Amnesty urges halt to Ethiopia evictions for urban development

BSS
Published On: 14 Apr 2025, 08:48

ADDIS ABABA, April 14, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Ethiopia is conducting forced evictions on an "unprecedented" scale, Amnesty International said on Monday, urging authorities to "immediately pause" urban renewal projects.

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, in power since 2018, is spearheading a "corridor project" in which streets in the capital and in cities across the country have been renovated and widened.

Launched in December 2022, the project has seen homes, shops, and offices razed in Addis Ababa and at least 58 other cities, leaving parts of the capital resembling a giant building site.

Ethiopian authorities have "failed to adequately consult with affected communities, provided insufficient notice, and none of the people reported receiving compensation," Amnesty said in their report.

The international NGO urged a pause in evictions and suspension of the project "until a human rights impact assessment is conducted".

Authorities did not respond to AFP's requests for comment.

The scale of the evictions is "unprecedented in Ethiopia," the report said, describing a climate of fear among residents, who are "uncertain if they will be the next to be displaced".

The NGO interviewed 47 families who were evicted in Addis Ababa between January and February of this year. All requested anonymity, citing security reasons.

Family members told Amnesty that only a week after a public meeting, local officials came to their doors, "asking them to leave their homes within three days and warning them that their homes would be demolished".

"The 47 respondents stated that their homes were demolished within 24 to 72 hours after officials delivered the door-to-door notice," Amnesty said, with families forced into rental properties on the city's outskirts.

"My child is suffering because his school is now too far," said one parent, saying they were grappling with mental health issues as their social lives had been "ruined".

"Life has also gotten expensive due to additional transport and house rent costs," another said.

Two journalists contacted by Amnesty also said they were "victims of harassment" when they attempted to report on the corridor work. They did not provide further details.

International partners "should engage Ethiopian authorities to end forced eviction with no further delay," Amnesty researcher Haimanot Ashenafi told AFP.

Authorities in Ethiopia, home to some 130 million people, are regularly criticised by global organisations and NGOs for human rights abuses and the repression of dissenting voices.

 

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