# taz.de -- Migration policy in Ethiopia: Europe's favorite country
       
       > Ethiopia is both a country of origin and transit for refugees and
       > migrants. The EU's interest in good cooperation is correspondingly high.
       
 (IMG) Bild: Women mourn during the funeral for victims of the stampede after a police shooting in Oromo
       
       When Chancellor Angela Merkel traveled to Ethiopia in October 2016, dozens
       of exiled Ethiopians gathered in front of the building of the EU Commission
       at the Brandenburg Gate with protest banners. „The support of dictators in
       Ethiopia does not lead to an improvement in living conditions, but promotes
       flight and crimes against humanity,“ said Seyoum Habtemariam, chairman of
       the Ethiopian Human Rights Commission in Germany.
       
       Merkel's visit to Ethiopia's capital Adis Abeba came at a very bad time.
       Only a few days before, hundreds of participants were murdered in the
       village of Bishoftu, south of the capital, at the traditional Thanksgiving
       of the Oromo People. Parts of the regions populated by Oromo and Amharen
       have been in turmoil since 2015 against the central government. What began
       there as a local outrage over governmental landgrabbing had extended to a
       coordinated protest movement that called for the overthrow of the
       government. Already in August 2016, more than a hundred people had been
       killed in mass protests in several cities. One day before Merkel's visit,
       the state of emergency was imposed on the country, the Internet and the
       social networks were switched off. Europe's favorite country showed the
       face of a repressive regime.
       
       Taking this into account, the Chancellor, at her meeting with Prime
       Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, warned that „a lively civil society is an
       essential part of a developing country“. In the same breath, she promised
       the training of national police forces, who were overwhelmed with
       insurrections, and the support of a dialogue between the people in the
       conflict regions. Then she cut through the band to celebrate the
       inauguration of the newly-finished headquarters of the Security Council of
       the African Union (AU) in Addis Ababa. Germany had financed the
       construction with 27 million euros – as a measure of “regional
       stabilization“.
       
       Ethiopia has hitherto accommodated most of the refugees on the continent,
       well over 700,000, most of them from Somalia and South Sudan. According to
       the law, the refugees must live in one of the 24 refugee camps, which are
       run by the national refugee agency (ARRA) together with the UN refugee aid
       agency (UNHCR). The two largest camps with more than 200,000 people are
       located in the south of the country: Gembella on the border with South
       Sudan, Dollo Ado near the border with Somalia. In the north, the Shire camp
       houses more than 100,000 refugees on the Eritrean border. Only around 7,000
       refugees received an exception permit due to security or health problems in
       2015 in cities such as Adis Ababa.
       
       ## Transit and country of origin
       
       Because of extreme drought in the deserts of the South, as well as ethnic
       conflicts and border disputes, the country lives around 800,000 internally
       displaced, most of them in camps. Human rights organizations report the
       violent expulsions of ethnic minorities by the government, especially in
       the South, where huge land is being built for agriculture or dams are built
       to increase food production, which is so important to hunger-stricken
       land.Ethiopia is a transit country for refugees from South Sudan, Somalia
       and Eritrea, but also for African migrant workers on their way to the
       Arabian Peninsula. At the same time, the repressive regime itself generates
       more and more refugees: over one million of the roughly 90 million
       Ethiopians are seeking refuge in exile. Many travel south, especially to
       Kenya. Some move to Tanzania and even to South Africa. But there they are
       now threatened with arrest, since they have no work permit.Most migrant
       workers, about 80 percent, have moved eastwards to the Arabian Peninsula,
       especially to Yemen and Saudi Arabia, where African men work on
       construction sites and women are hired as childminders. Ethiopia's
       government has banned all attempts to recruit workers from the Arab world
       in Ethiopia until 2013.The extent to which the labor migration of
       Ethiopians to the Arabian Peninsula is so far is only to be expected. After
       Saudi Arabia announced to deport Ethiopians in 2014, regional analysts with
       around 20,000 returnees, Bram Frouws recalls from the regional think tanks
       RMMS, which systematically records migration data on the Gulf of Aden.
       Deported were ultimately 250,000, Frouws said.
       
       ## Variable escape routes
       
       Even after the war broke out in Yemen in 2015, the numbers are steadily
       increasing: from the 120,000 migrants arriving in Yemen in 2016, 85% of
       Ethiopians were, according to Frouws. Significant is the recent increase in
       Oromo's share among the Ethiopian migrants after the brutal suppression of
       protests in October 2016. In November, 98% of the arriving Ethiopians
       belonged to the Oromo ethnic group. In the course of a voluntary return
       initiative, the International Organization for Migration (IOM) saved more
       than 600 migrants, most of the Ethiopians, from Yemen's war riots and took
       them to Djibouti. In October 2016, more than a thousand Ethiopians escaped
       from a detention center in South Yemen with the help of a prison guard.
       
