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Ethiopia security detain communication and PR head of Oromia justice bureau, move signals growing crackdown against the region

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addisstandard 2018-03-15
Etenesh Abera

Addis Abeba March 15/2018 – It has been confirmed that members of the command post overseeing the current state of emergency have this morning detained Taye Dendea, an outspoken senior member of the Oromia regional state’s justice bureau. Taye is the head of the bureau’s communication and PR department.

Taye Dendea is one of the growing numbers of officials from within the OPDO, the largest of the four parties that make up the ruling EPRDF, who took a public stance in criticizing the army’s killing of innocent civilians in Moyale town last Saturday. At least nine civilians were killed and 11 others were wounded in what many of the residents of the town said was an unprovoked attack by the army. The secretariat of the command post said the killing happened due to an intelligence report error.

#Ethiopia– Taye Dendea, head of PR & communication at the #Oromia regional state justice bureau, has been detained by “members of the command post” this morning. In a recent interview, Taye said that the military’s killing of civilians in #Moyale on Sat. was ‘not a mistake’. pic.twitter.com/YT4ZrbSWHy

— Addis Standard (@addisstandard) March 15, 2018

“They have arrested Taye this morning,” confirmed Taye’s colleague.

In an interview he gave to the VOA Amharic on Tuesday, Taye said he did not believe the killings were committed by intelligence report mistake, instead all indication show it was a deliberate act, he said. He also called on the federal government to investigate and bring to justice the entire chain of command that is responsible for the killings and not just five army members who were responsible for firing at the civilians. The violence has displaced close to 39,000 civilians, according to the national broadcaster EBC. Of these, more than 8000 are currently being taken care by the Kenya’s Red Cross Society across the border inside Kenya.

Since the first announcement by council of ministers on February 16 and the subsequent legislation by members of parliament on March 03 of the current controversial state of emergency, members of the command have detained several government employees from the Oromia regional state including the chief administrator of the east Hararghe zone, the deputy police commissioner of the Oromia regional state, the deputy administrator of the east Wellega zone, the Mayor of Nekemt city and the head of the justice bureau of Kelem Wellega Woreda.

The move to arrest Taye therefore lays bare the growing crackdown against individuals and institutions within the Oromia regional state, a region whose members of parliament have led a fierce opposition against the emergency rule. “Time will tell if arresting Taye could bring peace to Ethiopia,” wrote Dereje Gerefa Tulllu, who is known for his enthusiastic advocacy of reform from within the OPDO. “Taye has been previously detained twice; for three years and seven years; but his detention didn’t bring peace to the country. It will not bring peace this time too; in fact it will make things worse,”Dereje wrote on his Faceboook.

This is the third time for Taye to be detained. He has already served two jail terms of three years and seven years each after having been accused of being a member of the banned Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) while he was a university student between 2003 and 2016. It took Taye a total of 16 years to graduate with his first degree in Law before he joined the Oromia justice bureau in 2017.

While he was at law school at the Addis Ababa University, Taye Dendea had been arrested twice, first for three years and then for seven years as suspected Oromo liberation Front supporter, taking him 16 years to graduate from the University.

— Arefaynie Fantahun@ (@AddisJournal) March 15, 2018

In addition to these officials from the Oromia regional state, however, the crackdown by the command post also saw prominent blogger and university lecturer Seyoum Teshome detained. Seyoum is currently held at the infamous Ma’ekelawi prison in the capital Addis Abeba.

I visited #SeyoumTeshome today in #Maekelawi. He is held in Tawla bet, relatively convenient place. No interrogation he has passed through afrer the first day he was detained. He is considering the place like a human zoo, where lion like people are kept.

— BefeQadu Z. Hailu (@befeqe) March 14, 2018

The police have already brought Seyoum to a court and have been granted 14 days to investigate and establish a case against him. Seyoum has already been arrested during the first state of emergency in 2016-1017 for nine months.

So far, the names of those detained has not been released to the public and the a parliamentary inquiry board established to look into the conducts of the command post said today that it will make the names public by the end of this month in Ethiopian calendar or first week of April.

AS

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Ethiopia’s Sugar Saga: How Millionaires are made and Violence Exacerbated,

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by Asefa Belachew*

Introduction and Background

Ethiopia’s sugar shortage has become very pronounced in recent months. Since October/November 2017, it has become common to see long lines of people particularly women and children, but also a few men, waiting patiently in line for their sugar ration. In Addis, observers have noted such sites in Gulele, Cherkos and Yeka. During the same time, sugar had become a flash point (the trigger issue) for the violence in many towns in Oromia Region1.

Ethiopia depended on imported sugar for many years as the domestic production did not meet the increasing level of consumption. Traditionally, the sugar mills used to be closed between mid- June and mid-September for repairs and maintenance. During those months, attention was focused on the plantation of the sugar cane for the next harvest. Almost all the workers in the farms and crushing operations went on compulsory annual leave. Imports bridged the shortages during those lean months. From the time that imports became important (since the early 1990s), the Ethiopian Sugar Corporation imported sugar and distributed it through established channels. If the Corporation had such a long experience in managing the seasonal flows since the early 1990s, why did it fail this time? What are the underlying factors that exacerbate the need for imports and boost aggregate supply? Why did Ethiopia fail this time despite the promises of GTP1 and GTPII, the first of which has already concluded and the latter is in its mid-term of implementation? In responding to these and similar questions, this essay takes a broader and longer perspective.

.…Read more…………

 

Download (PDF, 642KB)

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Amara Democratic Movement Force: Tazebew Assefa

Ethiopian immigration on hold after Israeli budget passes

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Ethiopian Israeli woman holds up pictures of relatives in Ethiopia during a demonstration in front of the Knesset, Israel’s parliament, in Jerusalem, Monday, March 12, 2018. Hundreds of Ethiopian immigrants are protesting outside Israel’s parliament, demanding the government fulfill a pledge to bring some 8,000 of their countrymen remaining in Ethiopia to Israel. (AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner)

JERUSALEM (AP) — The reunification of hundreds of families split between Israel and Ethiopia is on hold after Israel failed to set aside funding for the Ethiopians’ immigration in next year’s budget, an activist group said Thursday.

Nearly 8,000 Ethiopians are hoping for Israel to approve their immigration, allowing them to join their families in Israel. Although many are practicing Jews, Israel doesn’t consider them Jewish, meaning their immigration requires special approval.

Alisa Bodner, a spokeswoman for the Struggle for Ethiopian Aliyah, called on Israel to resolve their plight without further delay.

The families see the issue as part of an inconsistent and discriminatory immigration policy.

Parliament approved a 2019 budget early Thursday with no allocation for the Ethiopians’ immigration. Bodner said the issue is expected to come up in a government committee at an unknown date.

An official from the prime minister’s office said the issue was set to be raised at the next meeting of a ministerial committee dealing with the integration of Ethiopian-Israelis, without elaborating on why the funding wasn’t allocated. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn’t authorized to discuss the issue with the media.

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Who will be Ethiopia’s next prime minister?

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BBC News

Ethiopia’s ruling coalition is due to meet soon to choose its next leader. That person will automatically become the prime minister. They will be taking on the role at a time of bitter internal wrangles and violent protests.

Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn announced on 15 February that he would resign as both the chairperson of Ethiopia’s ruling coalition EPRDF and as prime minister – a position he had held since 2012.

So that leaves the 180-strong EPRDF council to choose the next prime minister.

The coalition is complex.

EPRDF is made up of four ethnically based political parties: the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM); the Oromo People’s Democratic Organisation (OPDO); the Southern Ethiopian People’s Democratic Movement (SEPDM) and the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF).

While the ANDM and OPDO have roots in Oromia and Amhara regions, which together account for more than half of Ethiopia’s population, it is the minority TPLF from Tigray region that controls the military and security apparatus and is seen as the dominant party in the coalition.

Bitter internal wrangles within the ruling coalition have however made it difficult to predict just who will become the next prime minister.

To make matters worse, the government failed to quell anger when it declared a state of emergency. Demonstrators in the west defied a ban on protests and marches became violent.

The coalition, which has been in power since 1991 after toppling the communist regime, is at a crossroads.

The bitter infighting is between reformists who feel the country is headed the wrong way and conservatives keen on maintaining the status quo and the grip on power.

Here’s a run down of the top seven contenders for prime minister.

From left to right: Abiy Ahmed, Debretsion Gebremichael, Lema Mergessa, Workneh Gebeyehu, Demeke Mekonnen
Image captionFrom left to right: Abiy Ahmed, Debretsion Gebremichael, Lema Mergessa, Workneh Gebeyehu, Demeke Mekonnen
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1. Lemma Magersa

He is the current President of the Oromia Regional State and deputy leader of the OPDO.

The charismatic Mr Lemma is seen as a fearless and eloquent reformer. He was once quoted as saying he was ready to go out and join demonstrators if the government did not heed the demands of protesters especially from his region.

The 47-year-old was born and raised in East Welega, Oromia.

Last December he condemned the killings of protesters and the federal security forces’ intervention in the Oromia region without his region’s consent. He has also offered to hold dialogue with opposition groups.

He is deemed as an acceptable candidate who can unify the country but his path to the top seat is complicated. He’s not a member of the federal parliament, the House of People’s Representatives, a requirement to become prime minister.

Last December, a cartoon depicting Mr Lemma as the biblical Moses parting the Red Sea was widely shared on social media, showing just how his popularity “as a man with answers to the country’s problems” had soared.

Despite his meteoric rise within the ruling party and Ethiopia’s complex politics, his critics believe he is too inexperienced to take on the intricacies of the EPRDF.

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2. Abiy Ahmed

The current leader of the OPDO, Mr Abiy, is seen as the front-runner in the race to succeed the outgoing prime minister having just been elected to head the party.

He is an astute politician with impressive academic and military credentials.

He was born in the city of Agaro in Oromia and comes from a mixed Christian-Muslim family. The 42-year-old joined the OPDO in the late 1980s.

He has served in the military and rose to the rank of Lieutenant Colonel. He also took part in the UN peacekeeping mission to Rwanda.

He was the founder and director of the country’s Internet Security Agency between 2009 and 2012 after which he became the minister for science and technology.

He is seen by many as outspoken and competent and a person who leans to a participatory leadership style.

Mr Abiy is younger than the other potential leaders and is believed to have huge support among the Oromo youth as well as other ethnic groups.

His critics however say that as an EPRDF insider, he won’t offer much of the change demanded by protesters.

MAP

3. Debretsion G Michael

Mr Debretsion was born in Shire, located in the northern Tigray region. He dropped out of his studies at the University of Addis Ababa to join the armed struggle.

During this time he travelled to Italy where he completed training in communications technology. After which he established the regional TPLF radio station known as “Dimtsi Weyane”.

Soon after the EPRDF came into power in 1991, Mr Debretsion served as the deputy to the head of the intelligence bureau.

