|
Amnesty International USA Press
Release
Contact: Suzanne Trimel, 212-633-4150
For Immediate Release:
Wednesday, April 23, 2008
Amnesty International Demands Release of 41 Children
Held by Ethiopian Military After Mosque Raid in Somalia
(New York) --
Amnesty International today called on the Ethiopian
military to release some 41 children held after a raid
on Mogadishu's Al Hidya mosque last Saturday, which left
21 people dead.
"The safety and welfare of the
children, some as young as nine years old, must be
paramount for all parties,"said Amnesty International.
Witnesses have told Amnesty International that Ethiopian
forces would only release the children from their
military base in north Mogadishu "once they had been
investigated" and "if they were not terrorists."
While Amnesty
International has received reports that a small number
of children were released on Tuesday, the majority are
still being held by Ethiopian forces.
Amnesty
International strongly condemns the targeted killing of
civilians in the raid. Eleven of the 21 dead were killed
inside the mosque, including the Iman Sheik Saiid Yahya,
Sheik Abdullah Mohamud and several Tabliq Islamic
scholars. Eyewitnesses report that those killed inside
the mosque were unarmed civilians taking no active part
in hostilities. Seven of the 21 were reported to have
died after their throats were cut – a form of
extra-judicial execution practiced by Ethiopian forces
in Somalia. A spokesman for the Ethiopian government has
denied the involvement of Ethiopian troops in these
killings.
The U.N. Security Council must
take steps to end impunity across Somalia by launching
an International Commission of Inquiry, or similar
mechanism, to investigate human rights violations
committed during the armed conflict, said Amnesty
International.
"The
Ethiopian government and the Transitional Federal
Government must allow an independent investigation into
these killings, and those found responsible must be
prosecuted according to international standards of
justice," said Lynn Fredriksson, advocacy director for
Africa for Amnesty International USA. "The U.S.
government must use its significant influence to call on
the government of Ethiopia to ensure accountability for
this disturbing incident of egregious human rights
violations committed by its armed forces."
Background
The attack on the Al Hidya mosque
occurred during two days of fighting between the
Ethiopian military and TFG against armed groups opposed
to them, in which the Elman Human Rights Organisation
documented 81 deaths and more than one hundred injured.
It is not known how many of these were civilians. The
attack also followed increasing attacks by armed groups
opposed to the TFG on towns in southern and central
Somalia, including an attack on Beledweyne by Al-Shabab
militia on April 13, where local residents reported that
militia members killed four teachers. An Al-Shabab
leader has claimed the teachers were shot in crossfire. |