News

Senator Feingold holds State Department feet to fire

Ethiomedia

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September 24, 2008


Senator Feingold

SEATTLE – Senator Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) on Tuesday called on the State Department to explain on what ground was a targeted military assistance to Ethiopia and Chad justified despite continued human rights abuses in both countries as reported by the State Department’s annual report.

“In Ethiopia, the State Department’s annual reports over the last decade all document persistent human rights abuses by the security forces, including unlawful killings, beatings, abuse and torture, especially targeting members of the political opposition,” Senator Feingold said.

The US law maker expressed his disappointment in a statement issued following the State Department’s denial of any “consistent pattern of gross violations of internationally recognized human rights” in Ethiopia.

“I appreciate that there can be a need to engage with foreign countries
notwithstanding ongoing human rights abuses, but federal law requires
certification of
extraordinary circumstances before providing assistance to nations, not individual
units, that have a history of systemic violations of human rights in order to “avoid
identification of the United States, through such programs, with governments
which deny to their people internationally recognized human rights and
fundamental freedoms,” he said in the statement.

“In addition, the State Department’s Country Reports on
Human Rights Practices for 2007 specifically cites ‘the use of excessive force by
security services in an internal conflict and counter-insurgency operations.’ This
is a reference to the Ethiopian military’s operations in the Ogaden region, where
available reporting alleges that they have subjected civilians to executions, torture
and rape,” the Senator said in a statement.

Mr. Feingold said Ethiopia is a key US ally in the Horn of Africa which makes contributions to peacekeeping efforts. But he said Ethiopia’s refusal to address the gross human rights violations requires the US president to provide certifications before providing military assistance to the country.

The statement also included a stern warning of the consequences of cooperating with the “most repressive and brutal governments,” and said: “As the bipartisan 9/11 Commission found ‘[o]ne of the lessons of the Cold War was that short-term gains in cooperating with the most repressive and brutal governments were too often outweighed by long-term setbacks for America’s stature and interests.'”

Refering to Chad, Senator Feingold said State Department reports
“consistently criticize the government’s failure to prosecute members of the security forces who committed crimes… Ten years of such abuses, if not many more, suggests to me a consistent pattern of gross violations.”


(Photo of Senator Feingold: courtesy of thumbjig.blogspot.com)


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