He has been serving as the Director of the Information and Communication Development Agency since 2006 but also served as a deputy prime minister.

He is the chairperson of the TPLF party and the deputy head of state for the Tigray region as well as the minister for information and communications.

Activists and opposition political parties argue that the TPLF dominates the political power in the coalition, so his election as prime minster would be a controversial move that would be likely to deepen divisions within the coalition and further inflame feelings of exclusion among the Oromo and Amhara communities.

Mr Debretsion is a member of the House of People’s Representatives.

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4. Demeke Mekonen

He is the current deputy prime minister.

He joined the EPRDF after university and a few years later became a member of the Amhara region council.

During the mid-2000s he became the deputy chief of the Amhara regional state and a year later became a member of the ANDM executive committee.

While on duty as chair of the ANDM, in 2013, he was appointed the deputy chair of the EPRDF.

Prior to coming to power, Mr Demeke was a teacher and served as the education minister.

Mr Demeke, who is a member of the House of People’s Representatives, is known to be a low-key player in the federal government.

It is unlikely the ANDM will take the prime minister’s position as the party has held the deputy prime minister position for so long.

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Ethiopia’s ethnic make-up:

  • Oromo – 34.4%
  • Amhara – 27%
  • Somali – 6.2%
  • Tigray – 6.1%
  • Others – 26.3%

SourceCIA World Factbook estimates from 2007

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5. Workneh Gebeyehu

He is a member of OPDO and is the current foreign affairs minister.

Born in the late 1960s, Mr Workneh has served for many years as the commissioner for the federal police commission.

In the late 2000s he was appointed as transport minister, a position he held for four years.

A member of the OPDO since the late 1980s, Mr Workneh has since the late 2000s served as a member of the executive committee for both the OPDO and EPRDF.

He is a member of the Addis Ababa city administration council but not a member of the House of People’s Representatives.

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6. Siraj Fegessa

Ethiopia’s current defence minister has been the face of the state of emergencies announced in October 2016 and again in February 2018.

He has constantly appeared on state media articulating the conditions imposed by the state of emergency.

Supporters of Bekele Gerba, secretary general of the Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC), chant slogans to celebrate his release from prison, in Adama, Oromia Region, Ethiopia, 14 February 2018Image copyrightREUTERS
Image captionEthiopia has been hit by three years of protests

The sharply dressed but straight-faced politician is seen as one of the least favourite to become the new prime minister.

He is a member of the SEPDM, the same party as the recently resigned prime minister and has just been announced as its deputy leader, further complicating his ascendancy to power.

Some analysts say his party might argue that Mr Hailemariam never finished his term and therefore might suggest that Mr Siraj or someone from within SEPDM for the premiership. This is however highly unlikely.

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7. Shiferaw Shigute

He is currently working with the secretariat of the EPRDF, previously he was the minister of education, and president of the southern Ethiopia regional state.

Mr Shiferaw is the newly elected chairman of the SEPDM replacing the recently resigned prime minister who was also the chairman of the party.

Shiferaw ShiguteImage copyrightEPRDF/ FACEBOOK

Born in Haroressa, in the southern Ethiopia region, Shiferaw was a teacher before joining politics.

When the outgoing prime minister was still the region’s president, Mr Shiferaw was deputy president of the southern Ethiopia regional state government.

When Mr Hailemariam became deputy prime minister and foreign minister under the late Meles Zenawi’s administration, Mr Shiferaw assumed the presidency of the region.

Some people say his election as the chairman of the SEPDM was intended to enhance his chances of becoming prime minister.

Mr Shiferaw is a member of the federal parliament from which the prime minister will be elected.

Presentational grey line

More about Ethiopia:

Why has Ethiopia imposed a state of emergency?

Energy from rubbish to power Addis Ababa

Can Ethiopia be Africa’s leading manufacturing hub?

Key facts, figures and dates

You can now get the latest BBC news in Afaan OromoAmharic and Tigrinya.

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Life and Legacy Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie Pt 4 SBS Amharic

Debretsion Gebremichael Is The New Massacre in Chief in Addis Ababa (NY/NJ Ethiopians Task Force)

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(TPLF-governance 101: governing = terrorizing, massacring and torturing)

Ethiopians have witnessed too many massacres committed by a coward regime that uses its special military, the Agazi forces, to protect the interests of the ethnocentric killing and looting machine, the TPLF, rather than to protect the country’s borders.

Based on records of the Ethiopian government, close to 30,000 Ethiopians were massacred by fascist Graziani during the Ethio-Italian war of 1937. While it is very difficult to get the exact number due to lack of transparency and independent media, various sources put the number of Ethiopians killed by the TPLF over the past twenty-seven years to be over 10,000.

Italians massacred the population as revenge for their failed attempt to colonize the country and its people for the second time, since brave Ethiopians fought and defeated the ruthless colonial power. Similarly, the TPLF is massacring Ethiopians because they unequivocally rejected its apartheid style and its poor and uncivilized governance. TPLF officials including the current TPLF leader, Debretsion Gebremichael, who is known for his travel to foreign nations for prostitution, are proud of the number of Ethiopian lives they’ve taken, which is not that far from lives taken by the fascist General

It is well known that most of the TPLF leaders have no training in governance. They are so strongly influenced by their idol, Meles Zenawi, that they strongly believe that the only way they should govern Ethiopians is by applying the techniques of terrorizing, massacring, torturing and imprisoning.

While horrifying torture stories have been told by brave survivors, it is very hard to collect all the data on massacres committed by the TPLF. Based on recent reports, a few of the massacres committed by the TPLF include:

  1. Moyale massacre of March 2018: Close to 30 Oromo Ethiopians were intentionally killed days ago by the command post.
  2. Woldia massacre of 2018: More than 20 Amhara Ethiopians killed while celebrating a religious holiday (hundreds disappeared and suspected to be killed or imprisoned in Nazi style prison camps in Tigray).
  3. Chelenko Massacre of 2017: Close to 15 kids were murdered by the regime, including a 10-year-old child.
  4. Irreccha massacre of 2016: More than 800 Oromo Ethiopians were killed while celebrating the Irreccha holiday.
  5. Ambo Massacre of 2014 and 2017: More than 100 peaceful demonstrators killed.
  6. Gambella massacre of 2003: More than 400 Anuak Ethiopians were massacred.
  7. Ogaden massacre of 2008, 2014 and 2016: More than 200 people have been murdered.
  8. Gojam kobel massacre of 2016: More than 50 peaceful demonstrators were killed by sharp shooters stationed on buildings.
  9. Meles Massacre of Addis Ababa of 2005: Close to 200 youth massacred during peaceful demonstrations.

 

The question is, how many more massacres do we have to witness before the world community takes a strong stand and imposes sanctions against the TPLF leaders? How many more Ethiopian mothers must lose their loved ones? How many more Ethiopian households should have empty chairs and empty beds due to the loss of their brothers, sisters, fathers and mothers?

 

TPLF leaders have washed their hands with the blood of poor Ethiopians, and they will not think twice before they kill thousands more again. The fact is, key players, including Debrestione Gebremichael, Samora Yenus, Getachew Assefa, Sibhat Nega and Abay Tsehay would care more about the food they eat than the lives of hundreds of Ethiopians that they kill every day. They would care more about the whisky they drink than the wellbeing of the country Ethiopia itself. These thugs are committing all their crimes at the comfort of their houses, payed for by money looted from poor farmers and merchants whose kids are being attacked by weapons and bullets purchased by their own tax dollars.

 

Relentless uprising by Ethiopians in all regions, coupled with pressure from donor nations, have prompted little action and empty promises by the regime. The TPLF has only released close to 5% of its political prisoners and has never allowed for real and reliable political dialogue. The regime has immediately declared a state of emergency as soon as it released a few prisoners and soon started to imprison famous bloggers, like the Ambo University lecturer, Seyoum Teshome and peaceful demonstrators, taking them to TPLF’s torture museum called Maekelawi. As of now, that torture museum can only be visited by the TPLF torture masters.

 

These actions of the TPLF fortify the fact that Ethiopians have never considered the TPLF as their government. Instead, they have rightly labelled it as a collection of criminals who ruled the country under a state of emergency for twenty-seven years.

 

Ethiopians should continue the uprising to get rid of the cruel regime and establish a government that is accountable to them. The state of Emergency will not protect the killers who work for the TPLF, as they will soon face justice

 

Ethiopians Will Prevail

NY/NJ Ethiopians Task Force (www.ethionynj.com)

 

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Neamin Zeleke , a member of Patriotic Ginbot 7 Leadership, and Ermias Legesse of ESAT , Los Ageles Town Hall Meeting

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On the Re-Imposition of State of Emergency,  a desperate measure taken  by the brutal  TPLF designed to stem the tide of the Ethiopian people’s demand for fundamental change in order  to perpetuate minorityTigrayan elite domination & plunder  of state and economy . Ethiopian people, inside and outside, must continue to  wage a vigorous  struggle to bring about  a fundamental and systemic change- a democratic Ethiopia that is just , equal to all citizens and all ethnic groups.
SOE , a despate measure by #TPLF brutal regime which aims to perpetuate TPLF Tigrayan domination of Ethiopian state&plunder of resources.   What needs to be done by Ethiopians outside and inside of Ethiopia, etc.

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Getachew Assefa Exposed.: Leaked Video

Jailed, freed, defiant: Ethiopian journalist fights on

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More than six years in jail have not blunted Ethiopian journalist Eskinder Nega’s criticism of the government that put him there.

After more than six years in jail, Ethiopian journalist Eskinder Nega remains as defiant and as determined as ever, following his release last month.

He was released in February, as part of a broad prisoner amnesty, and remains just as defiant, just as determined as when he was locked up for writing critical articles.

“I am prepared to go back to prison,” Eskinder, 47, said in an interview in the Ethiopian capital this week. “What I am not prepared to do is give up.”

“We will continue to press and struggle for freedom of expression and democracy.”

Eskinder’s widely-read columns routinely took his country’s authoritarian, one-party government to task, until his arrest in September 2011, after writing a column predicting an Arab Spring-style uprising in Ethiopia.

Like other critical journalists, bloggers, activists and politicians, he was charged with terrorist offences and later sentenced to 18 years in prison.

His trial and detention attracted international condemnation from rights groups, including the literary freedom organisation PEN International.

Despite the recent, unexpected release of thousands of political prisoners, himself included, Eskinder fears life for journalists may worsen — not improve — following the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) government’s declaration of a nationwide state of emergency last month.

– A country at a tipping point –

If the government hoped Eskinder might slip into grateful silence, they will be disappointed: he told AFP he plans to press on with his journalism as fearlessly as before.

For a country defined by the all-pervasive power of the ruling party, Ethiopia is at a rare tipping point between greater openness and continued oppression.

Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn announced his resignation last month, a move unprecedented in the party’s 27-year rule. Behind closed doors, EPRDF leaders are in the midst of an opaque process of selecting a successor.

