
“Over the past year, alarm has been mounting over the worsening crisis of kidnappings for ransom by armed groups in Ethiopia. Although these crimes are often attributed to non-state actors, reports have also implicated government forces in colluding with various armed groups and sharing in the profits. To make matters worse, a disturbing trend has emerged: state actors are now openly justifying kidnappings for ransom. Amid ongoing civil wars, the government is increasingly relying on forced conscription to fill its ranks. Initially, the primary targets were underprivileged youth, particularly day laborers working far from their home villages. However, the focus has recently shifted to youth from wealthier families. Reports indicate that local security officials are detaining young men as they return from school or social venues and forcibly transporting them to temporary detention facilities. While the captured youth await transportation to training camps, brokers approach their families, offering to secure the release of their sons in exchange for substantial payments. These ransoms range from 100,000 to 500,000 birr, depending on the family’s wealth. Officials and brokers can easily access family income data from banks and tax records, enabling them to assess the targets ability to pay and determine how much to demand. Those without cash on hand have been forced to borrow from friends or raise funds through their afosha (እድር). Scared of being the next victim, many young men have gone into hiding abandoning their studies and jobs. Perhaps driven by its financial incentives, this recent forced conscription is not limited to remote rural villages; families in major cities and towns have now become the primary targets. This is not merely based on reports from across the country—a family I personally know had to pay 300,000 birr to secure their son’s release just a few days ago. Such extortion, at a time when the cost of living has become unbearable, is cruel” (Jawar Mohammed, 12.11.2024).
This here should shake the system. It just shows what is wrong with the political landscape and how the conflicts are enforced. The Prosperity Party and the Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed Ali have failed the youth and the future generations.
The current leadership haven’t secured the people or ensuring safety. That’s why militias and government forces can extort and get bribe out the ransom after they kidnap people. This is insecurity and misuse of power. They are doing it because the state allows it and see it as a profitable business. It is a sort of mafia-state and using the monopoly of violence to enforce bribes and extortion. The victims are unlucky targets and people who was to close to the sun.
The story and tale that the Mohammed Jawar is addressing shows the sinister part of the current regime. When this can be so systematic and planned efforts. This is a business and they are securing their “ends” by doing this. That’s what is happening here…
It has to be amplified and told, again and again. The state shouldn’t do this and government forces are behind it. Not only insurgent or rebels. No, this is state actors and people with connection with the state who is behind it. They are all part of the problem and the citizens are in danger as a cause of it. That’s why people are going into hiding and seeking shelter elsewhere.
This is a warning and it shows how the Medemer Terror continues to haunt the population. Peace.














