Quantcast
Channel: , Author at Satenaw: Ethiopian News | Breaking News: Your right to know!
Viewing all 8076 articles
Browse latest View live

Some Jews are more equal than others: Israel refuses to let Ethiopian Jews in

$
0
0

Ethiopian Jews worshipping in Jerusalem. (Photo by Marc Israel Sellem/Jerusalem Post)

By Brecht Jonkers

DAMASCUS, SYRIA (07:15 PM) – Controversy has arisen in Israel, as the upcoming cabinet meeting of the Tel Aviv regime that is planned for Thursday seems yet again to have no mention of any permission being given for migration of Ethiopian Jews.

According to a report by Jerusalem Post in late December, thousands of Jews from Ethiopia have requested for the so-called aliya, or “return to Israel”: a long-standing Israeli policy that normally allows each and every Jew to settle freely on soil under control of the Israeli regime.

Representatives from the office of Prime Minister Benjanmin Netanyahu stated that there can only be a resolution allowing continued migration of Ethiopian Jews if the Interior Ministry greenlights it, and if the Ministry of Finance can allocate the necessary funds to maintain the influx of immigrants. In total, 1,308 Ethiopians have migrated to Israel in 2017, which is far below the 9,000 that were originally planned to be allowed in by 2020.

“In the history of the State of Israel, there has never been a budgetary limit on aliya,” said Shelly Yacimovich of the liberal Zionist Union party, who claims the decision by Tel Aviv to obstruct Ethiopian migration are caused by racism.

“If the immigrants who waited in Gondar and Addis Ababa were blond, they would be accepted with open arms, as is the case with tens of thousands of white immigrants every year,” she continued.

According to Amos Arbel of the Interior Ministry’s Population Registry, the issue is further complicated by the fact that under Israeli law, most of the current applicants cannot apply for the “Law of Return”, and instead can only enter the area under the more strict “Law of Entry” regulations.

The issue is that many of the Ethiopian applicants are so-called Falash Mura: descendants of Jews in the Beta Israel region (Ethiopia and Eritrea), whose ancestors converted to Christianity in the 19th and 20th century. The mere fact that their ancestors once converted, makes the Falash Mura non-Jews in the eyes of Israeli law even if they have reconverted to Judaism, and as such they can only enter the country as non-Jewish immigrants. By contrast, anyone with at least one Jewish grandparent can immediately receive citizenship in Israel, even if not a practicing Jew himself.

Although the Falash Mura can upon entry into Israel receive full citizenship if they go through an official reconversion to Judaism, the Israeli government has been making it increasingly difficult for other Ethiopians to enter the country. This has led to many families being torn apart between Israel and their Ethiopian homeland, with many thousands of Ethiopian Jews in Israel having been waiting for family reunification for sometimes more than ten years.

The post Some Jews are more equal than others: Israel refuses to let Ethiopian Jews in appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.


Heavy fighting Broke Out Between ONLA and Ethiopian Regime Soldiers in Jaleelo Village in Shillabo District

$
0
0

 Ogaden News Agency 

The latest news from the Ogaden reports that there has been clashes between Ogaden National Liberation Army and the Ethiopian regime’s army in Jaleelo village in Shillabo district yesterday on the 8th of January.

A senior member of the Ogaden National Liberation Army confirmed today to Ogaden news agency (ONA ) that fierce fighting took place between ONLA and Ethiopian soldiers.

The ONLA has killed many soldiers and wounded unknown numbers of government troops.

The report also added that The ONLA has captured weapons, ammunition and communication equipment.

Stay tuned for further news from Ogaden News Agency in Ogaden.

The post Heavy fighting Broke Out Between ONLA and Ethiopian Regime Soldiers in Jaleelo Village in Shillabo District appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

South Sudanese Army General arrested by Ethiopian authorities

$
0
0


First Vice President Taban Deng

ESAT News (January 9, 2018)

A South Sudanese general allied to the country’s First Vice President Taban Deng Gai was arrested by Ethiopian authorities after he entered Ethiopia illegally, a senior official loyal to Taban Deng said.

David Dang Kong, head of the SPLM-IO office for peace and reconciliation in Ethiopia, told Radio Tamazuj today that Brigadier General Mun Gach Thoch was arrested at Tharpam Refugee Camp by Ethiopian police after crossing the border town of Pagak to neighboring Ethiopia without proper papers in October 2017.

 

He pointed out that the South Sudanese army general is being held for nearly three months in Gambella region.

“Mun crossed to Ethiopia to visit his relatives. The Ethiopian government said the general crossed the border without permission,” he said

“Also, I heard that Brigadier General does not have legal documents, and the Administration for Refugees Affairs (ARA) does not allow government officials to visit the refugees who are living in the camp,” he added.

The post South Sudanese Army General arrested by Ethiopian authorities appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Video Interview with the Grandchildren of Ethiopian Gallant Patriot Belay Zelake

The Untimely Death of an Exiled Ethiopian Journalist

$
0
0


Ibrahim Shafi. Photo shared on Twitter by Abiye Teklemariam Megenta.

Written byEndalk

In one of his last public comments, Ethiopian journalist Ibrahim Shafi wrote on his Facebook page: “Wake me up when I have a state.”

Not two weeks later, Shafi died in Nairobi, Kenya. His comment shed light on the deep personal toll of Ethiopia’s enduring political crisis that has swept the country over the last three years that sent Ibrahim into exile.

Ibrahim had worked as journalist covering sports and politics for nearly a decade, until he he no choice but to flee in 2014. Ibrahim, who was 40 at the time of his death, was not alone. He left for Nairobi, Kenya in June 2014, on a path taken by hundreds of Ethiopian journalists over the last twenty years.

According to data from Committee to Protect Journalists, Ethiopia’s government has driven more journalists out of the country than any other nation in Africa.

Ethiopian journalists most often flee their country because they fear imprisonment and violence. In the lead-up to Ethiopia’s 2015 elections, the ruling party, the Ethiopian Peoples’ Democratic Revolutionary Front (EPRDF) have arrested and charged journalists and bloggers with terrorism offenses, sometimes over their writing, or even their posts on Facebook or Twitter. They can also face extrajudicial threats and torture.