Whoever is chosen, Eskinder said an essential first step will be a willingness to talk, even to the party’s enemies, if people are to believe democracy is growing.

“If that person wants to make change, wants to make real change in this country, he will have to engage in negotiations with all political parties, including those who have been branded as terrorist organisations,” he said.

Eskinder was convicted of links to the armed anti-government group Ginbot 7 in a verdict that “deeply disappointed” Ethiopia’s ally the United States.

He has always denied the charge, and refused to sign a confession even though he believes it would have earned him early release.

Eskinder said he spent much of his sentence confined to a small room and yard with three other prisoners. In a column smuggled out, and published in the New York Times in 2013, he described the prison as a “gulag”.

– Democracy rising? –

The prisoner amnesty that saw his release was described by Hailemariam as aiming to “improve the national consensus and widen the democratic platform,” but analysts saw it as a reaction to popular anti-government sentiment.

Months of destructive, sometimes deadly, protests began in late 2015 and only stopped after the imposition of a 10-month state of emergency in October 2016.

Africa’s second-most-populous country remains a hard place for the press, ranking 150 out of 180 countries on Reporters Without Borders’ press freedom index.

Earlier this month, authorities deported British journalist William Davison after refusing to renew his press accreditation and last year they implemented a new regulation banning foreign journalists from owning cars.

After first travelling to the United States to reunite with his wife, who moved to Virginia with his 11-year-old son while he was jailed, Eskinder is considering a shift from print to broadcast journalism in a bid to reach a wider audience.

“To be relevant to the struggle, I think involvement in satellite television is fundamental,” Eskinder said.

But while the medium may change, the message remains the same: “It’s western liberal democracy that I envision for the country.”

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Ethiopia’s Recurrent State of Siege – Starve the TPLF of Foreign Exchange

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Aklog Birara (Dr.)
Part II of III

Ever since its inception, the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) has been relentless in assaulting, demeaning, marginalizing and impoverishing the Amhara population. In its

Manifesto, it identified two primary enemies of the “Tigrean people” as a flip of the same coin. These twin-enemies of the Tigrean people, the TPLF posited, are Imperialism and the Amhara. Imagine that for the TPLF core, Western imperialism and colonialism that the Amhara together with other Ethiopians fought bravely and preserved Ethiopian independence against foreign aggression, including Italian fascism are characterized as “mortal enemies of the Tigrean” people. The TPLF and its agents had the audacity to extend this animosity to others. It tried to teach hatred and ethnic division to an entire generation of Ethiopians. I find no other country whose rulers implant such hate and division and undermine their country.

Imagine further that it is lands from Gondar, Wollo and Gojjam and from major cities such as Addis Ababa and others that serve as homes and as sources of livelihood, wealth and riches for hundreds of thousands of Tigrean nationals. Amhara and Tigreans share a long history, culture, religion, economic and social bonds that should be shepherded carefully and strategically. The TPLF ideological architecture of hatred does exactly the opposite. It implants permanent scars that future generations may not be able to cure. It also creates a hostile and unwelcoming environment for all Tigreans. This is why I urge Tigreans to join other Ethiopians in the struggle to create an inclusive, fair, just and democratic Ethiopia. There is no longer a place for bystanders.

The TPLF animus towards the Amhara has defined and still defines the TPLF ideology of divide and rule. On the ground, TPLF annexation of Amhara lands and their incorporation into Greater Tigray is part of this animus. Sadly for Ethiopians, including Tigreans, with the exception of a courageous few individuals who consider the TPLF to be venomous and cancerous, the majority of Tigrean political elites, intellectuals and others within and outside the TPLF core sing the same song. For example, they propagate the untrue story of Tigrean nationals in Gondar, Wollo, Gojjam and the rest of the Amhara region as well as in Oromia as having been targeted and harmed. I do not know of a single Tigrean civilian that has been killed, maimed, wounded, tortured or harmed by the Amhara or the Oromo people. I find it disingenuous for the TPLF and its supporters to equate the destruction of private property and investments in reaction to murders and other inhumane treatment by the TPLF and its security forces equivalent to the murder of innocent civilians including children and mothers. Lives have greater value than property.

 

Tragically, the TPLF does not inflict pain and suffering alone. It has recruited and rewarded some Amhara and other ethnic groups to do its dirty work on its behest. In the Amhara region including Gondar, it is these recruits of locals, that serve as intermediaries that should be identified and isolated, especially by the bold and heroic youth movement, Fanno.

For too long, ethnic elites and so called learned Ethiopian society gave lip service to the atrocities committed against innocent Amhara in Wolkait-Tegede, Beni-Shangul Gumuz, Gambella, Oromia and Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples. Thousands of Amhara were murdered in several locations; and hundreds of thousands were either displaced or evicted from their lands and property.

The Amhara nationality became a target of the TPLF and its allies because the Amhara embraced the entire Ethiopia as their natural home; and intermarried and worshipped with other Ethiopians as a natural phenomenon. The centrality of Ethiopia as a multinational or diverse country and the Amhara self- identification of Ethiopian citizenship as a distinctive and defining norm made the Amhara population a target to which others succumbed either knowingly or unwittingly. Even Amhara intellectuals refrained from condemning atrocities against the Amhara reinforcing the mistaken premise that the Amhara people are responsible for Ethiopia’s past and current ills.

The Amhara people should be proud of their commitment to diversity, to Ethiopian national identity and to Ethiopia as a country. Equally, the Amhara people must agree on a unity of purpose; and an organization and leadership team that is impenetrable and resolute. Survival is critical for freedom, democracy and Ethiopia’s durability as a country.

It is true that the Amhara population can rightly be accused of making the entire Ethiopia its home and Ethiopiawinnet as its prime identity. This in itself should be commended rather than condemned. If we do not want Ethiopia to balkanize into six or more mini states as has occurred in the former Yugoslavia, it behooves us to embrace both our diversity; and the right of any Ethiopian to live and work anywhere in Ethiopia. This narrative was echoed eloquently by youth in Gondar when they uttered “The blood of the Oromo is our blood; Bekele Gerba is our hero.” This utterance resonated throughout Oromia. Oromo youth responded in kind by stating that “Wolkait is ours; Tana Kegna” etc. The visit to Bahir Dar led by Lemma Megersa highlighted and strengthened the historical bonds between the Oromo and Amhara people.

This narrative is transformative. It is this bond that should shape future history.

Accordingly, the Amhara and Oromo struggle for justice, the rule of law and for democracy is equally the struggle of Ethiopia’s mosaic. I state again that Tigreans have an identical obligation and should join their brothers and sisters, especially youth throughout Ethiopia.

TPLFs Ethiopia suffers from a democratic deficit. This deficit cannot be filled through draconian and inhumane punishments of innocent civilians, especially Ethiopian youth. The way out is not more killing and more forcible evictions of civilians. These civilians would have no permanent home. They will return and fight back the system that expelled them. The solution is an all-inclusive and democratic system of government.

Animosity against Amhara is animosity against all Ethiopians

Over the past 27 years, animosity against the Amhara spread like a germ and enveloped other nationalities, especially the Oromo nationality. This germ was prompted intentionally and deliberately to spread like a virus in order to divide and rule Ethiopians. The term of igniting “FIRE AND STRAW” (እሳትና ጭድ) characterizing the desired goal of triggering civil war among the Amhara and Oromo people should be a cautionary guide in terms of what not to do and not to echo anymore.

Today, the TPLF considers both the Amhara and the Oromo as mortal enemies and as barriers to continued TPLF political and economic dominance in particular and the interests and security of the Tigrean people in general. Sadly, the TPLF lacks the wisdom of stopping the propagation of lies in the form of ethnic hatred; and it is equally short of insight to comprehend and accept the fundamental principle that Tigreans cannot survive without the rest of Ethiopia and Ethiopians. It is undeniable that Ethiopia is their country too. As such, the people of Tigray should no longer serve as captives of the TPLF. Their rights to survive, thrive and feel safe in any part of Ethiopia depend entirely on their recognition of the equal and fundamental rights of other Ethiopians. Those who refuse or reject the rights of others have no place in a globalized world.

Further, there does not seem to be any statesman or an adult within the Tigrean elite and the newly well- to-do Tigrean community to pressure, at least to persuade, the TPLF to stop its carnage now. Tragically for all of us, including Tigreans there isn’t any time left.

Selecting and targeting Oromo or Amhara or other Ethiopians is a crime

The TPLF cannot afford to assault 110 million Ethiopians all at once. It does not have the capacity. Instead, it singles out, targets and assaults Ethiopians in turn. In yesterdays, months and years, it targeted and assaulted the Annuak of Gambella; the Ethiopian Somali in the Ogaden; Ethiopians in Afar; the Amhara all over. Tigreans who resisted the TPLF in Tigray were also victims of the TPLF etc. So, who is left? We should not allow ourselves to be assaulted, killed and degraded in turns.

Today, the theater of massive and relentless assault is in the Oromia region where the resistance against the TPLF is most intense. This intense and continuous resistance led by youth is history-making; and is unstoppable. In fact, Oromo and other youth are doing what so-called opposition parties of any ilk have not been able to do for three decades. They are spearheading the fundamental change process. This social force is unstoppable. No matter who the Prime Minister becomes, it is the ability and capacity to be bold and change the entire system that will matter most. A bold Prime Minister will side with Ethiopia’s youth; a timid one will do

TPLF’s dirty work. A bold Prime Minister will insist that Ethiopia’s defense and security forces and other critical institutions become national; and no longer partisan and ethnic.

Statistical data shows that 99 percent of top military and security officers are Tigrean. This must change in order for Ethiopia to defend itself; and in order to avert continued selective and targeted killings of non-Tigrean civilians.

Otherwise, nothing will change and Ethiopia’s convulsions will persist. Youth will continue to fight and die in the process.

Just take one current example that has been instigated by the Qeerro movement and adopted quickly by Fanno and other youth movements. The ‘FIRE AND FURY’ that enabled the movement to shake-up the entire economy and trade includes the following:

First, the series of boycotts that took place have diminished public confidence in the system.

Second, the blockage of petroleum, gas and related products throughout Oromia and that spread quickly to the Northern Amhara region, especially Gondar; and to the heart of the repressive regime’s stranglehold, namely, Addis Ababa have a devastating social impact.

The medium and long term effects of this economic resistance are far reaching; and will affect the entire society. Among them are the following notable and inevitable occurrences.

  • Prices of essential good (inflation) will rise dramatically and sharply;
  • Foreign exchanges shortages will be far worse than they have ever been;
  • The flow of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) will decline sharply;
  • Investor confidence will be eroded; tourism will evaporate;
  • The world community’s trust and confidence in the regime will decline; and
  • Pressure from all quarters for fundamental change, including a transitional government will deepen and

This is why I assert that Ethiopian youth and not the weak and fragmented opposition is making history.

