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Le Monde
Le Monde
22 Aug 2023


Mustafa Sofian, 22, an Ethiopian migrant who said he lost his left leg after the Saudi border guards fired at him, is helped up a hill by his father Sofian Mohamed, 48, after being repatriated by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) in Harar, Ethiopia, August 20, 2023.

Ethiopia will launch a joint investigation with Riyadh into a Human Rights Watch report that accused Saudi border guards of killing hundreds of Ethiopian migrants trying to enter the Gulf kingdom, the foreign ministry said Tuesday. "The Government of Ethiopia will promptly investigate the incident in tandem with the Saudi Authorities," the ministry said on X (formerly Twitter), a day after the publication of the HRW report sparked global outrage.

The allegations, described as "unfounded" by a Saudi government source, point to surge in abuses along the perilous route from the Horn of Africa to Saudi Arabia, where hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians live and work. One 20-year-old woman from Ethiopia's Oromia region, interviewed by HRW, said Saudi border guards opened fire on a group of migrants they had just released from custody. "They fired on us like rain. When I remember, I cry," she said.

Washington, a longtime ally of Riyadh, urged "a thorough and transparent investigation" into the allegations. United Nations spokesman Stéphane Dujarric called the report "very concerning" but noted the "serious" allegations were difficult to verify.

The European Union noted with "concern" the HRW allegations and plans to raise them with Saudi Arabia and with the Huthi rebels who control strategic parts of Yemen, a spokesman, Peter Stano, said Tuesday. "We welcome the announcement by the government of Ethiopia, specifically, to investigate the whole issue together with the authorities in Saudi Arabia," he said.

The New York-based rights group has documented abuses against Ethiopian migrants in Saudi Arabia and Yemen for nearly a decade. But, it said, the latest killings appear to be "widespread and systematic" and may amount to crimes against humanity.

Last year, UN experts reported "concerning allegations" that "cross-border artillery shelling and small-arms fire by Saudi Arabia security forces killed approximately 430 migrants" in southern Saudi Arabia and northern Yemen during the first four months of 2022.

In March that year, repatriation of Ethiopians from Saudi Arabia began under an agreement between the two countries. Ethiopia's foreign ministry said about 100,000 of its citizens were expected to be sent home over several months.

Le Monde