UN Establishes Body to Monitor Human Rights Violations in Ethiopia

The U.N. Human Rights Council on Friday adopted a resolution to establish an International Commission of Human Rights Experts to investigate allegations of abuses committed by all warring parties in northern Ethiopia’s Tigray conflict.

The resolution passed 21 to 15, with 11 abstentions at the end of a daylong special session to address the grave human rights situation in Ethiopia.

Among those voting against the resolution were China, Cuba, Eritrea, Pakistan, Russia and Venezuela. The European Union, which sponsored the resolution, said an independent investigation is necessary to ensure a transparent and impartial accountability process is put in place.

Speaking earlier in the day, Denmark’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Jeppe Kofod told the council it was Addis Ababa’s responsibility to bring perpetrators of crimes to justice. However, he expressed concern that Ethiopia’s national institutions were not up to the task.

“In order to ensure accountability and to prevent further violations, additional independent, international investigations are necessary,” Kofod said. “This is essential to ensure the timely gathering of evidence, of violations, and of abuses committed and for justice to be served.”

Since Ethiopia’s military attacked the Tigray People’s Liberation Front 13 months ago, human rights violations have escalated at an alarming rate. Tens of thousands of people have been killed, and more than 400,000 are suffering from famine.

The U.N. human rights office accuses all warring factions of gross violations, some amounting to war crimes and crimes against humanity. These include extrajudicial killings, arbitrary detentions, sexual- and gender-based violence, torture, and widespread destruction and looting of civilian property.

The resolution calls for the three-member commission to conduct investigations, establish facts, collect and preserve evidence, identify those responsible and provide guidance on transitional justice, including accountability, reconciliation and healing.

The commission’s mandate is for one year, renewable as necessary.

In a statement issued after the vote, the Ethiopian government denounced the resolution as being politically motivated. It accused the council of double standards and of meddling in the internal affairs of a sovereign state under the pretext of human rights. It said it would not cooperate with the established mechanism imposed upon it against its consent.

Source: Voice of America

Officials: Islamic State Group Plot in Morocco Foiled With US Help

Moroccan security forces with U.S. support have foiled a suspected bomb plot by the so-called Islamic State group and arrested an alleged supporter of the outlawed organization, counterterror police said Friday.

“This arrest is the culmination of close collaboration between (Moroccan security forces) and U.S. law-enforcement,” Morocco’s Central Bureau of Judicial Investigation (BCIJ) said in a statement without giving further details about the joint operation.

The arrested suspect was “an extremist belonging to the so-called Islamic State” and from the Sala Al-Jadida region north of Rabat, the statement added.

According to preliminary inquiries, the man had allegedly pledged allegiance to the group.

He had planned to join foreign jihadist training camps “before deciding to join a terror plot in Morocco using explosive devices,” the statement added.

The police subsequently seized electronic devices and materials used for the preparation of explosives.

“This security operation highlights the importance and effectiveness of bilateral cooperation between (Moroccan security services) and US intelligence and security agencies in the fight against extremist violence and the threat of international terrorism,” the BCIJ said.

Moroccan outlets reported a vast nationwide counterterror operation on Dec. 8, but official sources did not confirm the crackdown.

On Oct. 6, counterterrorism police announced the dismantling of a “terror cell” in Tangiers and the arrest of five suspects accused of plotting bomb attacks.

In September, a cell affiliated to the Islamic State group was dismantled in south Morocco, and seven people were arrested.

Since 2002, Moroccan police claim to have dismantled 2,000 “terror cells” and arrested some 3,500 people in cases linked to terror, according to BCIJ data published in February.

Source: Voice of America

Officials Say Insurgency in Northern Mozambique Is Spreading

With violence by armed groups spreading beyond Mozambique’s northernmost province of Cabo Delgado into neighboring Niassa province, President Filipe Nyusi on Thursday cautioned against panic.

That comment followed the president’s assurance, at the opening of a new road Monday in Cabo Delgado’s Balama district, that young soldiers in Niassa “are waiting for the terrorists.” Nyusi attributed what he called “expanding pockets” of violence to insurgents on the run from a military offensive by Mozambican forces, bolstered by troops from Rwanda and the Southern African Development Community regional bloc.

Insurgents linked to the Islamic State have staged attacks since October 2017 in Cabo Delgado, a coastal province rich in natural gas reserves and host to an estimated $60 billion worth of international investment in gas projects. The violence has left at least 3,100 dead, according to the Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED), which tracks political violence around much of the world.

