Kidnappings surge as guerrilla insurgency advances
The Guardian Weekly|February 02, 2024
The gunmen came for Alemetu when she was sleeping. They marched her out of her home in Ethiopia's Oromia region and took her to a disused school in the countryside, where she was held hostage for four weeks.
Fred Harter
Kidnappings surge as guerrilla insurgency advances

About 40 fighters were living at the school, although hundreds of men passed through. Alemetu, who was pregnant when she was taken, said her captors beat her with a horsewhip. On one occasion, she was tied up and suspended upside down from a tree for several hours.

She was released only after her family paid a ransom of 110,000 birr ($1,950), a huge sum in rural Ethiopia, which they raised by selling livestock and borrowing from friends. When Alemetu was kidnapped, the family was already struggling to pay a 90,000 birr ransom for her uncle, a farmer, who was held for 15 days in a separate abduction. The family is now destitute.

"It is very rare to find a family in our area who has not been affected by kidnapping," said Alemetu. "The government has no control."

Alemetu identified her kidnappers as insurgents from the Oromo Liberation Army, a rebel group that has been fighting Ethiopia's government since 2018. The OLA styles itself as the champion of the Oromo, Ethiopia's largest ethnic group, who claim a long history of marginalisation, but it has been accused of massacres and other abuses.

Ethiopia's federal parliament classifies the OLA as a terrorist organisation.

この記事は The Guardian Weekly の February 02, 2024 版に掲載されています。

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この記事は The Guardian Weekly の February 02, 2024 版に掲載されています。

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