By Ethiomedia, April 3, 2013
WASHINGTON, DC (Ethiomedia) -
Ethiopian authorities could be charged with the crimes of "ethnic cleansing" at
anytime in their life, a leading law professor said on
Tuesday.
Yacob
Hailemariam, a prominent opposition leader who previously was a senior UN
Prosecutor at the Rwanda Genocide Trials, told the Ethiopian Satellite TV (ESAT)
the recent forceful eviction of members of the Amhara from Benishangul-Gumuz
area was an obvious case of ethnic cleansing which is a serious crime for which
Rwandan officials were sentenced to life in prison. Last week about 59
Ethiopians targetted as 'Amhara' were killed when their truck overturned as they
were being forcefully removed from the Benishangul-Gumuz region.
The crime is
not 'genocide' but it is a crime of'ethnic cleansing' for which the current
authorities could be prosecuted according to both Ethiopian and international
laws, the business law professor warned. If Ethiopians at home and abroad
collect evidences for the UN Security Council, the officials could be brought
before the court of an international law, Yacob warned. Scholars generally
agree and define ethnic cleansing as the "the systematic and violent removal
of undesired ethnic groups from a given territory."
Yacob
said ethnic cleansing is an international crime and the perpetrators of the
crime could be prosecuted at an international criminal court. "The forceful
deportation of people because they speak a certain language could destabilize a
region, and if reported with tangible evidences, the UN Security Council could
order the International Criminal Court to begin to examine the crimes," Yacob
said. "At the Rwanda Tribunal, individuals who were charged with ethnic
cleansing were sentenced to life in prison," Professor Yacob said of the event
for which he was a Senior UN prosecutor. Benishangul officials as well as the
late dictator Meles Zenawi at one time had said those being removed were for
destroying forests and not for being Amhara.
Commenting on this remark, Yacob
said people accused of cutting down trees may face legal action but to condemn
them to ethnic cleansing is to commit a very serious crime that the perpetrators
could face justice irrespective of the passage of time - even 30 or 40 years
later. Ethiopian authorities should be duly reminded that their actions of
removing citizens from any part of their country is a criminal offense
prosecutable as per Ethiopian and international humanitarian laws, Professor
Yacob Hailemariam warned.
Ethiopia is signatory to several conventions,
including Universal Declaration of Human Rights, International Convention on
Civil and Political Rights, Africa Human and Peoples Rights Charter, which,
among others, state in clear terms that any citizen of a certain country has the
right to work and live in any part of his or her country. Therefore, Yacob
warned, there cannot be any excuse like a resettlement program etc. to violate
such laws and commit the serious crimes of 'ethnic cleansing.'
No comments:
Post a Comment