key issue #3: why do ethnicities clash? ethnic competition to dominate nationality – big problem...

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Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? • Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa) • Ethnic Competition in the Horn of Africa – Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, & Somalia (and neighboring Sudan & South Sudan) – Ethiopia & Eritrea • Eritrea – Italian colony 1890-1945 (along Red Sea) • Ethiopia – independent until captured by Italy in 1930s (ruled until 1945) • Eritrea was given to Ethiopia by UN after WWII – expected to give some autonomy but Ethiopia dissolved legislature & banned language • 1961-1991 – civil war, many fled to Sudan, emperor Haile Selassie • 1993 – Eritrea became a new country; 1998 – fight over location of border • Eritrea – 5 million; ½ Christian, ½ Muslim (9 major ethnic groups); sense of national loyalty & fight against Ethiopia are sources of unity • Ethiopia – still multi-ethnic; Amharans (Christians) in power until 1990s and in the center; Oromo (Muslim fundamentalists) are largest (40%) group and found in south; Tigres (Christians) in north

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Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition in the Horn of Africa – Somalia Mostly Sunni and speak Somali 9 million people in 6 clans (as well as sub-clans) In north – Isaak (took control of north in 1991), Darod (ruled until 1991), Dir In south – Digil, Hawiye (took control of south in 1991), Rahanwayn Somalia (Italian southern colony) & Somaliland (British northern colony) combined in 1960 as independent country Isaaks declared independent state of Somaliland – not recognized; have 20% of land and 40% of people U.S. sent supplies and troops in 1992 after 300,000 died from famine & civil war – withdrew in 1994 as peace talks fell apart (Black Hawk Down) Islamic militias took control in 2006 – more order than warring clans, but more supportive of terrorists Somali pirates in Gulf of Aden and Red Sea and Indian Ocean

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Page 1: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality

– Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)• Ethnic Competition in the Horn of Africa

– Djibouti, Ethiopia, Eritrea, & Somalia (and neighboring Sudan & South Sudan)

– Ethiopia & Eritrea• Eritrea – Italian colony 1890-1945 (along Red Sea)• Ethiopia – independent until captured by Italy in 1930s (ruled until 1945)• Eritrea was given to Ethiopia by UN after WWII – expected to give some

autonomy but Ethiopia dissolved legislature & banned language• 1961-1991 – civil war, many fled to Sudan, emperor Haile Selassie• 1993 – Eritrea became a new country; 1998 – fight over location of border• Eritrea – 5 million; ½ Christian, ½ Muslim (9 major ethnic groups); sense of

national loyalty & fight against Ethiopia are sources of unity• Ethiopia – still multi-ethnic; Amharans (Christians) in power until 1990s and in

the center; Oromo (Muslim fundamentalists) are largest (40%) group and found in south; Tigres (Christians) in north

Page 2: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Ethnic Competition in the Horn of Africa– Sudan

• 40 million people – civil war since 1980s– Black Christians & animists in South– Arab Muslims in north – attempted to dominate the country

• Segregation by gender, no perfume/jewelry, women fully covered, must be with a male relative, streetlights to avoid “sneaking around”

• 2 million (5%) died in civil war, many migrated to south or north or to Ethiopia

• 2005 agreement for autonomy in south (South Sudan became a country in July 2011)

• Ethnic war in Darfur began as civil war died down (western Sudan)– Black Africans (farmers) rebelled– Muslim nomads (jangaweed) & Sudanese military crushed rebellion; 450,000

killed; 2.5 million in refugee camps in Sudan or surrounding countries such as Chad

Page 3: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Ethnic Competition in the Horn of Africa– Somalia

• Mostly Sunni and speak Somali• 9 million people in 6 clans (as well as sub-clans)• In north – Isaak (took control of north in 1991), Darod (ruled until

1991), Dir• In south – Digil, Hawiye (took control of south in 1991), Rahanwayn• Somalia (Italian southern colony) & Somaliland (British northern colony)

combined in 1960 as independent country• Isaaks declared independent state of Somaliland – not recognized; have

20% of land and 40% of people• U.S. sent supplies and troops in 1992 after 300,000 died from famine &

civil war – withdrew in 1994 as peace talks fell apart (Black Hawk Down)• Islamic militias took control in 2006 – more order than warring clans,

but more supportive of terrorists• Somali pirates in Gulf of Aden and Red Sea and Indian Ocean

Page 4: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Ethnic Competition in Lebanon

