Eleven killed in razing
of two Ethiopian villages
November 25, 2008 (ADDIS ABABA)
– Special police forces surprised two villages in southwestern Ethiopia on
Friday as the inhabitants slept, launching an attack that burned all the houses,
killed nine civilians and wounded 23 others, said an official in Gambella region
who requested not to be identified by name. Two attackers were also slain during
the events.
A federal official in Addis
Ababa, originally from the Gambella region, confirmed reports of the
attacks.
The regional government was
apparently trying to force the villagers of Laare and Puldeng into a new area,
but they refused to move out until the dry season, by the end of January or
February.
A mixed force of Anyua, Nuer and
highlander police attacked the villagers, many of whom were Sudanese Nuer who
had joined Jikany kin in the area.
The Gambella official estimated
that some 600 cattle were stolen and more than 200 cattle and 1000 goats and
sheep were killed—many of them burned in the houses where they were kept. Thirty
men, women and children are still missing, and the villagers fled to the
bush.
The official accused of ordering
the attack, regional council member Goaner Yer, has now ordered some police
forces to protect his faction from retaliation by mobilizing around the Ciechany
section in Lol-gungjang.
Two attackers were killed: Bol
Malual, a Gajiok/Ciequick (Nuer) and James Omot, an Anyua. At least six other
attackers were wounded.
Thohl Muon Reath of the Cienuol
sub-clan, aged approximately 67 years, was killed in the attack. Two children,
Duoth Gal Chan and Nyedak Machduel Put, aged eight and thirteen, respectively,
were killed, and a four-year-old child from the Ciedup sub-clan was wounded in
the attack.
The deceased also include Deng
Gatluak Zuor, Kech Chuol Diew, Duit Bol Biliew, Wiyual Chol Wuol, Biel Gach
Tuach and Reath Dak Thoan.