Although the law provides for freedom of internal movement, foreign
travel, emigration, and repatriation, the government restricted some of
these rights.
The government cooperated with the Office of the UN High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) and other humanitarian organizations in providing
protection and assistance to internally displaced persons (IDPs),
refugees, returning refugees, asylum seekers, stateless persons, and
other persons of concern. At times authorities or armed groups limited
the ability of humanitarian organizations to operate in areas of
insecurity, such as on the country’s borders.
In 2014 humanitarian organizations reported 32 incidents that impeded
humanitarian work in the first half of the year, compared with 36 such
incidents during the same period in 2013. The majority of these cases
were in the Somali Region. The incidents included hostility toward and
violence against humanitarian personnel, theft of assets, interference
with the implementation of humanitarian programs, and restrictions on
importation of personnel and goods into the country for humanitarian
work. The reports referred broadly to humanitarian work and were not
limited to activities focusing on IDPs or refugees.
Access to Nogob (formerly Fik) Zone in the Somali Region improved in
2014. Authorities permitted several government-led, multiagency missions
including UN and NGO representatives to visit the area. Access to other
parts of the Somali Region, particularly those bordering Somalia,
worsened due to security concerns stemming from reports of an increase
in al-Shabaab terrorists operating in these areas. In several cases NGOs
delayed travel to program sites and could not assess needs. Following
credible information about a possible terrorist threat against
international staff, UN agencies temporarily withdrew some of their
international staff from Dollo Ado in June but began to return them in
August. Attacks on vehicles carrying humanitarian personnel, assault on
humanitarian staff members, and harassment, including arbitrary
detention, reportedly continued.
In-country Movement: The government continued to relax but did
not completely remove restrictions on the movement of persons into and
within the Somali Region on grounds that the ONLF and al-Shabaab
terrorists from neighboring Somalia posed a security threat (see section
2.d., Internally Displaced Persons). Security concerns forced a
temporary halt of deliveries of food and medicine in the limited areas
affected by fighting. The government continued a policy that allowed
refugees to live outside a camp. According to the Administration for
Returnees and Refugee Affairs (ARRA), which managed the out-of-camp
program, as of August 2014 there were 2,993 individuals living outside
the camps (2,806 in Addis Ababa and surrounding areas and 187 from the
town of Shire) compared with 3,412 in 2012. Prior to this policy, the
government gave such permission primarily to attend higher-education
institutions, undergo medical treatment, or avoid security threats at
the camps.
Foreign Travel: A 2013 ban on unskilled workers travelling to
the Middle East for employment continued. The ban did not affect
citizens travelling for investment or other business reasons. The
government stated it issued the ban to prevent harassment, intimidation,
and trauma suffered by those working abroad, particularly in the Middle
East, as domestic employees.
In March 2014 National Intelligence and Security Service officials at
Bole International Airport in Addis Ababa prevented Yilkal Getnet,
chairman of the political opposition Semayawi Party, from departing the
country. On April 14, Yilkal was permitted to leave.
Exile: Several citizens sought political asylum in other countries or remained abroad in self-imposed exile.
Internally Displaced Persons
The quarterly Internal Displacement Monitoring Report, issued by the
International Organization for Migration (IOM), for July-September 2015
listed 505,104 IDPs, including protracted and new cases. This was an
increase from the previous quarter (April-June), when the total was
470,261 individuals. Of the total number of IDPs, 425,454 or 84 percent
were protracted cases and 79,650 or 16 percent were new cases. The
number was also more than the same quarter of previous years: 2014
(426,736), 2013 (416,315), and 2012 (291,104).
According to the IOM, more than 90 percent of all IDPs were
considered “protracted” IDPs, for whom durable solutions (return to home
areas, local integration, and resettlement in other parts of the
country) were not possible at the time. This was due to lack of
resolution of conflicts, lack of political decisions or resources to
support local integration, or undesirability of resettlement to other
areas of the country.
Categories and totals of IDPs experiencing protracted displacement
included victims of interclan and cross-border conflict (406,727) and
18,085 (natural disasters). The majority of IDPs resided in Somali
Region (326,421); followed by 84,550 in Oromia; 36,630 in Gambella;
12,765 in the SNNPR; 4,590 in Afar; 4,580 in Harar; and 750 in Amhara.
Of the 79,650 newly displaced during July-September, 21,930 were
displaced by conflict and 57,720 by natural disasters (16,776 due to
flooding, 40,644 due to drought, and 300 due to fire). Among the newly
displaced IDPs, 52 percent remained displaced, while the other 48
percent had returned home. Of the individuals that returned home, 64
percent had been displaced by natural disasters and 36 percent by
conflict. As in the past, this was due to violence resulting from ethnic
tensions, as well as intercommunal fighting between ethnic groups in
Gambella and the SNNPR and highlanders.
The government, through the Disaster Risk Management Food Security
Sector (DRMFSS), continued to play an active role in delivering
humanitarian assistance to IDPs. Federal and local DRMFSS officials
coordinated with the IOM and its partners in monitoring IDP populations.
In addition the Somali Regional State-level Disaster Prevention and
Preparedness Bureau, in coordination with the IOM and other
international actors, set up a Durable Solutions Working Group, which
drafted a strategy paper for the large caseload of protracted IDPs in
Somali Region. The Somali Regional Government was reviewing the strategy
paper as of October.
Protection of Refugees
Access to Asylum: The law provides for the granting of asylum
or refugee status, and the government has established a system for
providing protection to refugees.
According to UNHCR, as of July the country hosted 719,524 refugees.
The majority of refugees were from South Sudan (283,030) and Somalia
(248,213), with others coming from Eritrea (144,920), Sudan (37,101),
and other countries (6,260, of which 832 were registered Yemeni asylum
seekers).
UNHCR, ARRA, and humanitarian agencies continued to care for Sudanese
arrivals fleeing from conflict in Sudan’s Blue Nile State. The
government also extended support to South Sudanese asylum seekers from
South Sudan’s Jonglei and Upper Nile states. Persistent conflict and
food insecurity prompted the continued flow of South Sudanese refugees
into the country. During the year UNHCR and ARRA jointly developed
standard operating procedures to identify Ethiopian nationals attempting
to register as refugees.
Eritrean asylum seekers continued to arrive in the country. This
included a large number of unaccompanied minors. Many Eritreans who
arrived in the country regularly departed for secondary migration
through Egypt and Sudan to go to Israel, Europe, and other final
destinations.
Employment: The government did not grant refugees work permits.
Durable Solutions: The government granted refugee status to
asylum seekers from Eritrea, Somalia, South Sudan, and Sudan. The
government welcomed refugees to settle permanently in the country but
did not offer a path to citizenship or facilitate integration. The
government supported a policy allowing refugees to live outside camps
and engage in informal livelihoods. In addition, refugee students who
passed the required tests could attend university with fees paid by the
government and UNHCR. As of October 2014 a total of 3,895 refugees,
mostly Eritreans and Somalis, were resettled in other countries.