       The escape routes beyond the Ethiopian border are becoming increasingly
       dangerous. The massacre of the Islamic state ISIS has spread to 30
       Ethiopian migrants in Libya in 2015. They had left their homeland via the
       northern border post Metema, a collection point for smugglers. The
       government in Addis then closed the border crossing, arrested some 200
       suspected human smugglers. RMMS surveys on the migration routes show how
       „the smugglers and tugs react quickly to changes in the migration routes
       and how well they are equipped, mostly with satellite telephones,“ says
       Frouws. The RMMS recently reported that more Ethiopians and Eritreans flee
       across Darfur and across Chad to Libya in order to bypass the border
       patrols of Sudan that have been upgraded, he says.
       
       According to the EU, more than 3,500 Ethiopians are irregularly submitted
       to Europe in 2015. This represents an increase of 175 percent compared to
       the previous year. Around 6,000 applied for asylum in the EU Member States,
       around half of them were granted. The UNHCR estimates that about half of
       the Somali and Eritreans who are receiving asylum in Europe are in fact
       Ethiopians who indicate false identities so as not to be deported.
       
       So far, Ethiopia has not shown itself particularly cooperative with regard
       to the return of rejected asylum seekers. The EU strategy paper on
       negotiating a repatriation agreement speaks of a rate of only 16 per cent.
       For other countries it is 40 percent.
       
       ## Charm offensive from the EU
       
       „Ethiopia is a regional heavyweight; It has assumed responsibility for
       peace and stability in the region in many areas and is an important actor
       in pan-African questions „- it sounds like this in the Chancellor's Office
       when the speaker explains the reason for Merkel's journey to Ethiopia.
       
       For the EU, Ethiopia is the most important partner country for migration
       regulation in Africa alongside Nigeria. As early as November 2015, the EU
       and Ethiopia signed a joint declaration on the implementation of the Common
       Agenda for Migration and Mobility (CAMM) at the EU-Africa Migration Summit
       in Valletta, Malta. The objective is that the EU will help to prevent
       trafficking in human beings and illegal migration, as well as the provision
       of relief funds for the purpose of combating the cause of flight.
       
       The EU is committed to supporting Ethiopian border units in regional
       training programs, to prosecute law enforcement agencies to combat
       trafficking in human beings and smuggling, to develop biometric data
       storage of passports, as well as tracking counterfeit detection equipment.
       Cooperation is particularly important in this area, in order to identify
       asylum seekers who erroneously turn out to be Somali or Eritreans in order
       to obtain asylum in the EU, the EU Commission's strategy paper on the
       negotiations of the repatriation agreements states. Ethiopia's cooperation
       with Ethiopian authorities is unavoidable. Three months later, 57 cases
       were given to Addis Ababa.
       
       In the future, there will be an annual meeting in Brussels or Addis to
       evaluate the progress made in the „Dialogue on Migration and Mobility“,
       according to the agreement. Ethiopia is committed to accelerating the
       return process. As helping EU institutions, they explicitly mention
       Frontex, Europol and the European Asylum Support Office (EASO). A status
       report from November 2015 states that Ethiopia has already identified cases
       of potential reimbursement of rejected asylum seekers from the EU, a
       procedure has been established. However, the sending of an EU immigration
       link from Frontex is still pending, in order to carry out deportations.
       
       ## Economic power of the diaspora
       
       Conversely, the EU wants to meet Ethiopia, with visa facilitation and
       expansion of economic partnership to maintain good economic growth. To this
       end, a business event in Brussels will be held to promote investment. In
       his visit to Brussels, Ethiopia's Foreign Minister had also explicitly
       asked for a more cost-effective re-transfer of exiled Ethiopians from other
       European countries. Ethiopia's gross domestic product and foreign exchange
       reserves are enormously dependent on these money transfers to the families
       in the home country. To maximize this, the government in Addis 2013 called
       the so-called diaspora policy, which encourages Ethiopians in exile to
       invest with a hard foreign currency in their home country.
       
       In 2015, Ethiopia signed a dialogue with the EU on migration development,
       the so-called Coutonou Agreement. With this, measures are to be implemented
       to prevent human trafficking and smuggling. Ethiopia is one of the main
       beneficiaries of the EU Emergency Relief Trust for Africa. Already in 2015
       targeted measures against the sluggishness had been determined at the
       summit in Valletta for Ethiopia. 253 million euros were earmarked for this.
       In April 2016, a further 117 million euros were earmarked to support
       refugees, internally displaced persons and their host communities. Ethiopia
       has a share of 30 million euros.
       