For Ibrahim, such threats were familiar. Nearly ten years before departing from his homeland, he was arrested and beaten by the police during the 2005 Ethiopian post-election violence. His friends say that the police tortured him so brutally that they left one of his legs permanently damaged.

Ibrahim Shafi. Photo of Addis Ababa University Political Science and International Relations departments graduates.

Before moving to Kenya, Ibrahim had lived several creative lives in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia’s capital, where he was born in September 1977. After graduating from Addis Ababa University’s Department of Political Sciences in 2001, he taught civic education to high school students, and was revered by his students for his hard work and dedication.

He also earned a reputation as a respected and rising independent journalist. He was a deputy editor-in-chief in one of Ethiopia’s major sports newspapers that made him a critical voice in Ethiopian sports journalism. He was a star on the fast-growing sports talk radio shows in Addis Ababa. Alongside his successful career as a sports journalist, he was a columnist for Addis Guday, the now-defunct weekly news magazine. He later served there as deputy editor-in-chief.

In Nairobi, Ibrahim joined countless other Ethiopians who’ve been forced to leave their homelands, fleeing political persecution.

While exile can be a source of pain on its own, Ethiopian government is known to make things even more difficult by sending covert intelligence agents to silence members of Ethiopian exiled dissident groups.

Despite these difficulties, Ibrahim made it clear that he was incapable of staying quiet. He remained connected to a life in Ethiopia that at times must have seemed distant. He shared his frustrations and his joys on his Facebook page.

On January 3, 2018, two weeks after writing his prophetic remark on Facebook, Ibrahim Shafi passed away in Nairobi, Kenya. The cause of his death has not been made public, but his close friends in Kenya said that living in exile had taken a toll on his physical well-being. Some have suggested that the injuries he suffered at the hands of Ethiopian police may have contributed to his death.

At the time of his passing, Ibrahim had recently concluded the long and grueling vetting process to be resettled as a refugee in the United States, only to be cancelled by the Trump administration, and making his untimely death even more tragic.

A small corner of the Ethiopian internet has been buzzing over Ibrahim’s passing since last week, and he became a trending topic locally. Many across the country who knew Ibrahim reacted to the news of his passing and fellow exiled journalists offered their condolences.

It’s heart-wrenching to learn the death of my beloved friend, Ibrahim Shafi. I’ll miss his energy, love for disputation, wit, playful mischief making, warmth, & disdain for autocracy. His reward for having conscience in a country that criminalises it was torture & death in exile.

Journalist and former Committee to Protect Journalists staff member Tom Rhoades wrote:

It is with a heavy heart that I learn my friend Ibrahim Shafi from Ethiopia has passed away. Last time I saw him was a couple years ago at my house…we had a small party…no clue what we were celebrating. My final memories of Ibrahim were jovial –but I knew he and many other Ethiopian journalists in exile were experiencing huge challenges. The lack of work / opportunities, the constant harassment from local police and fear of Ethiopian security –many colleagues that I knew via email whose projects and words suggested a vibrant, active life grew listless and disconsolate while in exile. The journalist I would meet from Addis, forced to flee a hypersensitive oligarchy, would appear very different from the correspondences we previously shared from their home. I daresay colleagues told me Shafi was struggling here and I kept telling myself that “I must catch up with this guy”. Now it’s too late. If only I had done more. R.I.P. Ibrahim Shafi Ahmed. You are greatly missed..

Prominent sports journalist Mensur Abdulkeni wrote on his Facebook page:

Words fall short of expressing my sorrow for your loss! Those hard days we shared together will never be forgotten. Goodbye the humble one, my beloved colleague and friend! Rest in peace Ibro!

An online memorial fund created at GoFundMe raised more than USD $10,000 in a few days for Ibrahim’s mother, who remains in Addis Ababa.

Written byEndalk

The post The Untimely Death of an Exiled Ethiopian Journalist appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Abebe Kassie, a Brave Ethiopian and a Victim of a TPLF Terror House

$
0
0

Ethiopia NY NJ Gibrehail

(Note: Ethiopia is a current member of Human Rights Council of the United Nations)

Below is a translation based on a letter obtained from one brave Ethiopian among many victims who have fallen into the hands of the terrorist regime of the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) currently ruling Ethiopia.

My name is Abebe Kassie, I am a forty-one-year-old from Armachoho Woereda in Northern Gonder. I am currently in Kilinto prison in the Akaki area.

I was imprisoned by the TPLF on the 20th of January 2014, and I was immediately taken to Maekelawi prison, located in Addis Ababa, the capital city of Ethiopia. For most of the five months I spent in Maekelawi (four months and twenty-five days) I was kept in solitary confinement in a dark and a very cold room.

Here are some of the things that were done to me by TPLF cadres at the notorious Maekelawi prison:

  1. All my fingernails and toenails were completely extracted. The pain was extremely unbearable. However, I was repeatedly injected with anesthesia, and there were times when I did not even feel what was done to me until I woke up the next day.
  2. They tied up my hands and legs and left me standing up for hours and hours in a very cold room, and then they threw me like a garbage bag into a very dark and insect infested hole and left me there for a long time.
  3. They kept me upside down for a long time until I lost my consciousness.
  4. I have been left tied to a chair for an extended period of time.
  5. Some of the interrogators are women, and I have seen them smoke something which I think is a drug to make them lose their feelings of humanity. They kept me naked and they also undressed themselves. There are some things they did to me that I will never speak of due to my culture and tradition.
  6. Those women would at times tie my hands up and then tie a string holding a bottle of water onto my testicles. Then they would kick the bottle, generating an excruciating pain.

 

Because of what those women did to me, I am unable to control my urine and I do not think I will ever be able to have sexual intercourse.  I believe my god given reproducing ability was taken from me.

The TPLF interrogators were doing all of the above to force me to tell them of others who work with me and to get secrets that they think I have on an opposition group called Ginbot-7. They also wanted to force me to tell them where I was trained.

Once they were done with me at Maekelawi, they transferred me to Kilinto. At Kilinto they warned other prisoners not to get close to me.  Due to the extreme torture I endured, I was unable to walk on my own, which forced me to use a stick to help me walk, but they even took that stick away from me.