What the rest of us can do

At minimum, let us be bold enough to express our admiration for Ethiopia’s youth; and resist to trumpet TPLF propaganda. For example, TPLF cadres argue that boycotts and the current blockade of petroleum and gas “has no impact” on investments, commerce and trade. In one case, I argued with an EPRDF representative on VOA that the “Ethiopian economy must be based on the Planet Mars rather than in Ethiopia.”

The point is this. While Ethiopian youth is doing unprecedented deed; the rest of us should not stand idle. Our historical call is to defend and support the youth-led resistance. It is to promote unity and resist division. It is to withhold remittances and channel them through informal channels and starve the regime of hard currency.

 

Youth is leading the resistance

Last week, the Guardian newspaper presented an eye witness account of the Qeerro movement, arguably the most highly motivated and organized youth movement since the

height of the famous Ethiopian student movement under Imperial rule. “Twelve years ago,” one prominent Qeerro “helped organize mass protests against an election result he and many others believed the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) had rigged. This landed him in prison, along with thousands of others, on terrorism charges. Since then, he has married and, like many of his generation in Ethiopia, mostly avoided politics. That was until 12 February, when he joined almost everyone in the town of Adama, and in many others cities across the region of Oromia, in a strike calling for the release of opposition leaders and an end to authoritarianism.”

This protest movement succeeded; and leaders such as Bekele Gerba have been released from prison. Hundreds of others have also been released. Thousands remain in prison and others are now being arrested and sent to the same prisons. The numbers are likely to increase under the pretexts of the new state of emergency. It is reported that the notorious Agazi has gone house to house in the city of Gondar and taken away 40 young people to unknown destinations. This is a repeat of what happened about two years ago; and won’t stop. The intent is to deprive Ethiopia of young and vigorous people that have the potential to make history. This too is a cowardly act and won’t stop the inevitable.

The Qeerro movement is unlike any other movement. It is led by youth and this youth represents Ethiopia’s future. It is highly sophisticated and networked. It has broken the walls and barriers of fear. It serves as “the vanguard of the Oromo revolution (I would add, the Ethiopian popular revolution that is also spearheaded by the Fanno movement in the Amhara region and similar emerging youth networks in other regions. Although these powerful and history-making youth movements are not formally linked to one another; their vision and programs are almost identical. “Ethiopia Kegna.” It is time that they are linked nationally.

A distinct feature of the Qeerro and Fanno movements, especially the former is that it is innovative and adjusts its method of struggle in accord with changing circumstances. Among others, it designs and applies practical programs of resistance such as economic and trade boycotts, blocking of road transport networks, trucks, work stoppages. The most recent announcement to initiate a 7 days program of action against petroleum, gas and other supplies indicate innovation. This is biting and hurts the entire system. I can imagine that freedom will enable this energetic and creative social force to change the economy for the better.

Ethiopia’s youth are deploying powerful and peaceful resistance tools. Boycotts and other economic instruments paralyze economic activities and investments; and derail the TPLF’s singular fame and free ride of state-led development that benefits the TPLF and its allies while leaving millions of Ethiopians poor and marginalized. They augur peaceful resistance and provide it a new and compelling meaning.

While Ethiopian youth are doing miracles against formidable odds, those of us who enjoy freedom are not doing as much. Only a few members of the Diaspora are genuinely engaged. I am sure some of us in this segment would even have the audacity to call a mother, father, brother, sister or other relative or friend inconvenienced by the boycotts and blockages and blame the victims and the youth who triggered these peaceful actions in the pursuit of freedom.

The dual life of the Diaspora and remittance flow

Ethiopia’s Diaspora population is large and well-endowed in terms of incomes compared to the population back home. However, for too long most of the Diaspora has its stools and hearts in two places at the same time. Members enjoy freedom in Western countries but are unable and unwilling to fight for freedom in the country they left behind. This freedom includes the right to speak, move, own property, vote etc. Yet, they maintain their roots and travel to the homeland. In numerous cases, those who pass away overseas are airlifted to be buried in the Motherland they left behind. Ethiopia is that precious even for the dead.

There is nothing wrong with this umbilical cord, except the system that represses, oppresses, marginalizes and impoverishes the vast majority of the population. Imagine that this system empowers and encourages a selected few, primarily Tigrean nationals to become instant millionaires. Addis Ababa, the power and wealth center of the newly rich is literally owned by the few. The largest skyscrapers, condominiums and other massive buildings, at least numbering 2,800 are owned by Tigreans. Tigrean generals and other high officers are among the beneficiaries of this corrupt and exclusionary system. The poor are evicted from their lands and homes to make room for the well to do.

This untold story of rags to riches is virtually impossible to attain on merit and hard work. Easy access to lands, loans and critical supplies is possible under this system. By all measurements, ethnic affinity is the single most important variable that enables this rags to riches story.

Political economists call this economic capture. Such economic capture is only possible under a well-integrated or merger of party, state, government and institutions. Remittances feature prominent in this capture.

In August, 2017, the European Union funded a project on the growing role of remittances in

Ethiopia. “Ethiopia Registers Fast Progress in Remittance Flow” showed substantial increase in the amount of remittances in Ethiopia.

Before retiring from the World Bank, I read internal Bank reports and spoke to specialists there why the amount of remittances is underreported by the National Bank of Ethiopia. No one knew why; but an attempt was made to correct the anomaly. Seven years later, the EU financed consultant study showed that, at the end of 2015/2016, remittances accounted for at least 5.3 percent of Ethiopia’s GDP. “Ethiopia has made fast progress in remittance flow in recent years, Developing Market Association (DMA) CEO and specialist on remittances Leon Isaacs said.” The

 

country “registered impressive increase in remittance from 141 million USD in 2003 to 4 billion USD in 2015/16.”

Given the make-believe statistics used by Ethiopian officials and party dominated institutions such as commercial banks and the National Bank, the figure of “$141 million in 2003” underestimates the flow by several fold. Underreporting of actual figures is a recurring phenomenon in Ethiopia. The policy argument presented by the consultant of why the dramatic increase took place is plausible. “Subsequent directives such as zero charge tariff on transfer services issued by the National Bank of Ethiopia (NEB) to improve remittance flow has supported the country to increase remittance flow.”

If the directives are the sole variables for the increase, why is “78 percent of the total remittance being sent through informal channels?” There are numerous reasons for this phenomenon:

  • Those who remit do not trust the banking system;
  • The middle men and women who deal with transfers make huge profits from the remittance system;
  • Remittances are exchanged into Birr and the foreign exchange is siphoned off and hidden in foreign countries (in other words, there is a huge parallel or black market);
  • This parallel or black market is a source of riches for high officers, diplomats and others loyal to and or connected to the TPLF;
  • Among the beneficiaries of the informal channel of transmission are TPLF agents, firms and other traders who operate within and outside Ethiopia;
  • Those involved in illicit outflow of foreign exchange use and exploit the black market as a conduit; an
  • Illegal migration and human trafficking aggravate the

The consultant study states that “Lack of access to services in sending and receiving markets, high direct or indirect costs associated with formal channels, illegal migration and the existence of parallel market exchange rates have contributed to the high level of informal transfer. “

This is true. The biggest and most credible explanation to this persistent phenomenon of black market dominance in the foreign exchange market is endemic and systemic corruption. When an entire system is corrupt, institutions are degraded severely and irreparably. There is literally no accountable official or institution. The National Bank that was always independent and

professionally managed under previous regimes is now dominated by political cadres. It has lost its independence to serve the country.

The economic model supported by the TPLF core is everyone for himself/herself. “Multi-

stakeholder” facilitation to steer the broken and corrupt system in the direction of productive investments using remittances as capital is virtually impossible. The few who control both politics and economics in Ethiopia believe in a zero sum outcome. This is why the benefits of growth are not shared; and why there is a glaring income and wealth inequality in Ethiopia. In simple language, the norm is “I become rich by making you poor. I build a skyscraper that I will rent by taking lands from you. I eat by making sure that you don’t” etc. This is so Darwinian that it should frighten every Ethiopian. This is why the system must go. It is incurable. This type of state led capitalism should be rejected by all Ethiopians.

I agree with the consultant that Ethiopia’s huge undocumented or so-called illegal migrant community in Gulf countries, especially Saudi Arabia, does not have a proper formal channel to transfer hard earned monies to relatives in Ethiopia. The informal channel is harder for this group than for the Diaspora in Western economies. In light of this hurdle, it is vital for the segment of the Diaspora that enjoys freedom and the capacity to transfer remittances with ease through informal channels to assist those in Gulf countries. For this to work efficiently, there must be mutual trust. This is a deficit that we must attempt to bridge soonest.

It is possible to establish a back channel to remit from the Gulf to Western countries and from Western countries to Ethiopia. There are creative ways. For example, Somali migrants and those in the Somali Diaspora have established a sophisticated and reliable system of remitting to beneficiaries, the ultimate objective of remitting funds.

The notion of remitting monies through the formal current system of party, state and government thieves and private actors in Ethiopia does not make sense at all. It is not petty corruption I am talking about. Ethiopia continues to suffer from massive illicit outflow of funds to the tune of at least $3 billion per year. No wonder that the country suffers from foreign exchange shortages, with the private sector bearing most of the burden.

In light of this phenomenon, there is absolutely no moral or economic or social justification to remit through the formal system. It is rotten to the core; and those at the top of the policy and decision-making pyramid and their families are the top beneficiaries. Further, formal remittances enable the dictatorship to buy arms and other tools that kill innocent people.

So, why not starve the police state that killings from accessing your monies?

I am not suggesting that you stop helping your families, relatives and friends. More than 15 million Ethiopians depend on remittances to survive. I am saying that you can do this without buffeting the police state and without enriching the few whose incomes, wealth and investment assets depend in part on remittances.

 

I would, instead, urge the Diaspora to reduce further the amount sent through formal channels by 30 percent.

No body, including the EU consultant study, knows the amount of remittances through formal channels. It is not insignificant. A 30 percent reduction in remittances through the formal channel will amount to about $1.2 billion per year. Taking the doctoring and make-believe statistics into account, Ethiopia receives a minimum of $4 billion per year through the formal system. “The flow of remittance to Ethiopia was 1.9 billion USD in 2010, USD 2.4 billion in 2012/13, USD 2.9 billion in 2013/14 and USD 3 billion in 2014/15.” Maybe yes; maybe no. there is no independent authority to tell us the truth.

Incidentally, this is the same low estimate World Bank experts had put on the table internally more than 7 years ago. My own estimate was and is still much higher.

The same is true for exportable items. Ethiopia’s earnings from exports continue to decline; and a bulk of the earnings are siphoned off through illicit transactions. There isn’t much the Diaspora can do about this sector, except for consumables such as injera, berbere etc.

Why cater to imported injera?