Conflict there also has displaced nearly 856,000 people, nearly half of them children, according to UNICEF.

As recently as Wednesday, militants looted five villages in Cabo Delgado’s Macomia district, burning several huts and allegedly beheading a man working in a field near Nova Zambézia village, witnesses and other sources told VOA Portuguese. Authorities did not respond to VOA’s request for comment.

Attacks in Niassa, the province directly to Cabo Delgado’s west, have been reported since at least mid-November, according to ACLED.

For instance, suspected Islamist militants struck November 28 at the village of Naulala-1 in Niassa’s northeast Mecula district.

The attackers were armed with four guns “and the rest had machetes and there were some ladies with them,” local resident Gabriel Naita told VOA Portuguese, adding that “they started shooting in the air and people fled. … They looted food and the health post and took medicines.”

Residents did not mention any civilian injuries or deaths. VOA sought more details from the Niassa provincial command for the Mozambican Republic Police, but a spokeswoman, Mirza Mecuande, would neither confirm nor deny it occurred.

‘The conflict is not over’

Mozambican authorities have been closemouthed “as the insurgency began to launch attacks in Niassa province” last month, according to Sam Ratner, an ACLED senior researcher focused on Mozambique.

“The Mozambican government effectively denied that this was happening,” maintaining that its interventions, aided by Rwanda and SADC, “have been successful and that we’re nearing the end” of conflict in Cabo Delgado, Ratner said. While the allied forces have made some security gains, he added, “This new development of attacks in Niassa province and expanded attacks in Cabo Delgado seems to suggest that that’s not actually true — that actually the conflict is not over, is perhaps not close to being over.”

But in recent days, both Nyusi and Mozambique’s top police official acknowledged the insurgency had breached Cabo Delgado’s borders — perhaps months earlier.

Aside from the president’s comments, at an event Sunday to launch a new crime prevention effort, General Police Commander Bernardino Rafael said that the Mozambican Defense and Security Forces had killed an insurgent leader while on a patrol in Niassa’s Mecula district.

“Our patrol walked into an ambush, and in the ensuing fight one of the terrorists was shot,” Rafael said. “ … We concluded that the terrorists had moved on to Niassa province.”

Rafael, who said he had received many queries about Niassa, did not specify when the incident occurred, nor did he comment further.

August 20 attack

But Cabo Ligado — a Mozambique conflict observatory run by ACLED, Zitamar News and Mediafax — noted in a report posted Wednesday that Rafael could have referred to the August 20 “ambush of a Mozambican police vehicle on the road in Mavago district. The attack, which was not confirmed to be the work of insurgents at the time, resulted in the death of one member of the police and injuries to others,” Cabo Ligado reported.

It also said the insurgent who died may have been Ali Cassimo, an Islamic leader from Mecula.

The insurgency is connected to the Islamic State, but “the nature of that connection is a little bit unclear,” said Ratner, of ACLED. He said insurgents identify as an Islamist group whose “core grievances are really about the lack of control that local people have over their lives.” The insurgents propose wresting local control from the central government in Maputo and instead having “an Islamist form of self-government in the north.”

The U.S. State Department’s newly released Country Reports on Terrorism 2020 said that in that year in Mozambique, “an estimated 1,500 deaths were due to ISIS-Mozambique attacks.”

The report also noted challenges with border security in northern Mozambique: “Terrorists are known to cross the porous border with Tanzania, which serves as a recruitment and transit point for terrorist and criminal organizations.”

Observers long have warned that the insurgency likely could not be contained to Cabo Delgado. In early January, Niassa’s chief police commander, Arnaldo Chefo, expressed concern that as “neighbors to that province, we have to be constantly vigilant so that terrorists do not penetrate our province.”

The SADC military support mission in Mozambique is scheduled to end in January. Researcher Borges Nhamirre said he believed the SADC forces would be renewed. But, if they withdraw, he told VOA Portuguese, “it will be a total failure for the entire region. I think that what the region should do is mobilize more funds to maintain its mission in Mozambique.”

In Ratner’s view, “the most pressing issue” in Cabo Delgado is a food shortage, leaving civilians increasingly vulnerable and desperate. The World Food Program says a combination of manmade conflict, climate change and COVID has heightened hunger risks, while funding shortfalls limit what the agency can provide to needy people everywhere, including those who have been displaced in northern Mozambique.

“There’s pressure for displaced people to return to the conflict zone to find food,” Ratner noted, which “both puts them at greater danger and also gives insurgents access to more resources that civilians bring with them.”

Source: Voice of America