At Kilinto, I was given a sleeping place right next to a bathroom with strong smell of urine and feces. The stench was unbearable, and as a result I did ask to be moved away from the bathroom, but I was told that even that was too good a place for me.

At one point, I couldn’t move at all and some of the younger cadres decided to take me to a hospital.  As they were taking me to the hospital, they were telling me that they were doing me a big favor, as they think I deserve to die. There were times when they intentionally put me in a cell where I was sexually assaulted by men.

They did all these things as revenge, and they did their best to negatively affect my mental health. Most of the prisoners are going through similar punishment. However, we are still strong, and we will not give up.

 

I suffered because I stood up for Ethiopian unity, I suffered because I demanded for equal rights in my own country. I want my Ethiopian brothers and sisters to know that I was ready to sacrifice myself when I joined the struggle. Sadly, this happened to be my destiny.

Translated from Amharic by: NY/NJ Ethiopians Task Force (www.ethionynj.com)

The united Nations convention on human rights refers to article 5 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, both of which provide that no one shall be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment.

The fact that such a tortures regime in Ethiopian serves as a member of the Human Rights Council of The United Nations raises a question as to whether the united nations seriously cares about human rights in third world countries like Ethiopia.

 

 

 

The post Abebe Kassie, a Brave Ethiopian and a Victim of a TPLF Terror House appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Why did Ethiopia decide to release political prisoners?

$
0
0

Ethiopia’s PM Hailemariam Desalegn has announced plans to drop charges against political prisoners and close a notorious prison camp [Michael Tewelde/AP]

by Thembisa Fakude

Earlier this month, Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn announced plans to release political prisoners in a surprise move the government says aims to “foster national reconciliation”. The prime minister also declared that the government would close the Maekelawi detention facility in Addis Ababa, which has been considered “one of the country’s most notorious police stations” since its construction in the 1970’s.

While the international community welcomed the government’s unexpected announcement as a step in the right direction, many in Ethiopia, especially civil society and political organisations, took the news with a grain of salt.

The obvious question many are asking is: What is in it for the government and why now?

Perhaps the answer partially lies in the fact that Ethiopia is host to a very important African powerhouse – the African Union (AU). The AU has long been trying to disentangle itself from Africa’s poor human rights record, including systematic suppression of basic rights and detention without trial of political prisoners.

Ethiopia is currently seen as an impediment to these ambitions. Over the years, the Ethiopian government has repeatedly failed to deliver basic services to its citizens and protect their fundamental human rights and freedoms.

In this context, it is understandable for the Ethiopian government to try and live up to its responsibilities as a founding member of the AU, by promising to release thousands of political prisoners.

But there is certainly more to this recent announcement than an honest desire to please the AU and improve the country’s human rights record.

An attempt to curb foreign interference

In the past few decades, the Ethiopian government has marginalised several ethnic groups by allowing a single ethnic group, Tigrayans, to dominate the political sphere. This has resulted in deep-seated, widespread dissatisfaction with the political establishment, and has caused occasional flare-ups of protest.

The government, rather than starting a dialogue with these marginalised communities, tried to suppress dissent by force. According to Amnesty International, the government of Ethiopia has engaged in a “crackdown on the political opposition which has resulted in mass arbitrary arrests, torture and other ill-treatment, unfair trials and violations of the rights to freedom of expression and association”.

This has led to a number of armed groups forming and waging war against the government of Ethiopia.

The most prominent among these groups is the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF). Since 1984, the ONLF has been fighting for an independent homeland for ethnic Somalis in the region known as Ogaden, in eastern Ethiopia.

Another one of these groups is the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), which was established in 1973 to promote self-determination for the Oromo people. The Oromo people are the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, however, their economic and political participation remains minuscule.

Over the years, both organisations have managed to establish support beyond the borders of Ethiopia.

The Ethiopian government has repeatedly accused neighbouring Eritrea of supporting the ONLF, and Somalia of providing equipment as well as moral and organisational support to armed groups in the Ogaden region.

This foreign interference has damaged the national cohesion in Ethiopia and hindered the government’s efforts to improve the economic, social and political conditions in the country.

By promising to release political prisoners, many of whom have been imprisoned for their alleged support for these organisations, the government of Ethiopia is extending an olive branch to the country’s marginalised communities.

This gesture of goodwill may lead to an easing of tensions and give the government an opportunity to concentrate its resources on Ethiopia’s new economic and political interests in the region.

A possible truce with the ONLF and the OLF will serve to counter any attempts by the governments of Eritrea and Somalia to intervene in Ethiopia’s domestic politics. By positioning itself to start direct political negotiations with these groups, Addis Ababa will finally have a chance to derail efforts by its neighbours to create conflict within the borders of Ethiopia.

A mega dam project 

Another reason behind Ethiopia’s sudden decision to release political prisoners may be its determination to complete an ambitious construction project, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, without hindrance.

The Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, formerly known as the Millennium Dam, is a gravity dam on the Blue Nile River in Ethiopia that has been under construction since 2011. It is in the Benishangul-Gumuz Region of Ethiopia, about 15 km east of the border with Sudan.

The dam will be the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa when completed, and the seventh largest in the world. It is expected to solve Ethiopia’s ongoing energy crisis and help the country expedite its development.

Ethiopia needs to ensure that the construction of the dam is completed without any disturbances. It is therefore in the interest of the country – and its main investor, China – to make truce with the ONLF and OLF at this time.

Also, the dam project may ignite another confrontation between Egypt and Ethiopia in the coming days. Egypt has long been at odds with Ethiopia over the $4.8bn megaproject, with Cairo fearing that the dam’s position may affect its access to water from the Nile River basin, which will feed the dam. Therefore, as Ethiopia prepares itself for the completion of this monumental project, it is forced to re-evaluate threats and priorities.

Addis Ababa’s sudden decision to release political prisoners is not only a necessary move aiming to fix the country’s human rights record, but also an important chapter in a complex political strategy. Ethiopia is prepared to make truce with its internal dissenters in a bid to end foreign interference in the country’s domestic affairs, and ensure the swift completion and smooth operation of the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.

What's fuelling protests in Ethiopia?


