Dangote Cement Factory in Ethiopia Razed by protesters
Ethiopia has accused
elements in Eritrea and other countries of fanning the crisis in the
country that culminated in the burning of factories owned by Nigeria’s
Aliko Dangote and other foreign investors.
In
a statement on Monday, Ethiopia accused elements in Eritrea, Egypt and
other states of arming, training and funding groups that it blames for a
wave of protests and violence in regions around its capital Addis
Ababa.
The protesters attacked Dangote Cement factory, with vehicles and machinery at the firm’s plant in Oromiya vandalised.
Other firms attacked are:
* FV SeleQt BV – the Dutch firm’s 300-hectare vegetable farm and warehouse in Oromiya were plundered.
* AfricaJUICE BV – the Dutch firm’s factory in Oromiya was partially destroyed.
* Saygin Dima Textile – a third of the Turkish firm’s factory in Oromiya was burned down and three vehicles destroyed.
* BMET Energy Telecom Industry and Trade LLC – the Turkish cable firm’s factory was damaged in Oromiya.
*
Esmeralda Farms BV of the Netherlands, Italian owned-Alfano Fiori,
Indian firm Fontana Flowers PLC, and others operated and owned by
investors from Israel, Belgium and the Middle East were destroyed or
partially damaged in the Amhara region.
The
government declared a state of emergency on Sunday after more than a
year of unrest in Oromiya and Amhara regions, where protesters say the
government has trampled on their rights in pursuit of industrial
development. The protesters accused government of grabbing their land.
Rights
groups say more than 500 people have died in clashes with police and
other confrontations. The violence has damaged around a dozen factories
and equipment mostly belonging to foreign firms, accused by protesters
of purchasing leases for seized land.
“There
are countries which are directly involved in arming, financing and
training these elements,” government spokesman Getachew Reda told a news
conference.
He
named Eritrea, which has a long-running border dispute with Ethiopia,
and Egypt, embroiled in a row with Addis Ababa over sharing Nile waters,
as sources of backing for “armed gangs”, although he said it might not
come from “state actors”.
“We
have to be very careful not to necessarily blame one government or
another. There are all kinds of elements in the Egyptian political
establishment which may or may not necessarily be directly linked with
the Egyptian government,” Getachew said.
Egypt
has dismissed previous accusations that it was meddling in Ethiopian
affairs. “Egypt firmly respects the principle of non-interference in the
internal affairs of other countries,” a Foreign Ministry statement said
last week.
Eritrea
routinely dismisses charges that it wants to destabilise its neighbour,
and instead accuses Addis Ababa of stoking unrest on its own soil.
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