TPLF supported persons and entities continue to export staples such as injera. It is inexcusable for the Diaspora to cater to this outrageous and shameful practice while millions of Ethiopians go hungry each day. My argument is based on supply. The demand for staples within Ethiopia exceed the available supply. The first and primary responsibility of the developmental state is to satisfy the basic needs of the Ethiopian people.

Injera is a commodity that is manufactured outside Ethiopia; and is marketed in bulk in towns and citifies, especially in North America. So, what is the logic of shoring-up oppressors and thieves on the back of 110 million Ethiopians?

I urge Ethiopian mothers and girls to leverage their enormous influence on their families and communities so that the practice stops immediately. I urge spiritual leaders of all faiths to persuade their flock to stop catering to a killing police state and to its Diaspora supporters.

I urge the Ethiopian Diaspora to side with Ethiopian youth and withhold its hard earned foreign change. This is the least one can do to help and to signal to those who are sacrificing their lives for a better tomorrow!!!

Part III of this series will follow soon. March 16, 2018

The post Ethiopia’s Recurrent State of Siege – Starve the TPLF of Foreign Exchange appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Life and Legacy: Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie – Pt 1 – 5 – SBS Amharic

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Life and Legacy: Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie – Pt 1 – 5 – SBS Amharic

 

Life and Legacy Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie Pt 4 SBS Amharic

Life and Legacy፡ Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie Pt 3 SBS Amharic

Life and Legacy Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie Pt 2 SBS Amharic

 

Life and Legacy Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie Pt 1 SBS Amharic

The post Life and Legacy: Emeritus Prof Bereket Habte Selassie – Pt 1 – 5 – SBS Amharic appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Africa in the news: Tillerson fired during Africa trip, attack in Ethiopia, new tax laws in DRC and Nigeria

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Dhruv Gandhi
Research Assistant – Africa Growth Initiative

Early Tuesday morning, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson returned from his trip to Africa a day earlier than planned. He visited Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Chad, and Nigeria. According to BBC reports, Secretary Tillerson was informed of his firing on Friday, but President Donald Trump made the decision public a few hours after his return. In interviews with VOA, several Africa experts raised concerns about the optics of the firing and the validity of any commitments made during the trip. Former U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria, John Campbell said, “What, after all, do the various assurances that presumably the secretary provided during his meetings—whatdoes that mean when he gets fired?”

U.S. Secretary of State Rex Tillerson departs N’Djamena, Chad, March 12, 2018. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst – RC1C1535E7E0

Secretary Tillerson discussed the political situation in Ethiopia and Kenya during the visit, noting that the answer to violence in Ethiopia “is greater freedom” and urged the country to lift the state of emergency “as quickly as possible.” In Kenya, the secretary applauded the recent meeting between President Kenyatta and Raila Odinga as a step to bring the country together but also criticized the shutdown of television stations earlier this year saying that “a free and independent media is essential to safeguarding democracy and giving all Kenyans confidence in their government.”

Terrorism and security issues were discussed in Chad and Nigeria with Secretary Tillerson pledging strong U.S. support in fighting militant groupsin the region including Boko Haram. Chad, one of the countries on the U.S. visa-ban list last year, received encouragement in its effort to be dropped from the list. Tillerson highlighted that the government of Chad has taken “many important positive steps” and that this would help “to take action to begin to normalize” relations.

ATTACK BY SECURITY FORCES IN ETHIOPIA’S MOYALE REGION DISPLACES TENS OF THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE

On Saturday, March 10, government security forces acting on bad intelligence killed nine civilians and injured 12 others in Moyale, an Ethiopian town near the border with Kenya. Accounts from the town’s mayor and other local residents indicate that the attack began suddenly and without provocation as police targeted young people in a busy street full of shops and restaurants. According to official sources, the soldiers purportedly mistook civilians for members of a banned militant opposition group, the Oromo Liberation Front, which the government considers to be a terrorist organization. Five soldiers involved in the attack have been disarmed and are currently under investigation.

Meanwhile, the botched military operation and rumors of further violence have led to widespread displacement within and from the region. Nearly 40,000 people in the Moyale area have been uprooted since the attack with more than 8,000 people fleeing to neighboring Kenya, according to Xinhuanet. Moyale falls within the Oromia region, where anti-government protests and repressive government crackdowns have become common in recent years. In mid-February, the government declared a six-month state of emergency—the country’s second state of emergency since 2016—in an attempt to “protect the constitutional system.” Notably, the emergency gives authorities broad powers to restrict freedom of expression and assembly. Since the state of emergency was announced, anti-government protests have continued, and hundreds of people have been detainedDeutsche Welle reports.

DRC AND NIGERIA TO IMPLEMENT NEW TAX LAWS

This week, the Democratic Republic of Congo has moved toward increasing taxes and royalties imposed on the mining industry. The law was passed by parliament in January and was signed by President Kabila last Friday. The new mining law will apply to both domestic and international firms. According to Reuters, the new law includes a provision for “strategic substances” that would have royalty rates of 10 percent and the government has indicated that cobalt will be included in this category. The DRC currently produces 60 percent of the world’s cobalt. Under the old mining law, royalties in the DRC were lower than other countries in the region with copper and gold royalties at 2 and 3.5 percent compared to 6 percent in Zambia and Tanzania.  The move was strongly opposed by mining firms operating in the DRC, stating that their operations in the country would not be profitable anymore, and future investment will be deterred. The heads of mining companies Glencore, Randgold Resources, China Molybdenum, and Ivanhoe Mines traveled to Kinshasa last week to (unsuccessfully) lobby against the law. Meanwhile, the Congolese government has agreed to take the firms’ concerns into consideration and work with them on a case by case basis in order to execute the new code.

In other resource mobilization news, Nigeria’s President Buhari approved an amendment to the excise duty tax for alcoholic beverages and tobacco. The new duty will take effect on June 4. According to Finance Minister Kemi, the increase in the tax will have the dual effect of increasing government’s fiscal revenues and reducing the negative health effects associated with tobacco and alcohol use. In addition to a 20 percent tax on tobacco, the government adds an extra fixed tax of one naira per cigarette.

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A sequel to Ethiopian journalist Eskinder Nega’s inmate letter

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Written by Tarikua Getachew

Somewhat of a prologue:

“But strike against only a handful and copious number of peoples are hypnotized into inaction.”

It is a quote from Eskinder Nega’s “Letter to My Son,” smuggled out of prison and published in March 2014. Eskinder is a veteran Ethiopian journalist whose career spans over 15 years. Since his first newspaper was founded in 1993 Eskinder counts a PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write and several other awards to his name. Yet, his life as a journalist in Ethiopia, like that of so many of his colleagues, has been one also marred by persecution- including eight instances of imprisonment, torture and trials for treason and terrorism. His only child, Nafkot, was born in prison where Eskinder’s wife was held at the beginning of the latter’s latest incarceration which lasted seven years before he was released, on general pardon, on 14th February 2018.

In Letter to My Son, Eskinder tries at once to explain and to understand the “reasons for his imprisonment” examining events, personal and national, going as far back as his childhood. He delivers a perspective on Ethiopian “modern political history” – which he dates to the 1960s- extending from the student movement that preceded the advent of the Derg regime, a “nihilist”, unrooted and unguided effort with dire consequences, to the passing of the Prime Minister of the government in Ethiopia in 2012. Eskinder’s intimate and saddened look at the “mediocrity” and the persisting penchant for violence which it eventually has come to, reveals nonetheless a man steadfast in his belief in democracy and convinced in a bright future for his country.

Every action is personal…

It is a good day to write this somewhat pompous response to Eskinder’s now four years old letter. This letter, for God is indeed generous, belongs to all of us. But I have appropriated this public good from the moment I read it not for the selfish reasons which have guided most of my life decisions but their total opposite. What is the opposite of selfishness? A man once said that “America was his country but Paris was his home”. He was reacting as humans should to something exquisitely beautiful: be filled with hope, derive a personal, deeply secret meaning from it and perhaps, with some luck, be inspired to become slightly better.

It is a good day then. We are a few days into the 123rd year since Adwa, marked this year with an almost frightening, and ironically now permitted, display of fervor. It is a good day too because the inmate is no longer an absent father.

This day, we find Ethiopia pushed to a cross-roads where each individual, scattered or home, needs to make a choice. It is not a rare occurrence. So many of these cross roads have lost their cross to remain roads and we’ve threaded them “tant bien que mal” (equally as good as bad). But as I have done in moments of near despair before I recently returned to “Letter to my son” to mine a bit of its generosity to our society, warmth to the country’s faults and gentle nudge to all of us. To each year that is added to my life this smuggled letter offers one more reward.

Seven years is as a grain of sand for one who maintains “two centuries is but a plunge”. On a personal level, returning as I did in one last attempt to work with Ethiopia (twist intended), just as Eskinder, to my complete oblivion, was thrown in jail, then deciding to leave again… (re?) discovering social media and the hashtag that upstaged my life and then stumbling upon your letter, to this very good day where I find myself still alive, the past seven years have been the same ones where Ethiopia took proportions in my consciousness (transposed with naiveté to the “real world”) which was all consuming.

As long as I considered Ethiopia an accident of my birth about which I knew most but not necessarily will have to make my home, human rights, despite my studies, was like the Bible: a document that is good to know but does not translate into daily life. Like a common convert, I waited until I became affected to start preaching it.

I was there then when a “sports car parliament” took shape, when in a televangelist episode sounding mania about a dam gripped the country, when the “NGO law” took effect, when the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation grew devouring teeth, when Birtukan Mideksa left the country and when the now historical series of imprisonment followed. Yet “all was for the best in the best of worlds.”

I was hopeful. I was hopeful that they will read that report and act upon it; I was hopeful that the note to the prime minister will make that happen, I was hopeful that I have sufficiently exposed my students to the right choices… Perhaps, in the final analysis of a life lived to make proud a worshipping immutable fan of a father and determined not to emulate the woman who gave birth to me, it was in my own self that I believed.

It is a good day too to find one-self looking back ….and to try to take stock of all the signs that I missed. I admit hindsight is a cheat.

…but every reaction is social

For in the background of the excesses which more or less make it to news, or at the very least to the archives of some organization or other, took place the sequel to Eskinder’s letter.

The post-2005 purge of career technocrats from civil service, in the series of vengeful actions against Addis Ababa, first disguised as “business process reengineering” claimed its debt. The universities were first to fall losing their already weak teaching capacity to consultancy. Discarded technocrats themselves licked their wounds and those still of employable age either fled or became consultants. The age of consultancy impoverished an absent knowledge economy by fueling an already highly rent-seeking economy, by cloaking quick information as knowledge and by artificially propping a dysfunctional civil service. It got to a point where people were placed in high levels of civil service including diplomatic positions, academic headship and financial sector leaderships just for speaking a passable English. The state which had so far been ingenious in co-opting multiple levels of the society with all sorts of tactics became within three to four years, fully captured by utter incompetence.