ABOUT THE AUTHOR

The post Why did Ethiopia decide to release political prisoners? appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia: Ancient churches, mysterious towers and Lucy

$
0
0

Marcus Eliason, Associated Press

FILE – This Oct. 16, 2017, file photo, shows one of the 12th century churches carved from stone in Lalibela, Ethiopia. The architectural marvels are one of the country’s most magical attractions, miracles of … more

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Ethiopia has always held me in thrall. It is a cradle of prehistoric humankind. It embraced Christianity long before the missionaries arrived. Its people carved subterranean churches out of solid rock and built mysterious towers of stone.

The country’s mythology included serving as keepers of the Ark of the Covenant (the legendary chest containing the Ten Commandments) and the biblical story of King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba. And in the modern era it was the only African nation to repel a European colonial invasion (by Italy in 1896).

I was born and raised in Africa but had never visited Ethiopia. The chance came last fall when my wife Eva and I were in Israel, a mere 4 1/2 -hours by air from Addis Ababa. Ethiopian Airlines flew us, arranged all-inclusive tours, and for six days, by plane or car, we toured the north of the country from the source of the Blue Nile to the stone obelisks of the vanished empire of Axum.

After our first night in Addis Ababa, the huge and crowded capital, we flew to Bahir Dar, a pleasant town on the shore of Lake Tana, and were driven south to see the Blue Nile, a tributary of the Nile River. It had rained overnight, and the trip was a slow and slithery affair on an unpaved road. Then we hiked for about a mile through bright green fields, across a wobbly wooden footbridge, and through patches of shoe-swallowing mud. We encountered women herding cattle and a man working his small plot with a plow harnessed to a bull.

Then the sun shone and we were looking at a wall of white water thundering over a cliff: the Blue Nile at its first great cataract on a journey to Khartoum in neighboring Sudan to merge into the White Nile and continue north to the Mediterranean.

Back in Bahir Dar, we traveled by boat across Lake Tana, one of the largest lakes in Africa. Its islands are dotted with monasteries and churches, one of them a circular chapel with a richly thatched roof. The ecclesiastical art on the inner walls was exuberantly colorful, but my own favorite touch was a boulder suspended from a tree branch which, when struck, sounded like a gong, summoning the faithful to prayer.

Next morning, after waking to a sunrise that streaked Lake Tana in gold, we set out on a three-hour drive north to Gondar, a past capital of Ethiopia whose highlight is a royal compound of 17th and 18th century palaces and castles.

Gondar was also once home to Ethiopia’s Jewish minority until they emigrated en masse to Israel in the 1980s and 1990s. We did, however, bump into a high-spirited party of Ethiopian-Israeli teenagers on a visit to the place their families had come from.

Next stop, the mysterious kingdom of Axum (or Aksum) in northern Ethiopia. It’s a junction of early Christian, Muslim and Jewish civilization in the Horn of Africa. Although the Axumite empire lasted hundreds of years, little is known about it. But it was clearly advanced for its time, judging by its most visible highlight, the obelisks.

These so-called stelae, some roughly 10 stories high with intricately carved stone, are thought to have demarcated royal burial places. The largest weighed 520 tons and still lies where it collapsed. Others survive upright.

Another flight took us to Lalibela and its 12th-century churches — my other reason for wanting to visit Ethiopia. They are magical, baffling, awesome. Defying all conventional rules of architecture, they were carved out of soft volcanic rock, and are seen by looking down into the light-filled crevices that surround them.

The churches are decorated with religious art and other ornamentation. Attesting to the religious mix that makes Ethiopia so interesting, we spotted a Christian cross inside a Jewish Star of David.

Ethiopia endeared itself to us in many ways: its impossibly complicated calendar; the complete absence of smokers (we were told the Church discourages the habit but Ethiopia has also begun banning smoking in public places); the Ethiopian currency, called birr (rhymes with grrr); our driver fighting through traffic not by leaning on his horn but by tapping it gently, almost apologetically; the exquisite little sauce dish we bought, only to see it melt back into mud under our all-vanquishing detergent.

We came across multitudes of people walking on roadsides in rural areas, often too poor to afford public transport. On the dusty unpaved road from Lalibela, at an elevation of 8,000 feet (2,440 meters), we saw crowds of children marching home from school. Our guide mentioned Haile Gebrselassie, the great Olympic long-distance runner, who walked and ran 12 miles (19 km) a day to and from school (not at all uncommon, so great is the hunger for education).

And traipsing uphill came a family in weathered robes and sashes, belongings lashed to a donkey, straight out of the Old Testament.

Finally, to get a sense of proportion after all the antiquity we had encountered, we stopped at the National Museum of Ethiopia in Addis Ababa to see Lucy, whose bones were discovered in northern Ethiopia in 1974. At 3.2 million years, she’s the most famous human ancestor.

The post Ethiopia: Ancient churches, mysterious towers and Lucy appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.


Ethiopia, UAE agree to expedite overseas labor agreement

$
0
0
Soudie Arabia

Thousands of Ethiopians have been attracted to Saudi Arabia by the job opportunities

ADDIS ABABA, Jan. 9 (Xinhua) — Ethiopia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) on Tuesday agreed to expedite the signing of overseas labor agreement.

The two countries announce the commitment as part of the visit of Ethiopia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Workneh Gebeyehu, to the Middle East country.

“Gebeyehu and Nasser Bin Thani Al Hamel, UAE’s Minister of Human Resources, have underscored the need to fast-track the signing of labor agreement that was being discussed for over two years,” said a statement issued by the Ethiopian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MoFA).

Gebeyehu stressed that the signing of the overseas labor agreement “will create a viable legal framework for protection and safety of workers.”

UAE is one of the major Middle Eastern destinations of Ethiopian migrants in search for job.

The announcement came amid the Ethiopian government’s attempt to repatriate its undocumented citizens from Saudi Arabia as the latter ordered undocumented foreigners to leave its territory or face fine and imprisonment.

The Ethiopian government has repatriated some 14,130 Ethiopians from the kingdom, since the extended amnesty period ended on November 15.

However, hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians are still believed to live in the kingdom without legal document and still hesitant to return home.

