SourceURL:https://www.dw.com/en/ethiopias-neglected-crisis/g-49431578 Ethiopia′s neglected crisis | All media content | DW | 01.07.2019

Ethiopia is facing one of the world’s biggest displacement crises — nearly 3 million people in the country have fled their homes in recent years.

People walk on a dirt road with green hills behind them

Starting over again

Authorities have started returning home some of the hundreds of thousands of ethnic Gedeos who fled attacks in Ethiopia’s southern Oromia region, which is mainly populated by ethnic Oromos. But humanitarian organizations accuse the government of forcing Gedeos back to villages where they have lost everything – and still don’t feel safe.

Men, women and children stand on a dirt road
Children in Hinche

Accusations of forced returns

The residents of Hinche, as well as other ethnic Gedeos, were left with little choice but to return to their village after the government razed the refugee camps and limited humanitarian aid in the Gedeo zone. Observers accuse authorities of organizing ‘forced returns’, which they say will aggravate an already tense situation.

A man stands in front of a temporary shelter built with banana leaves, sticks and plastic

Dwellings looted and razed

Zele is happy to be back home with his wife and six children. However, life here in Hinche is very difficult, especially as the rainy season starts settling in. Zele’s house was destroyed and his belongings stolen in the violence, so he built this shelter. The family lives off monthly food aid of around 40kg of grain and 2 liters of oil.

A women washes something in a green bucket

Fear of futher attacks

Most of the returnees are farmers but haven’t been able to cultivate their land since they have returned. Dingete is now working as a daily laborer to feed her four children. “Our farm is far from here, and I am afraid to go there because some people said they saw the Oromo armed groups in the area,” she says.

People stand on a dirt road with market stalls and houses along the sides
Destroyed house lacking roof and some of the walls

Lack of justice

Many Gedeos are frustrated about what they perceive as a lack of justice. In Cherqo, more than 1,000 people fled, and almost all of the houses were destroyed. “Those who committed these things have not been arrested or faced justice – not a single person has been captured so far,” says Abebe, Cherqo’s administrator. The Guji police say they have arrested more than 200 people over the violence.

Children stand waiting to fill water canisters
A girl sits on a dirt road

Disease and malnutrition

“We are starving, people suffer from diarrhea, our children have to go to the streets and collect food in the garbage and bring it to their families,” say Almaz, who has been living in this camp in Dilla in the Gedeo zone for more than a year.

A woman sits with her baby

Food aid stopped

Authorities in the Gedeo zone say they have requested food from the federal government, and then they can return the families to East Guji. But many Gedeo people don’t feel safe going back. There were more reports of killings of ethnic Gedeos in East Guji at the end of May.

A dirt road runs through a village lines with huts

Incomplete statistics

Humanitarian organizations say thousands of Gedeos who fled their homes in the West Guji zone are living in informal settlements or renting houses. They are difficult to keep track of and thus don’t appear in official statistics. Nor do they receive any aid.