Abstract:
Individuals are displaced all around the world because of several factors. Internal displacement
is a phenomenon in which individuals are forced to leave their homes but remain within the
borders of their own country. The main objective of this paper is to explore the normative and
institutional frameworks devised to protect IDPs in Ethiopia and examine how the federal and
regional governments respond to the humanitarian needs of IDPs- in Melo Koza Woreda. This
study is a qualitative descriptive in its purpose and case study in its methodology. Both primary
and secondary sources were employed using the semi- structured interview to collect data from
IDPs, officials from the woreda, zonal, regional and federal levels. The study found out that, the
phenomenon of IDPs in Ethiopia is increasing from time to time primarily due to conflicts. In
contrast, the main issue of protection remains still untouched. Ethiopia lacks a specific
normative and institutional framework for the protection of IDPs. IDPs are protected
insufficiently by the existing legal frameworks of the nation, i.e. the FDRE Constitution and The
FDRE National Policy and Strategy on Disaster Risk Management. Institutionally, the Ministry
of Peace, the National Disaster Risk Management Commission (NDRMC), and the Ethiopian
Human Rights Institutions (the Institution of the Ombudsman and the Ethiopian Human Rights
Commission) play a key role in undertaking the issues of IDPs. With regard to the governance of
humanitarian assistance to IDPs, currently, the Ethiopian legislation does not establish a
separate authorized body with a specific mandate of providing humanitarian assistance only for
IDPs. In turn, the NDRMC within the newly established Ministry of Peace is found to be a
central executive body with the mandate of making appropriate preparation for natural and
manmade disasters that include IDPs. The study also pointed out that the search for durable
solutions of IDPs in Melo Koza is not in consistent with the UN Guiding Principles and without
the active participation and voluntary interest of the IDPs. Hence, the study recommends the
adoption of new law specifically regulating internal displacement, develop a national policy,
strategy, and action plan particularly on IDPs that accommodate durable solutions, increase
internal capacity for responding humanitarian assistance to IDPs possibly through increasing
the capacity of NDRMC.