The post Ethiopia, UAE agree to expedite overseas labor agreement appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia needs to change its authoritarian course

$
0
0

Financial Times

Ethiopia is the China of Africa. Like China, it traces its history back thousands of years and considers itself a regional giant. Like China 30 years ago, it has a serious development plan based on raising health and educational standards, improving farm yields and industrialisation with the help of foreign capital.

2016-11-ethiopia-africa-oromo-protest

Unfortunately, also like China, it has an authoritarian government that represses its people to stay in power. There is a crucial contrast with China, however. Ethiopia will not be able to carry off the trick of economic expansion and political repression indefinitely. For the 26 years since it ousted the Marxist regime of Haile Mariam Mengistu, the ruling coalition has tried just that.

Yet, if anything, it has been less prepared than the Chinese Communist party to give space to the private sector. It has maintained a firm grip over strategic sectors and planned its march towards putative prosperity with military ruthlessness.

That has stifled entrepreneurialism and jeopardised a strong economic record that has seen growth — at least according to official numbers — average about 8 per cent since 2000. It is the political risks that form the gravest threat to the present system.

Though it insists otherwise, the coalition is dominated by the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front, which is seen to favour ethnic Tigrayans who make up only 6 per cent of the population. The cabal in charge seems genuinely to believe that only it can frog-march Ethiopia to middle-income status. Its plans have run into opposition from the Oromo and Amhara, ethnic groups that together make up 60 per cent of the population.

The Oromo, the biggest, have long felt discriminated against, a sentiment that exploded two years ago after government plans to extend Addis Ababa, the capital, into their land. Unusually, the Oromo have formed a united front with the Amhara, who have long felt themselves the rightful rulers of Ethiopia. That is the background to the turmoil that erupted in 2016 with the killing of at least 55 people at a religious festival. Several thousand may have been killed since, and many thousands more are still imprisoned. The ruling coalition’s attempt to quell dissent forcibly — tempered by holding off on Addis expansion plans — has failed.

Now, there is a hint that the government is rethinking. Last August, it ended a 10-month state of emergency. Last week, Hailemariam Desalegn, the prime minister, said the government would release political prisoners and close a notorious prison as the first steps to “national reconciliation”. It is too early to celebrate a change of heart. No prisoners have yet been released — and some are likely to remain in jail even if the government meets its promise. Though welcome, even a full-scale amnesty would be just a start. More fundamentally, the government must do more to deepen democracy and demonstrate that it rules for all Ethiopians and not just an undeclared minority.

That will require changes within the mechanics of government as well as a reprioritising of development goals such that all the country is seen to benefit. Enforced land seizures must stop. The press should be freed so that Ethiopians can have an informed debate about their priorities. The people who run Ethiopia have no monopoly on wisdom. Of the almost 50 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, few matter more than Ethiopia. A successful development agenda there could help ignite a continent badly in need of role models. Sadly, for all its economic and social achievements, authoritarian Ethiopia is still far from that.

 

The post Ethiopia needs to change its authoritarian course appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

BBN Breaking – Addis Ababa youth activists distribute flyers and pamphlets

The Lemma Megerssa Moment and the Oromo Dilemma: Between resistance and governing

$
0
0

Tsegaye R Ararssa,
Introduction
Tsegaye R

Tsegaye R Ararssa,

Addis Abeba, Janurary 10/2018 – One of the most emphatic achievements of the #OromoProtests is Lemma Megerssa himself. The Lemma Megerssa moment is produced by the resurgent Oromo resistance that was rekindled in 2014 and persisted to date.  Having produced the Lemma Megerssa moment as its overall effect, the Oromo protest has since evolved into a full blown revolution that is increasingly forcing a fundamental change upon the TPLF-EPRDF system of rule. For the first time in its history, the ruling Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) has been rendered so incoherent that it is almost dismembered as a coalition of ethno-national fronts of the four major highland regions of the Federation, namely the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO) of Oromia, the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM) of Amhara, Southern Ethiopian Peoples’ Democratic Movement (SEPDM) of Southern Nations Nationalities, and Peoples (SNNPRS), and the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) of Tigray.

As a consequence of the Oromo Revolution, the TPLF, the hitherto dominant core of the ruling EPRDF, has been so fractured that it had to sit for an extra-ordinarily long meeting of over thirty-five days in October-November 2017, just so it can divine some coherence in a party that was completely in disarray. Earlier, the three other parties have been sitting for similar, if shorter, meetings at the end of which they all vowed that they have achieved what they insisted was a “deep reform.” In late December, the 36-member Executive Committee of EPRDF sat for a similarly long meeting of about seventeen days at the end of which they came out clearly divided (in spite of the fact that the written press releaseissued before the leaders gave a presser claimed to have achieved a unity of ideas and a consensus of a sort). What they were saying implicitly (also noted in the veiled comments of the TPLF chief, Debre-Tsion Gebremichael) was that they have averted a shootout among the leaders.

The combined effect of this complex and intricate dynamics is the emergence of a faction of the OPDO (now known as ‘Team Lemma,’ tellingly named after the OPDO Leader and the Oromia President, Lemma Megerssa) offering an alternative future for EPRDF and for Ethiopia. This was preceded by a heartening gesture of alliance between OPDO and ANDM, an event that unsettled the TPLF and signaled the increasing isolation of TPLF within the coalition. Lemma’s statement that although they “didn’t enter the Executive Committee’s meeting hall with a sense of competition among ourselves, there is a clear winner at the end,” already indicates that his team – or in his words, the country – has come out most favored. No doubt, following the long presser given by the four representatives of the parties (i.e., Lemma Megerssa, Demeke Mekonnen, Hailemariam Desalegn, and Debretsion Gebremicheal), Lemma has, as an individual, come out the most popular leader in the eyes of the Ethiopian public. This in turn has created what can be called the ‘Lemma moment’ in Ethiopia. The Lemma moment, as generative as it is in many respects, seems to be having its own irresolution and ambivalence. This piece reflects on the dilemma of this extra-ordinary moment highlighting the tension between ‘the logic of resistance’ that gave popular legitimacy to his efforts and the challenge of ‘occupying’ the seat of leadership that demands not just protesting but also governing.