This inorganic layer pumping quick cash into the inflated service sector of Addis Ababa created another form of overnight middle class further overblowing a foul entertainment culture- alcohol, pornography, meat, drugs and even a lowly breed of televangelism.

The state media’s idolatry of reporting any new introduction with comparisons to some country or other is another example. Poor imitation became the order of the day at all levels tragically extending to as far as worshipping all things foreign and discrediting of anything “not from abroad.”

Dislodge and disorder

Behind the scenes, the dislocation of populations was in full swing. It was also the other specter hanging over the people of Addis Ababa. There is no merit in repeating a method of dislocation much discussed. Its impact on community ties, on trust building, on urban consumption, on gainful employment opportunities for the urban rural poor, on community led socio-economic safety nets and on their relationship with the capital’s geography as a whole is not enough analyzed. The blurring of divide between residential and commercial centers had the added nefarious effect of making forbidden material more accessible than say food items seriously endangering child rearing (consider how quickly you get to the next khat shop to the distance between your home and your grocer’s.)

The internally displaced of Addis Ababa attempting to fashion a livelihood in their unfamiliar and remote locations were pitched against their new neighbors, themselves unjustly dislocated, and an emerging rural youth unable to find any exit but an exodus to the capital. As an endearing trait of Ethiopians goes any social phenomenon is first expressed in comedy (my favorite is “we occupy both the top and the bottom”). It slowly turned to pointing fingers: they were dirtying the city, they are responsible for the rise in crime, they have no morals and they are brutes. This vengeful urban “planning” and diseased economy driven demographic movement even plays out now on football fields.

The physical impact on the city is of course too ridiculous in the sheer magnitude of its insanity to whine about here. Even if one feels most of it is done with the purpose of erasing history and eliminating public gathering spaces. How it is once again the urban poor, whether migrant or old, who pay for these foreign named “high” rises is the real tragedy. The craze for unnecessary public infrastructure, viciously greedy for cash, the dependence on imports, aggravated by a changing urban consumption as well as the construction sector, the near stagnation of the productive sector, sickened from the absence of attention and the ignorance of civil service, itself leading to proportions of price inflation impossible to hide with cooked numbers, all decimated the “middle class” Eskinder refers to but made survival strenuous for the poor.

The rural youth, who were the pioneers of “foot migration,” were now joined by their peers from the capital. As another joke goes “we were everywhere before; now we are anywhere.” The state only glorified remittances. An emerging economy of 40 million 18-26 year olds shaped in the acceptance of the fabricated: facilities sprouting overnight, fast cash, fast cures, fast degrees.

Discernment and discrimination

A patronizing state was bound to prompt a top bottom decadence in societal behaviors. This particular state has its tentacles in the lowliest professions, leaves nothing to chance or even to itself. Another lunacy, this time that of slogans, has gripped the state, in a highest level of manifestation of its incompetence. A comparison with the prevailing misconception of hard work devoid motto for cause, historicism for history, transposition of foreign terminologies for synthesis and mobbing behind hashtags and words for activism is inevitable. If the sole purpose of the student movements was “nihilism,” we seem to be living in an age of exaltation of victimhood.

This emerging youth economy, made urban by force or by choice, also had to grapple with global phenomena brought closer by social media: The rise and fall of Obama, the migration crisis he left Europe to fumble with, the rising antipathy for the other powered by ailing economies, the ensuing increase of extremism and a “war for and against terror” gone cyber, the love for sensation motored by the atomic level mincing of media and content generation. The events, movements, concepts and geopolitics that swept to power anti-progressive (to say the least) elements from Hungary to Scandinavia, from Poland to the United States trickled their dirty footprints on Ethiopian social media in the form of words without context- from feminism to so or so lives matter, from fake news to dispossession, from “occupying” to “boycotting” – the sensational trumped the rational. Tragicomically cultivated by a severely paranoid state.

The guidance and structure are still missing today. This generation however is forced to process at an unnatural speed a whole soup of information brought right to its pocket.

To give credit where it is due, those that do the organization, the leg work, the voicing and the pressure also came out from this “generation”. Similarly, the rare bouts of sentiments, as during the slaying of Ethiopian migrants in Libya and the abuses of Ethiopian maids in Arab countries that spill over Meskel Square, would, at times, baffle anyone’s views.

Those are also symptoms of the systematic, sustained elimination of what Eskinder called “conduits” – of reason, of merit, of structure, of (to steal from a friend) “filters”. The death of free press has caused the hijacking of Ethiopian information generation by foreign journalists in turn propagated by a disconnected diaspora and their innumerable media. The death of merit has caused a monopolization of activism by zealots. Social media follower numbers are equated with intellect and hero-ification of ordinary acts is followed by humiliating chastising of minute errors.

“On the ground”, as some remind those who write about Ethiopian social media, and in Addis Ababa, as others remind those who write about Ethiopia, the sentiment is no less fractured. The “them” vs “us”, “us” vs “you” banter of state media has found reflection not just in an agenda setting informed only by action and reaction but also in a perverse competition of fervor- religious and/or patriotic zeal, ethnic and/or clan loyalty. A counter-reaction? What originated as an expression of defiance of divisive state propaganda has muted in this context into a reason defying breed of puritanism, minus the ideology, political correctness, minus the love, romanticizing of rural Ethiopia, minus the most basic knowledge of a farmer’s livelihood and conservatism, minus the belief system.

It remains a good day. It is a good day for one like me who has no other country but Addis Ababa. It is a good day to hope to see how a unifying narrative, weaved from love and reason and not from polarization and much less from hatred for a common enemy, can emerge from this chaos. It is a good day to welcome back home the voices whose silencing had “hypnotized us to inaction.” It is a good day to write this.

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Ethiopia accuses Eritrea of trying to destabilise its security

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Asmara and Addis Ababa have had two bloody wars over border disputes [File: Reuters]
Accusations come as Ethiopia continues to be under a state of emergency since its former prime minister resigned

Ethiopia has accused neighbouring Eritrea of attempting to destabilise its security by supporting “destructive” groups while the country continues to be under a state of emergency.

According to Ethiopian state television, the country’s emergency council managed to capture weapons from “destructive” groups trying to smuggle the arms into the country from across the border.

Asmara and Addis Ababa have had two bloody wars over border disputes in the past.

This was the first accusation made at Eritrea since Ethiopia declared a state of emergency on February 18, following the resignation of its prime minister, Hailemariam Desalegn.

In February, Desalegn abruptly announced he would step down as prime minister and head of the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition, citing ongoing “unrest and a political crisis” in the country as major factors that prompted his resignation.

The current state of emergency, which is expected to last until August 2018, is the second state of emergency to be declared in Ethiopia in the last two years.

In August last year, Ethiopia lifted a 10-month state of emergency imposed after hundreds of people were killed in anti-government protests, demanding wider political freedoms.

The country’s Oromo and Amhara people – who make up about 61 percent of the population – have staged mass demonstrations since 2015, demanding greater political inclusion and an end to human rights abuses.

The protests have continued until recently, with many people expressing frustration over a perceived slow government release of political prisoners.

In January, Ethiopia promised to free all political detainees, in an effort to “foster national reconciliation”. More than 6,000 prisoners have been released so far, news agencies have reported.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

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The changing face of Ethiopia’s politics and the dissolution of EPRDF as an ethnic coalition

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The long awaited dissolution of regional ethnic parties that make up the Ethiopian peoples revolutionary democratic front ( EPRDF) seems to be on the corner. If it happens, its a major victory for people who have been calling for an end to regional politics but its also a calculated move to keep the domination of rebel veterans of the Tigre peoples Liberation front. The following is what this latest move means for the general Ethiopian politics and how it’s been in the making. 

By Betemariam Hailu

TPLFLast week, the official state newspaper Addis Zemen published an interview with Shiferaw Shigute whose title is quoted as “head of EPRDF’s office” by local media reporters ( that title is not clear and not sure if it means secretary of EPRDF). But anyway, during the interview Shiferaw talked about dissolving the ruling coalition EPRDF’s member parties which are the Tigre peoples liberation front ( TPLF), The Amhara national democratic movement (ANDM), The Oromo peoples democratic organization (OPDO) and The Southern Ethiopian peoples democratic movement (SEPDM). According to Shiferaw, the proposal will be discussed in the ongoing EPRDF meeting. He also said the new move will include the so called partnering parties in Gambella, Benishangul, Afar and Somali regions of Ethiopia. This is the first time the ruling elite has publicly raised the idea. But why now?

Former top regime communication officer now turned opposition figure, Ermias Legese wrote in his first book about how dissolving EPRDF was raised by Tefera Walwa, one of the faces of the rebel movement who played a key role in the formation of the coalition and how the deceased dictator Melles Zenawi downplayed the idea. This was a decade ago. By that Melles Zenawi and co. were not yet done with EPRDF’s services. So they did not accept the idea.

The EPRDF was originally formed by the powerful TPLF and the now defunct EPDM ( the Ethiopian peoples democratic movement) in the late 80s after the former militarily “liberated” Tigray and some parts of the now Amhara region from the control of the Mengistu Hailemariam regime. Its true purpose was to give TPLF an Ethiopian coat to rule for the upcoming three decades. Then the EPDM gave birth to three regional parties (OPDO, ANDM and SEPDM) and died. This is how we got today’s EPRDF, a coalition of four regional parties. The man mentioned earlier, Tefera Walwa was a founding leader of EPDM and later joined ANDM.

For three decades EPRDF served its purpose. TPLF dominated Ethiopian politics under this mask coalition. Melles Zenawi himself, the engineer of the idea, made the best of EPRDF for his personal gains as he crushed rival TPLF leaders in the 2001 with the help of the other member groups. so it served both purposes. But Melles died on power in 2012. the death of its God father was almost like a death for the coalition itself. Soon after, member parties seem to be standing out of TPLF’s control. Later violent pro-democracy protests erupted in the Oromo region followed by the Amhara in the north. The protests took the lives of so many and tarnished the regime’s image. Even worse, directly or indirectly, the protests were supported and sympathized by the regional parties. So EPRDF’s genesis has now become obsolete. Its not surprising  that dissolving it is raised now.

This time, it sure came from TPLF. And it came to shoot back at a resurgent OPDO and Oromo nationalism. After its leading two became the faces of the organization, the OPDO has launched a national propaganda about leading Ethiopia both in Amharic and Afaan Oromo. Its regional TV, OBN campaigns without the influence of the central state about Ethiopia’s great history and the role Oromo played. It slowly came out on its own, registering its biggest victory so far on TPLF, ideological.

