE GOVERNMENT TO BLINDFOLD THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY BUT THIS TIME THE AMERICAN GOVENMENT REALIZE THAT ETHIOPIA IS KILLING INNOCENT PEOPLE OF \\\'OGADEN\\\'. FOR THAT REASON WE WANT THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNTIES AND ESPECIALLY TO STANDUP BY HELPING THE PEOPLE OF OGADEN BEFORE IT IS TO LATE.SECOND.WE WANT FROM THE AMERICAN GOVERN TO BRING MELES ZENAWI AND HIS MILLITERY GENERAL TO JUSTICE AND WE REQUEST OTHER INTERNATIONAL ORG.TO ALLEVIATE THE SUFFERING OF THE PEOPLE OF OGADEN.LAST BUT THE LEAST, THERE IS A SAYING WHICH SAYS\\\'\\\' ANYBODY WHO BROUGHT A GINI (DEVIL) KNOWS HOW TO TAKE AWAY\\\" AND I MEAN THIS QUOTE TO THE BRITISH PROTECTORATE OF 1954 AND 1948 WHO HANDED OVER THE ;OGADEN SOMALIS TO ETHIOPIA TO STANDUP AND TELL ETIOPIA TO IMMEDIATELY GIVE TRHESE PEOPLE THE CHOICE OF THEIR DREAM BECAUSE ETIOPIA CANNOT FEED AND DEVELOP THEIR OWN PEOPLE.
Guest
14. 10-10-2008 04:29
ETHIOPIA MILITARY WAR ON TERROR
Amongst over 1000\'s of political prisoners, are exists the question of many Oromos and Ogadenians who were kidnaped in Somalia and their where about is not even discussed. 
 
What happened to all these prisoners who we have names and IDENTITIES. 
 
Ethiopia would never, will never be a democratic nation in zillion years. What is going on is modern day savegery, barberism, in which people get butchered without any question. This a fact the world community are avoiding to hear. NO TRACES OF DEMOCRACY NOR ACCOUNTABILITY EXISTS FROM THUGS THAT HAVE TAKEN THE ENTIRE Ethiopian people hotage.
Guest
yusuf

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