Playing Politics into the Center: the Logic of Resistance

‘Team Lemma’ and the moment of political hope it created is the product of the Oromo Revolution. The team is a group that came to realign OPDO with the resistance movement of the Oromo youth, known in Afaan Oromoo as Qeerro, to whose pressure the old OPDO establishment buckled. As soon as the team took over the helm of power in the OPDO and in Oromia, it sought to vie for the minds and hearts of the Oromo youth by promising a massive employment scheme through what they awkwardly called ‘economic revolution’.

The team picked up some of the demands of the youth and amplified them as part of their desire to implement ‘deep reform’ within their party (OPDO), their region (Oromia), their front (EPRDF), and the wider country (Ethiopia). In so doing, the team started to sound like the voice of protest in government. It used the language of freedom from oppression, (human) rights, and people’s suffering. More often than not, the team followed tack of the protesters’ motto in insisting, among others, on the adherence to the rules of the constitution, observance of the rule of law, respect for the federalist principles of self-rule and shared rule, a better enforcement of constitutional human rights clauses, a more equitable distribution of wealth, a more democratic share of powers, implementation of the constitutional “special interest” of Oromia over Finfinnee (Addis Abeba), recognition of Afaan Oromoo as one of the working languages of the Federal Government, etc. Operating as a government but identifying more with the suffering public, it appropriated the language of the Oromo Revolution and functioned essentially on the logic of resistance, albeit from the top.

To all close observers of Ethiopian politics, it soon became apparent that the team is in resistance to the dominance of the TPLF and the latter’s authoritarian modus operandi both in EPRDF and in the entire country. This in turn revealed the emergence of consequential tensions between TPLF on the one hand and its hitherto junior partners, particularly OPDO and ANDM, on the other. The tension started to rock the entire federal government. Knowing the numerical advantage OPDO and ANDM have in Parliament, the TPLF started to evade or bypass formal democratic institutions of decision-making such as the Federal Parliament (formally known as the House of Peoples’ Representatives [HPR]), especially after the resignation of its Speaker Abba Duulaa Gammadaa (also from the OPDO). Tensions also started to show up within the Federal Government (e.g. between the Communications Minister and the Director of the Press Board) as well as between the Federal and State Governments (Federal Ministry of Communication and Oromia and Somali Regional Communication Bureaux; Federal Prime Minister and Oromia President).

Team Lemma. From Right: Shimelis Abdissa, Addisu Arega, Lemma Megerssa and Abiy Ahmed

These tensions put the OPDO at the center of the unfolding drama of Ethiopian politics of these latter days. Increasingly, the protesting public seemed to have found an ally in Team Lemma. Having appropriated all the languages of the protest and its logic of resistance, the team (especially its key figures, Lemma Megerssa, Abiy Ahmed, Addisu Arega, and Shimelis Abdissa) increasingly sounded virtually like, and became, political activists speaking for the people. However, beyond speech, in reality, little changed on the ground. People are still being killed arbitrarily by the military. Many are being arrested. The army and federal police roam around the states and their localities uninvited and illegally-unconstitutionally. TPLF-orchestrated “border wars” are still raging, especially between Oromia and Somali regions. Regiments of federal government soldiers are encamped in university campuses all over the country. The close to 700, 000 persons displaced from the Somali region and the adjacent border areas are yet to be resettled in proper homes. The promise of ‘economic revolution’ and the jobs and benefits thereof are yet to be delivered.  Provision of utilities and public services are not making any improvement. Economic activities are still stalled. In short, governance is conspicuously absent. And the team has yet to stop activism (which the TPLF casts negatively as a populist gesture) and start governing.

At times, the team seems to be trying to do two things at one and the same time: resisting TPLF’s hegemony in order to transform EPRDF from within and to govern Oromia legitimately and serve the regional public (the domain of the Oromo demos) properly. The first task propels the team to scale up its ambitions and act on behalf of the wider country as it also seeks to edge out TPLF, sustaining its alliance with ANDM, taking other political groupings on board, and gradually steering the country to the democratic transformation long hoped for. The second pulls it in the direction of remaining grounded in its Oromo constituency as it seeks to address all the demands of the revolution, pacify the region, secure its autonomy (or self-rule), restore displaced people, release detainees and political prisoners, make wrong-doers (officials included) accountable, and heal social wounds caused by tragedies of mass killings and other atrocities. The first pulls them in the direction of assuming new national (country-wide) responsibilities including re-configuring the Ethiopian state and its identity for the better. The second pulls them in the direction of discharging the responsibilities they are already encumbered with in the Oromia region. The first demands the envisioning of a new Ethiopia, the creation of a distinctly Oromo project for Ethiopia, as part of the Oromo contribution to the ‘nation-building’ process, if only redemptively. The second demands a nationalist self-assertion as Oromos vis-à-vis the hitherto oppressive Ethiopia.

Owing to the complex politico-moral responsibilities they shoulder as Oromos in contemporary Ethiopia, members of Team Lemma are inescapably forced to live with a tenuous irresolution, walking every day with a degree of ambivalence about which call to emphasize (and which to postpone in pro tem)—the call of the wider Ethiopia or that of Oromia?–at a particular point in time. Perhaps more than any other political groupings in Ethiopia, Team Lemma will be the most afflicted with ambivalence, the ambivalence about which call to respond to first, the call to reform, redeem and “save Ethiopia from itself” (the call to become more than oneself and to do more than resisting TPLF and traditional Ethiopian hegemony), or the call to empower its own constituency regardless of what becomes of its Ethiopian other (the call to first pursue Oromo justice vis-à-vis Ethiopia and think of Ethiopia only afterwards). The team is thus required to live under the imperative of reflexive (and agonistic) thinking. Consequently, the team is forced to play politics into the Ethiopian center. (What this center is a debatable point in itself. But that should be left for another day.)

Oromia is home to people from all the other States of the Ethiopian federation. It is also a region sharing borders with all the regions save for Tigray. Oromia also hosts the Federal Government in its capital city, Finfinne, which, as a result, draws people from all corners of the country. More than any of the States in Ethiopia today, Oromia is conscious of the presence of other peoples in its midst. This consciousness forces the leadership to practice an entirely other-regarding political ethics. This same consciousness makes the leaders mindful of the need to appeal to the political sensibilities of peoples other than the ones in their own constituency in order to bring the latter on board as they endeavor to bring about country-wide change. (Perhaps this explains Lemma Megerssa’s extravagant, if only vacuous, rhetoric in Bahir Dar about being “addicted to Ethiopianism!” Note: this is not to underestimate the symbolic significance of the speech as a gesture. But the gesture of alliance between the parties must be encouraged and given a more substantive content in order for it to be politically consequential, especially in creating new terms of relationship between the two peoples.)