The Oromo no more looks at Addis Ababa from a distance but wants to walk into the Minilk palace and rule over it. Some ten days ago, the regime admitted OPDO’s surge for power in an old friendly way. Siraj Fergesa, Defense minister and spokesman of the military command post, formed to rule the country under the state of emergency, said events in the country mainly in the Oromo region have shaped up like a color revolution. Its true meaning is OPDO is trying to grab power from the hands of the central government. So in addition to cracking down with military force, dissolving OPDO as a regional party is taken as a long standing cure. The fact is though, just like Esepa ( Workers’ party of Ethiopia) was known as a mask for colonel Mengistu  Hailemariam’s clique in military junta Dergue, the new party EPRDF will only be a hiding place for TPLF. But what does it mean?

Implications of the Move

Even though, today’s ruling elite in Ethiopia is forced by the situations to remake EPRDF as a national party, its messages are significant. Ethiopia’s current problems mainly flourished from polarized regional ethnic identity politics which was glorified, celebrated and effectively used by engineers of TPLF. So when a ruling elite (even though tactfully and only in structure) abandons its long standing shape, its a big psychological and symbolic victory for millions of Ethiopians who believe people better organize based on their views not regional ethic identities. And its been in the making for the a while.

The consequential 2005 elections played a big part in this. Before 2005, organizing in a national party was bashed as an act of reactionary Addis Ababa based “Amhara elites” to work for the return of the “old system”. It worked until 2005. but the Ethiopianist party CUDP swept most of the votes in the election, it was just an alarming victory for the ruling elite and for some hard-line leftist groups in the opposition.  CUDP was crushed, dissolved and its leaders jailed for years. A year later in 2006, the diaspora wing of CUDP formed an alliance, the first in its kind, with ages old separatist ethnic groups, the Oromo liberation front and the Oganden front. The name of the alliance did not include the word Ethiopia but it was morally a big start.

But the biggest of all was the formation of Patriotic Ginbot seven and the rhetoric of its leaders. Even though the movement was formed as a flexible Ethiopianist movement only to replace the undemocratic system by a democracy in which people’s vote is the only source of power, its gestures were romantic to ethnic nationalists unlike decades old rigid approach by other Ethiopianist groups. Some key figures including its chairman being “non Amhara’ was also a stab for the old notion of  Amhara hiding in the name Ethiopia. The movement quickly became the most active and powerful in the Ethiopianist camp. Then, the Melles Zenawi regime officially or legally labelled the movement as a terrorist group along with OLF and ONLF. Until the formation of Ginbot Seven, no rebel or opposition was ever labelled as a terrorist group by the Ethiopian parliament. The group’s approach of balancing regional ethnic politics and center Ethiopian politics, attractive for many seriously concerned about democratizing Ethiopia, made it a target by the deceased dictator Melles Zenawi.

The group’s leader Berhanu Nega, who owes the reactivation of his political life to the Oromo political prisoners he met in 2001, somehow endorsed the existing federal structure which was a very sensitive topic for Oromo nationalists and echoed his long standing opinion of introducing Afaan Oromo as federal language in a 2013 TV appearance on ESAT.  This approach has systematically worked over the years. It has influenced Oromo politics from behind.

Intellectual God fathers of Oromo nationalism and founding leaders of the Oromo liberation front formed the Oromo Democratic front in 2013. Leenco lata for long has held this pro-Ethiopia view since the 90s. But the formation of ODF was a breakthrough. Leenco as an individual played significant role by denouncing outdated leftist politics. He has publicly said “lets move on, lets democratize the federation”.  In a 2015 interview with ESAT, Leenco lata spoke about his unsuccessful travel to Addis Ababa and their plan to form a national party ( Ethiopia democratic front) not a regional group before they formed ODF. But things were not suitable for them. Before the formation ODF, Although emotional and unseccessful, General Kemal Gelchu and General Hailu Gonfa seceded from Dawud Ibsa for an Ethiopianist OLF in 2008.

Things have slowly developed to the formation of Ethiopia national movement. The movement equally uses both afaan Oromo and Amharic in its public communications. Language is the key factor in Ethiopian politics. As Ali Birra sang Afaan Oromo hundee Oromo, making Afaan oromo a nationally  used language is very important to even a stronger unity of the country. Brave and necessary steps taken to promote the language by Ethiopianist groups like Patriotic Ginbot 7 has transformed the country’s politics. The maturity of both camps, the Oromo nationalist and the Ethiopianist is a big hope for the democratization and betterment of the nation.

Another event to mention, last year, the Ogaden national liberation front had signed a memorandum of understanding with Patriotic Ginbot 7. it was of course part of the process. the front has not yet joined the Ethiopian national movement or even was reported to negotiate with the regime in Addis Ababa a month ago. But  its assumed that the group is still on the pro-Ethiopia radar and seems to have no choice. Peoples alliance for freedom and democracy (PAFD) in which the ONLF is a member remains as another player but its been denied access to media by Oromo media activists. Plus Its approach is very outdated and seems to have been dominated by other modern Oromo voices.  So without a strong Oromo presence, PAFD is almost obsolete. Our understanding is it will eventually join the new movement.

With this all development, The ruling elite is forced to pondering the dissolution of the ethnic coalition. We don’t for sure know if it will really happen or if OPDO accepts this approach. But in general Ethiopian politics is moving to the center. The latest announcement from EPRDF is part of that. The front is due to discuss this in august. Its almost half a year before that. Given the dramatic events of the last two months, six months mean too much. So we’ll see what these six months hold for the country’s politics.

Betemariam Hailu is an Ethiopian journalist and media personality. He can be reached @betehailu on twitter

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ESAT Menalesh Meti, Journalist Elsa Yemenu

Joy back home as Ethiopian side eliminates Zamalek from CAF Confed. Cup

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Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban

Egypt and African football giant Zamalek have been knocked out of the Confederations Cup competition by an Ethiopian side, Wolaitta Dicha.

The Ethiopian side playing for the first time in the CAF club competition are into the second qualifying round after dismissing Zamalek via penalties over the weekend.

The local news portal, Soccer Ethiopia, described the victory as ‘the biggest upset of the first round.’ Wolaitta beat Zamalek 2 – 1 in the first leg before the Egyptians won by a similar margin in the second-leg forcing a shootout.

In the end, Wolaitta won by 4 – 3 to progress. A feat the country’s football federation chief described as a ‘historic victory.’

“Wolaitta Dicha beat the Egyptian giants Zamalek 4-3 on penalties to progress to the next round in CAFConfederation Cup. Congratulations on this historic victory! We’re proud!” Juneidi Basha wrote on Twitter.

Even as the players celebrated in faraway Egypt, back home in the town of Hawassa in southern Ethiopia, fans thronged the streets in jubilation.

 

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You are TPLF, and not Eritrean Opposition

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By Amanuel Biedemariam

Between 1998-2000, over 80,000 Eritreans were forcibly evicted from their homes and deported from Ethiopia by Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) in the most horrible ways. Children, elderly, and the very sick were forced to travel hundreds of kilometers via treacherous routs to be thrown away on the hottest parts of the world only because the minority regime from Tigray decided to teach Eritreans. The late genocidal tyrant Meles Zenawi said,

“If we say ‘go, because we don’t like the color of your eyes,’ they have to leave.”

TPLF then confiscated the properties and gave it to Tigrayans. Ethiopians who lived side by side with the deported Eritreans were shaken and in disbelief. It was a sudden shock that felt like death because these were friends for-life that respected one another and raised their families as one. The idea of ethnic cleansing was unprecedented, and many came to the aid of Eritreans and tried to help them any way they can.

The Tigrayans minority regime was vicious in its attempt to destroy Eritrea. In 30 years of struggle Eritrea lost nearly 70,000 martyrs. During the war with the TPLF however, over 20,000 Eritrean youth died to defend hard won independence. They displaced hundreds of thousands of Eritreans and pushed them out of their fertile farm land. They then littered the farms with landmines which in turn took many lives.

The TPLF’s aim is to destroy everything Eritrea. They dream, plan, strategize to annihilate Eritrea every second of their life. TPLF believes, Eritrea must be destroyed so they can dominate the region. No two ways about it. Nothing is off the table when it comes to Eritrea. If given a chance, and as evidenced by the past 20 years, Tigray People’s Liberation Front planned to destroy Eritrea from its roots. They planned for genocide or in the least, Eritrea becomes another Palestine.

To that end, they waged wars, tried to isolate Eritrea by collaborating with Sudan, Yemen and others. They displaced millions of Eritreans from their homes, tried to lure the youth to flee Eritrea so that Eritrea is left without her productive youth. TPLF campaigned to sanction Eritrea and worked hard to keep Eritrea in continuous state of war by occupying sovereign Eritrean territories. They tried to sabotage Eritrean currency, worked hard to stop remittances and attempted to stop mining companies from doing business in Eritrea.

TPLF’s campaigns against Eritrea is robust internationally. It is actively engaged in campaigns to vilify, destroy the image and history of Eritrea. It works with corrupt Eritreans that claim to be opposition and targets Eritreans in the Diaspora. TPLF pays large sums of money to infiltrate Eritrean communities, create discord along ethnic, religious and regional lines.

The TPLF is knocking on every aspect of Eritrean way of life to weaken and tear it apart. They are in universities reaching out to Eritrean youth to weaken their mindset with falsities. TPLF is recruiting Eritrean musicians and enticing them with money to work and sing against their government and sing for the agendas designed to weaken Eritrean nationalism.

Simply put, the resources the TPLF invests to bring Eritrea to its knees is in the billions. It is the largest and longest campaign waged against any group of people in the history of Africa. If the TPLF succeeded, Eritreans would have had to flee or assume other identities to survive. Because TPLF is amongst the deadliest regimes the world has ever seen. Moyale, the crimes against humanity in Gambela, and the genocides in Ogaden would pale in comparison had the TPLF finalized its wishes against Eritrea.

Their inferiority complex, willingness to serve as mercenaries against people of the region, their hegemonic ambitions, and jealousy against the people of Eritrea has lead them to a dark place. They must have believed, stripping Eritrea’s strength would make them stronger. They wanted to take the power from Eritrea, so they can be powerful.

However, and because of the strength and resilience of Eritrea, the TPLF is in shambles, losing grip and getting hit on many fronts in a manner it cannot overcome. All the international institutions it manipulated (UN, EU), regional and international bodies it exploited (IGAD, AU), money it earned in peacekeeping missions (AMISOM) and international agendas it exploited are no longer enough to sustain it. TPLF received half a billion dollars in one week in February of 2018. That money was stripped clean in a matter of days when the people of Ethiopia decided to shut down the country by stopping the free flow of goods and gas throughout the country. TPLF is bankrupt due to loss of earning from agro-industries in Oromia, Gambela and the imprisonment of Al Amoudi has also added to the financial crisis. The economy of Ethiopia is non-existent rocked by nonstop uprising.

Europe and North America are forced to reevaluate and change their asylum acceptance approaches in large part because Eritrea managed to skillfully turn the geopolitical developments to her advantage.