– 4 million in 10,000 sq. km (4,000 sq. miles)– Once recreational & financial center of Middle East (capital of Beirut

once called “Paris of the Middle East”)– 60% Muslim (1/2 Shia, 1/2 Sunni); 30% Christian (2/3 Maronite, 1/6

Greek Orthodox); 7% Druze (combine Islam & Christianity); 3% other– 1943 – independence; each religion was supposed to be represented

in government (was a Christian majority, now a Muslim majority); Beirut divided in eastern (Christian) & western (Muslim) zones

– 1975 civil war among religious groups; officially ended in 1990-91; conflict still persists though

– U.S. & Israeli intervention failed in 1983– Syria tried to control until 2005 when they were forced out; Israel

intervened in 2006– Hezbollah – terrorist group with ties to Shias; backed by Iran

Page 5: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Dividing Ethnicities Among More Than One State– Hard to completely segregate ethnicities when creating new

countries– Dividing South Asia

• British colony from 1800s until 1947• Divided into:

– India (part of India nearly cut off by Bangladesh) - Hindu– West Pakistan (now Pakistan) – Muslim– East Pakistan (became independent Bangladesh in 1971) – Muslim

• East & West Pakistan were one country but separated by India• Fighting between groups over South Asia for over 1000 years• Assassination of Gandhi in 1948 – Hindu who believed in

nonviolence and reconciliation with Muslims• Forward capital – Pakistan moved its capital city to Islamabad to

be have greater control near the conflict region of Kashmir

Page 6: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Dividing Ethnicities Among More Than One State– Forced Migration in South Asia

• Boundaries between religions are not exact• About 17 million on wrong side in 1947

– 6 million Muslims from India to West Pakistan– 1 million Muslims from India to East Pakistan– 6 million Hindus from West Pakistan to India– 3.5 million Hindus from East Pakistan to India– Violence as extremists from both sides attacked refugees– Sikhs migrated from West Pakistan to India (division of Punjab)

– Ethnic Disputes• Boundary dispute in Kashmir (mountainous northern region) between

India & Pakistan– “Line of Control” for Kashmir established in 1972– Muslim majority on both sides – use guerilla warfare to unite with Pakistan or

create own country of Kashmir– 25 million Sikhs not given own country – preferred India to Pakistan; extremists

have fought for independence in Punjab

Page 7: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Dividing Sri Lanka Among Ethnicities

– Once the British colony of Ceylon until 1948– Island off SE coast of India– 20 million people – Sinhalese vs. Tamils– Sinhalese – 74%, southern Sri Lanka, Buddhist, speak language in Indo-

Iranian branch of Indo-European, migrated from India in 5th century BC– Tamils – 18%, northern Sri Lanka, Hindu, speak a Dravidian language,

migrated from India in 3rd century BC– Fought for over 2,000 years but not during British rule– Civil war began in 1983 – 60,000 or more have died– Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam – rebel Tamil group; responsible for

assassinating president of Sri Lanka in 1993; defeated in 2009– Sinhalese dominate country; Tamils feel discriminated against– Cease-fire since 2002 but violence still common– Exporter of tea, coffee, cinnamon, and coconuts

Page 8: Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash? Ethnic Competition to Dominate Nationality – Big problem in Sub-Saharan Africa (Horn of Africa & Central Africa)

Key Issue #3: Why Do Ethnicities Clash?• Kurds – a stateless nation (an ethnic group without a self-governing country of its

own but has desire for self rule)– Sunni Muslim, Indo-Iranian language – Former country of Kurdistan taken by Turkey– 30 million Kurds– 14 mil in Turkey, 6 mil in Iran, 5 mil in Iraq, & 2 mil in Syria– Have tried to rebel in Turkey, Iran, & Iraq unsuccessfully– Saddam Hussein tested chemical weapons against Kurdish rebels– Kurds persecuted by ISIS/ISIL (Islamic State of Iraq & Greater Syria) – refugees trying to flee

to Turkey• Other examples of stateless nations:

– Sindhis, Sikhs, Kashmiri in Pakistan/India– Tamils in Sri Lanka– Chechens, Circassians, Tatars in Russia– Uyghurs, Tibetans in China– Quebecois in Canada– Acehnese in Indonesia– Shan, Hmong, and Rohingya in SE Asia– Assyrians in Turkey/Iran/Iraq/Syria– Occitans, Basques in France/Spain