Addressing all the demands of the Oromo Revolution AND leading the effort to reform the TPLF-EPRDF regime with a view to transforming the wider polity, all at the same time, is a herculean task. That is the challenge confronting Team Lemma at the moment, a challenge they seem to have taken up, with an enormous amount of care and caution not to rock the boat too much to their own peril. Perhaps this explains why the team is not pulling out of the EPRDF coalition. Or why, for example, it is so far hesitant to use the Parliamentary platform to form a new government in collaboration with ANDM, thereby automatically ending the TPLF hegemony in the Front and in Ethiopia.

Beyond vindicating the Oromo Protests: the challenge of governing of behalf of the oppressed forces, North and South

Given this is the situation, what can Team Lemma do? What can they do beyond vindicating and validating the claims and demands of the #Oromoprotests? And more particularly, what can they do to rise up to the challenge of governing on behalf of the oppressed peoples of Ethiopia, north and south? The following is a tentative list of (obvious) suggestions. I offer these suggestions fully mindful of the difference in the strategies, tactics, and positioning deployed for the different tasks of Resistance and Governing. The ‘logic of resistance’ based on which the team operates is more like the logic of oppositional politics run by groups running campaigns for democratic elections. Just as campaign strategies are different from strategies for governing in healthy democracies, so are the strategies of ‘Resistance’ and of ‘Governance’ in Ethiopia for Team Lemma. Accordingly, the team ought to learn to live with its dilemma, the Oromo dilemma in its best (with all its irresolution), and manage its priorities prudently. In so doing, it should find a happy synthesis of the work of resistance and governing, the work of critiquing and holding power at the same time, in order for them to effectuate a preferred change both for themselves, for the country, and for posterity.

The most outstanding task awaiting them now is how to bring the discussions (and negotiations) in EPRDF (and the platforms of the parties forming the Front) to the formal public decision-making institutions of the country such as the Parliament, aka, the HPR. Accordingly, they ought to:

  1. Make an increasing use of parliamentary platforms for public decision-making in the country. After all, the parliament is “the highest authority of the Federal Government” (See Art 50(3) of the FDRE Constitution). Similarly, they should use the State Parliament, Caffee Oromia, and State Constitutional institutions for every public issues pertaining to state matters. In order to help facilitate a free deliberation in the legislative bodies, they should begin to relax the rules of parliamentary procedures both at the Federal level and at the State level. This should be easy in the light of the fact that theirs are all single-party parliaments.
  2. Activate and exercise the parliamentary power to scrutinize the Executive at all levels, Federal and State. For far too long, the parliament’s decisional powers (legislative, financial/budgetary, and taxing) have been bypassed by the Executive which used the parliament as a window dressing. It is important to remember that the parliament’s scrutiny and monitory powers have hardly been utilized especially where it matters most, i.e., on the military, police, and intelligence authorities. The parliament’s responsibility to monitor the executive is key to the increasing (political and administrative) accountability of the latter in its duty to respect, protect, and enforce human rights at all levels of government (Art 13(2) of the FDRE Constitution). This will pave the way for, among others, making Abdi Ille, his so called ‘Special Police,’ and the complicit Federal Security authorities accountable politically (through removal), administratively (through demotion, disciplining, and dismissal), and judicially (through trials for their atrocities including mass killings, torture, gang rape, mutilations, and genocide). This will also give the Parliament an opportunity to disarm, disband, and outlaw the ‘Special Forces’ and all similar repressive security apparatuses in the country. Likewise, it will create the occasion for the Parliament to go beyond the symbolic (partisan political party) gestures to publicly resolve to release all political prisoners and to close down and outlaw all institutions of torture such as Ma’ekelawi and nameless detention centers in the military training camps. Most pressingly, this will help the Parliament to bring the country as a whole to come together and act in unison to resettle and/or restore the over 700, 000 displaced persons.
  3. (In the interest of opening up the political space and freeing the country for a more open, transparent, inclusive and, hopefully, deliberative democracy, the team ought to) use its parliamentary platform for repealing all repressive laws such as the counter-terrorism law (Proc no 652/2009), Charities and Societies law (Proclamation no. 621/2009), political party registration law (Proclamation no. 573/2008), media law (proclamation no. 590/2008), and the law on freedom of assembly (Proclamation no. 3/1991).
  4. Prepare the regime for a broad-based negotiation with other political parties with a view to pacifying the country, restoring political hope, especially among the youth, and creating a working consensus among a wide variety of political, social-communal, and economic actors. In order for such negotiations to happen, the regime should remove political parties from its list of ‘terrorist’ organizations.
  5. Now that the TPLF anxiety over potential loss of power to the OPDO-ANDM alliance has subsided (ensuring this seems to be the deal from the long Executive Committee meeting!), Team Lemma (in collaboration with Team Geddu Andargachew of ANDM) must push for a reconfiguration of the membership and voting power and procedure of the Executive Committee in the EPRDF. This is absolutely necessary if there is to come a transition to democracy keeping TPLF-EPRDF as part of transition to come. Sooner or later, and sooner than later, TPLF-EPRDF must realize that democracy, internally and externally, is the only happy way out of the quagmire they have put themselves and the country in. Team Lemma also should know that if they can’t push for change in the Executive Committee membership and transform their own party into a democratic one, there is no way they can take the wider country into the democracy to come.

Conclusion: Any Reason to Hope for Transformation?

