Respecting minority rights as a means of preventing or mitigating the impact of
humanitarian crises: Case of Anywa Community, Gambella Ethiopia
Ojot Ojulu
Mr. President, distinguished delegates, ladies & gentlemen,
It is an honour to address this Forum on Minority Issues and I would like to express my
gratitude to the SR for giving me this opportunity. My intervention will shed light on the
contribution of respect for minority rights to prevention and mitigation of humanitarian
crises instigated by violent conflicts. In my presentation, I will draw up on my personal
experience from the Gambella region of Ethiopia and I also bring some reflections from
my professional background as a former OHCHR’s Minority Fellow and currently as
Advocacy Officer for the Lutheran World Federation.
Mr President,
In most cases, minorities suffer from “hidden humanitarian crises”. My first interaction
with the UN human rights was 11 years ago when I came to voice the human rights
situation of the Anywa community to then ‘Working Group on Minorities’. Anywa is a
minority ethnic group located in the Gambella region of Ethiopia with some in the
Republic of South Sudan. Historically, this community, like any other lowland
communities, have been politically disenfranchised, economically marginalized and
socially discriminated against. Despite some notable progress being made after the
introduction of federalism in 1991, minority regions in general continue to lag behind in
terms of economic development and political inclusion. As a consequence, ethnic
tensions, conflicts and insecurity have been synonymous with the Gambella region.
However, on December 13, 2003, these long-simmering ethnic tensions erupted into a
massacre of the Anywa community in which according to Human rights watch, 424
Anywa civilians were massacred in Gambella town in single day, over 400 houses
belonging to them were burned to the ground and their entire neighbourhoods
ransacked and looted. Throughout 2004, as this violence turned into broad-based
military operation on the entire Anywa population, over 15,000 fled to South Sudan and
more than 50,000 became internally displaced. This is more than 60% of the entire
Anywa population. For them this was the biggest ‘humanitarian crisis’ ever in their
history as a community.
Regrettably, despite the magnitude of this crisis to this community, no one came to their
aid, except for few international organizations, because this was not recognized as a
humanitarian crisis. After all, it was affecting a tiny minority group in a remote region.