       In July 2016, the EU signed two other agreements with Ethiopia to be
       financed by the EU Trust Fund. Italy's development agency is responsible
       for implementation. Approximately 20 million euros will be invested in
       vocational schools and training programs for young people and women,
       especially in the regions of the country, which are particularly affected
       by irregular migration. The aim was to reduce the migration of young
       people. A further 47 million euros will be used to tackle the causes of the
       escape in five regions with neglected ethnic minorities. Here, too, the
       focus is on vocational training and better school and health care as well
       as food security. The EU policy description assumes that young people
       migrate less or emigrate if they find locally better living conditions. In
       the agreements, it is suggested that the central government, by its
       repressive policy against minorities and enormous land allocation to
       foreign investors such as Saudi Arabia itself creates reasons for escape.
       
       ## Military and police
       
       Within the framework of the so-called Khartoum process, Ethiopia is
       allocated € 45 million from the Treuhandfond for Africa under the keyword
       „better migration management“. The German Association for International
       Cooperation (GIZ) has added further offices in Addis and is expanding its
       work further. Ethiopia's law enforcement agencies are to be empowered to
       act against traffickers. Regional training programs for border authorities
       are to be implemented in order to establish joint border patrols between
       neighboring countries and to strengthen cooperation.
       
       Almost all border lines of Ethiopia are contested locally and regionally,
       especially the line of demarcation against Eritrea, which had disappeared
       after an independence war in 1993. The border region is today an official
       war zone on both sides and is monitored by Ethiopian, well-trained special
       units of the army. Also along the border with Kenya there are always
       battles with Kenyan border troops. The desert-like area is a pasture and
       transit area for pastoralist peoples with their huge herds of cattle, which
       migrate back and forth in the barren desert depending on the rain and dry
       season. The settlement of the numerous border conflicts and thus the better
       regulation of the migration movements in and through Ethiopia can
       contribute to more stabilization in the region, according to the
       agreements.
       
       Hardly any country is as armed as Ethiopia. The borders are defended by
       special forces of the army. Dieseling fast intervention groups are also
       used for the suppression of protests and insurrections. „The tension
       remains elevated and the human rights situation is terrible,“ says Michelle
       Kagari of Amnesty International.
       
       Ethiopia, one of the first countries in 2012, has set up an agency to
       combat trafficking in human beings, the National Council against Human
       Trafficking (NCHF). This emerged from a task force, which had already been
       founded in 1993, in order to prevent the mass expulsion to South Africa
       after the loss of Eritrea in the independence war. Today's Prime Minister
       Desalegn was once the chairman of the NCHF, today she is headed by Deputy
       Prime Minister Demeke Mekonnen. Representatives of the central, but also
       the local governments, as well as the secret services, as well as
       representatives of various ministries and youth organizations, are also
       members of the Executive Board.
       
       In 2015, a law on the prevention and suppression of trafficking in human
       beings and smuggling has been passed, which provides penalties of up to 25
       years of imprisonment and fines, also for the helpers of smugglers and
       document counterfeiters. In the case of serious offenses where the death of
       migrants by smugglers was intentionally accepted, the death penalty can
       also be imposed.
       
       The NCHF agency is involved in places where many migrants live, among other
       things, with reconnaissance campaigns. It is gaining more and more
       information from the population and refugees themselves, and has been able
       to record some successes in the past few years. NCHF reported more than 200
       arrests in 2015, according to a report from the regional Sanah research
       institute based in Kenya. Ethiopian NCHF agents, in collaboration with
       Sudanese and Kenyan border authorities, had carried out cross-border
       investigations on smuggling networks that drag migrants to South Africa.
       
       The US State Department, however, noted in its 2015 report that although
       the investigations are increasing, corruption and complicity with the
       perpetrators impede the enforcement of the laws. According to the country
       profile of the Swiss NGO Global Detention Project, it is also worrying that
       little is known about the internment facilities and their conditions for
       the imprisoned migrants and refugees.
       
       12 Dec 2016
       
       ## AUTOREN
       
 (DIR) Simone Schlindwein
       
       ## TAGS
       
 (DIR) migControl
 (DIR) Jemen
       
       ## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA
       
 (DIR) Vor Jemens Küste: Schlepper stoßen Flüchtlinge ins Meer
       
       Mindestens 29 Menschen seien dabei ums Leben gekommen, meldet eine
       UN-Behörde. Sie nennt den Vorfall vor der jemenitischen Küste
       „schockierend“.