The Death of the Anti-Eritrea Camp

This is death sentence to the anti-Eritrean camp that operated as Eritrean opposition. They are anti Eritrea because they stand against everything Eritrea stands for.

They have no power, so they must saddle on TPLF’s back to march to Eritrea. They have no principled stands as their causes are based on regional, ethnic and religious issues motivated by self-aggrandizement, opportunism and attention. They are liars that sold their nation and people selfishly. They have stood on the way of development. They have tried to disrupt and create disharmony on behalf of TPLF and foreign agents.

They are members of the former Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF) that never recognized Eritrean independence because it was won by EPLF. These mindless losers and cowards (those who work with TPLF) want to be cuddled to power by the hands of enemy. They are disgruntled members of the EPLF that betrayed their nation like Haile Menkerious. Or, like Dr.Bereket Habteselassie with identity crisis that finally admitted he is Ethiopian. These are personalities comfortable with the idea of Eritreans suffering, and working with the TPLF to be hoisted to power on the backs of Tigrayans.

Well, now, that agents of TPLF-Tigrayans are clamoring to make peace with Eritrea, where is it going to leave the sellouts? In the dust bins of history. The minority regime will have no problem discarding them to appease Eritrea not because of love to Eritrea but that is what they do. Betray. Eritrea gave TPLF life and propelled them to power. And how did they repay Eritrea?

You are TPLF, not Eritrean Opposition

At this point, any Eritrean that collaborates with the TPLF is not only enemy of Eritrea, they are in effect enemies of the people of Ethiopia as well. And no matter what they claim to be they are not Eritrean opposition they are TPLF.

The people of Eritrea in the diaspora are kind and forgiving to a fault. Eritreans find it easier to find reasons to look the other way. However, at this point, no two ways about it; you are either with us or against us.

At this point, it is irresponsible to do business with the TPLF in Ethiopia or anywhere. There is absolutely no justification for it. Therefore, those who work with the TPLF against Eritrea today, must realize they are also working against the millions of Ethiopians suffering in the hands of a brutal genocidal regime. Hence, if one is compelled to do business with TPLF based on a narrow self-interest, they are TPLF. At a time when Ethiopians are boycotting the regime’s businesses, urging people from sending money to Ethiopia and succeeding; any Eritrean that engages in business activities in Ethiopia to enrich themselves at the expense of everyone else is a crime. That is blood money.

Thousands of Eritreans lost billions after they were forced out of their homes and pursued legal means to regain their properties, businesses and money using international laws. It is, therefore, shamelessness of the highest kind to betray your people at a time of war. It is cowardice and ultimate sign of greed to go behind fellow Eritreans to regain your property simply because you can afford a plane ticket to Addis and by kowtowing to those who humiliated your families in the worst possible ways. Therefore, you are no different than the Tigrayans that took over Eritrean businesses. YOU ARE TPLF!!!

This shows that these people are dumb, unable to see the future, careless and above all they underestimated the Eritrean resolve. They most certainly did not see this day coming. And of course, when one does business with the TPLF, they are betting on the TPLF. One must believe the TPLF will prevail. As the fool hearty Dr. Tekeste Asefaw said, PM Hailemariam Desalegn promised me, Ethiopia will not harm Eritreans. Like most, he believed the TPLF will unseat the GoE and place him on the throne. But one thing those who work to overthrow the government of Eritrea in collaboration with TPLF or other countries forget is that they are agents that serve at the mercy of these countries as mercenaries.

For example: On February 12, 2018 Gedab News released an article about the reappointment of Major General Salah “Gosh” Abdulla as chief of the National Intelligence and Security Services (NISS) of Sudan. This is not the first time Gosh served as security chief. He held the position from 2004-2009. According to Gedab (Kezab),

“Since he became the chief of the NISS in 2004, Salah Gosh has been a staunch supporter of the Eritrean opposition. But once Sudan’s trouble with the ICC started, president Isaias Afwerki of Eritrea who hosted the Sudanese opposition parties, intensified his pressure on Sudan to gain security and economic concessions. Thus, in 2008, the Sudanese government terminated its support of the Eritrean opposition forces that it systematically pushed to the laps of the Ethiopian government.”

This is false and outright lie. The government of Sudan signed the Eastern Sudan Peace Agreement in Asmara in 2006. That essentially stopped all hostile actions against Eritrea. After Omer Bashir’s indictment by the ICC, Eritrea was the first country that extended hands to Bashir in 2008. Abdulla “Gosh” was ousted from his post a year later.

The above quote demonstrates Awatista’s false hope that sympathetic Gosh may reopen doors and inability to learn from history. This shows how the pathetic-parasites rely on enemies of Eritrea to do their bidding. They are unprincipled, powerless and shameless servants of enemies. They are short-sighted and too dumb to realize that the people of Ethiopia will destroy the TPLF soon and what happened in Sudan will also happen in Ethiopia and they will be left with no place to go.

Salih Ghadi, Salih Younis and co have been crying to no avail. Everything they have done failed and out of frustration, on a piece, “Eritrean Opposition Faces an Imminent Ultimatum,” February 14, 2018 they penned,

“Since its formation in Hawassa in November 2011, the Eritrean National Council for Democratic Change (ENCDC) has been in a coma with no signs of waking up, though not yet declared dead. Many frustrated members and supporters of the ENCDC have all but formally withdrawn their enthusiastic allegiance.” Emphasis added. Folks, it is impossible to make this up. It continued,

“Notably, many opposition elements accuse the Ethiopian handlers of heavy-handedness and unwarranted interference in the Eritrean opposition affairs. They claim that they are more interested in their narrow future regional interests at the expense of the Eritrean cause. Ethiopia provides varying support to different Eritrean organizations, but most of the support it provides is token funds to cover sundry expenses and free office space and bearing the cost of the many meetings. An activist from England asked, what good is an office if not a single tangible contribution to the struggle against the PFDJ cannot be presented?” Emphasis added.

The Awate extremists admitted unwittingly that they work for TPLF’s agenda. There is nothing worse for anyone who claims to be Eritrean to depend on stipends from TPLF in the name of Eritrea, the land of SELF RELIANCE!

Ironically, in the backdrop, Tigrayans are trying to reconcile with Eritreans. The internet is full of campaigns advocating peace between the people of Eritrea and Tigray. As if nothing happened over the last twenty years, Tigrayans are saying, we want to make peace with Eritreans. They say, “even if Badme is Tigray we must hand it over for the sake of peace. We are brothers. We all speak the same language,” and on and on.

Of course, the people of Eritrea know what is going on. For clarification, Badme is Eritrean and not Tigray’s to give. The people of Eritrea have been working with all Ethiopians in all parts of Ethiopia and, Tigray alone cannot speak on their behalf. In other words, the people of Ethiopia and Eritrea are collectively working together to clean the region from the vermin that is the TPLF. Furthermore, Eritrea is comprised of Nine Nationalities, Tigre, Tigrigna, Saho, Rashaida, Nara, Kunama, Hidareb, Bilen and Afar. Eritrea is one.

So, the Game is over for those that enticed Eritrean youth to flee from their homes into life of uncertainty to the desert, open-seas and death. Game over for those that harassed Eritreans in the diaspora. Game over to those that defamed, vilified and denigrated the image of Eritrea. Game over for those that collaborated with the TPLF to harm Eritrea. Game over for those that tried to divide our communities in the diaspora.

Conclusion

Anyone dumb enough to betray the people of Eritrea, and dumb enough to cuddle in the bosoms of genocidal tyrants of the TPLF is not worthy to be called ERITREAN. Anyone who pursued his or her agenda, in collaboration, with means and ways provided by the TPLF directly or indirectly is TPLF and does not deserve to be called Eritrean. Anyone from the diaspora who travelled to Ethiopia for self-benefit and, or, anyone who collaborated and benefited from TPLF in the diaspora does not deserve to be called Eritrean. It is GAME OVER, you lost. Your gamble did not pay off.

And those Tigrayans who pretend to be Eritreans please wake up. You will soon realize that you are exposing yourself because people know who you are and how you got here.

3/19/2018

The post You are TPLF, and not Eritrean Opposition appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

COMMEMORATION OF YEKATIT 12 MARTYRS DAY

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The Global Alliance for Justice – The Ethiopian Cause expresses its appreciation to all those who arranged and participated in the global commemoration of the 81st anniversary of the Yekatit 12 Martyrs Day in 2018.

On the basis of the information we have received so far, the event has been commemorated in the following countries and cities:

Ethiopia: Addis Ababa, Gonder, and Debre Libanos Monastery;

Italy: Rome and Belluno;

USA: Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Miami, New York, Washington, DC, San Jose and Tampa;

Israel: Jerusalem;

U.K: Coventry and London;

Canada: Vancouver and Toronto;

Germany: Munich, Berlin, Frankfurt and Nuremburg;

South Africa: Pretoria;

Zimbabwe.

The event was commemorated in the form of prayers, meetings or, as undertaken in Washington, DC and Vancouver, through peaceful rallies.

Yekatit 12 is commemorated due to the massacre of 30,000 Ethiopians during February 19-21, 1937 by the Italian Fascists with the implicit support of the Vatican. In addition, one million Ethiopians were massacred during the Italian invasion (1935-41) as well as the destruction of 2,000 churches, 525,000 homes and 14 million animals. Vast quantities of Ethiopian properties were also looted. As if all these were not enough, a mausoleum was installed recently for Rodolfo Graziani who is otherwise known as “the butcher of Ethiopia”.

The Global Alliance for Justice – The Ethiopian Cause is campaigning for the achievement of justice for Ethiopia. Its objectives are Italy’s adequate compensation to the Ethiopian people in the form of useful projects; the restitution of the looted Ethiopian properties; the United Nations to recognize the Fascist Italian war crimes in Ethiopia; a Vatican apology to the Ethiopian people for its complicity with the Fascists, and the removal of the Graziani mausoleum.

Thanks to the Almighty, an Italian court has recently sentenced those responsible for the Graziani mausoleum to imprisonments and financial penalties. Italians have also commemorated the Yekatit 12 Martyrs Day in Rome and Belluno.

Among the ones who deserve appreciation for their support to the cause of justice and a continued anti-Fascist struggle are the following:

The Italian Court that has rendered a just verdict on those responsible for the

mausoleum for the criminal, Rodolfo Graziani;

H.E. Mr. Nichola Zingaretti, the Governor of Lazio Province, Italy, and the Provincial

Council;

ANPI (The National Association of Italian Partisans);

FARI (Federazione Assemblee Rastafari in Italy);

The Ethiopian Community in Rome;

Mr. Carmelo Crescenti;

Mr. Valerio Ciriaci, producer of the documentary film: “If Only I Were That Warrior”;

Mr. Ian Campbell, author of “The Addis Ababa Massacre”.

May God help Ethiopia to obtain the justice that it deserves.

 

 

 

The post COMMEMORATION OF YEKATIT 12 MARTYRS DAY appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

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