The foregoing must have made it clear that the transition to democracy to come from within, particularly the one that may come about through the agency of Team Lemma, is going to be an extremely controlled transition. At best, being a result of internal contestation and negotiation within EPRDF, it is only going to be a managed transition. As such, it is bound to be slow (relative to the Revolution), measured, and incremental. Team Lemma, as a protest team that is also in government, can only push for a reform that may (or may not) pave the way for a full-fledged transformation. There is a limit to a revolution sought to be accomplished through well-placed elite. (And this is precisely the reason the Oromo Revolution continues unabated to put pressure on Team Lemma or any place holder until the peoples’ demands are fully met.)  Nevertheless, quite understandably, there is a limit to what the Team can do because there is bound to be an inertia born out of the irreducible contradiction in engaging (as they do) in protest WHILE ALSO exercising leadership, in doing resistance WHILE ALSO governing, in maximizing one’s current position WHILE ALSO seeking to occupy a more powerful position (in the name of effecting the change the generation sought to see).  Here in lies the dilemma of Team Lemma, whose dilemma can also be seen as the quintessential Oromo dilemma, the dilemma of the people whose historic mission it is to critique and interrogate Ethiopia (and all that it stands for) WHILE ALSO wanting to transform, redeem, and save it from itself at the same time.

The question remains, though. Is this Lemma Moment going to last? Will it overcome its dilemma and deliver what it silently promises? Does it still offer a moment of political hopefulness? Or is it a moment of anticlimax already? These are questions for another day. AS


The writer, Tsegaye R Ararssa, can be reached at tsegayenz@gmail.com

The post The Lemma Megerssa Moment and the Oromo Dilemma: Between resistance and governing appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Department of State to Launch New Travel Advisory System

$
0
0

January 9, 2018: As part of our responsibility to support the safety and security of U.S. citizens overseas, the Department of State is improving our communications with U.S. citizen travelers to provide clear, timely, and reliable safety and security information worldwide.

On January 10, 2018, the Bureau of Consular Affairs, which is charged within the State Department with the protection of U.S. citizens abroad, will launch a new Travel Advisory for each country of the world.  The Travel Advisories will replace the previous system of Travel Warnings and Travel Alerts with a single platform using plain language to help U.S. citizens find and use important security information.

On the Travel Advisory page, travelers will find a standard format for each country, including an interactive map.  Each country will be assigned a Travel Advisory Level from One to Four

  • Level 1 – Exercise Normal Precautions: This is the lowest advisory level for safety and security risk.  There is some risk in any international travel.  Conditions in other countries may differ from those in the United States and may change at any time. (Color: Blue)
  • Level 2 – Exercise Increased Caution: Be aware of heightened risks to safety and security.  The Departments of State provides additional advice for travelers in these areas in the Travel Advisory.  Conditions in any country may change at any time.  (Color: Yellow)
  • Level 3 – Reconsider Travel: Avoid travel due to serious risks to safety and security.  The Department of State provides additional advice for travelers in these areas in the Travel Advisory.  Conditions in any country may change at any time. (Color: Orange)
  • Level 4 – Do Not Travel: This is the highest advisory level due to greater likelihood of life-threatening risks.  During an emergency, the U.S. government may have very limited ability to provide assistance.  The Department of State advises that U.S. citizens not travel to the country or to leave as soon as it is safe to do so.  The Department of State provides additional advice for travelers in these areas in the Travel Advisory.  Conditions in any country may change at any time. (Color: Red)

While overall levels will be set for each country, some Travel Advisories may include different levels of advice for specific areas within a country.

The Travel Advisory Level will include clear reasons based on established risk indicators and specific advice to U.S. citizens who choose to travel.  These are:

  • C – Crime:  Widespread violent or organized crime is present in areas of the country.  Local law enforcement may have limited ability to respond to serious crimes.  
  • T – Terrorism:  Terrorist attacks have occurred and/or specific threats against civilians, groups, or other targets may exist.
  • U – Civil Unrest:  Political, economic, religious, and/or ethnic instability exists and may cause violence, major disruptions, and/or safety risks.
  • H – Health:  Health risks, including current disease outbreaks or a crisis that disrupts a country’s medical infrastructure, are present.  The issuance of a Centers for Disease Control Travel Notice may also be a factor.  
  • N – Natural Disaster:  A natural disaster, or its aftermath, poses danger.

 

  • E – Time-limited Event:  Short-term event, such as elections, sporting events, or other incidents that may pose safety risks.
  • O – Other:  There are potential risks not covered by previous risk indicators.  Read the country’s Travel Advisory for details.

The Travel Advisories may be supplemented by Alerts, which will replace the previous system of Emergency Messages and Security Messages, to provide timely information to the public in an easy-to-understand format.  Alerts will inform U.S. citizens of specific safety and security concerns in a country, such as demonstrations, crime trends, and weather events.

This new system will be deployed worldwide and does not reflect a change in our security posture toward any particular country.  It was developed over the past year based on feedback about our consular safety and security messaging.

We expect the changes will improve the Department’s ability to inform the public in an efficient and comprehensive manner.  Information will be easier to find, understand, and use.  Travel Advisories will ensure U.S. citizens receive important advice for every country, applying a consistent worldwide standard.

We continue to encourage U.S. citizens traveling overseas to enroll their travel plans in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (step.state.gov), so they can receive important Alerts while traveling.  We will continue to keep U.S. citizen travelers up to date through travel.state.gov, Twitter (@travelgov), and Facebook (facebook.com/travelgov).

###

The post Department of State to Launch New Travel Advisory System appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

ESAT Latest Ethiopian News January 10, 2018

Ethiopia: National Security Council Reflects On Yet Another Daunting Security Assessment

$
0
0

Liyat Fekade

Addis Abeba, January 08/2018 – In another meeting attended by members of Ethiopia’s Security Council, participants at a day long meeting on Friday January 05 have reflected on yet another daunting security assessment compiled from various parts of the country since the council’s first meeting was held, during which an alarming security assessment document was presented.

The participants on Friday’s meeting included Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn and Defense Minister Siraj Fegessa, who is the chairperson of the security council. Both PM Hailemariam and Siraj Fegessa have chaired the meeting which was also attended by high level federal and regional defense and security officials and members of the federal and regional police forces among others.

 

Two sources familiar with the meeting have told Addis Standard during the weekend that “concerns were raised by members of the national defense forces and the federal police regarding strong resistance from several parts of the public, particularly in Oromia and Amhara regional states.” Oromia and Amhara regional states are two of the biggest regional states which were hit by persistent anti-government protests in the last two years. The security council meeting was also told by participants from the federal security and intelligence forces that increasing trends of ethnic based attacks observed in various universities and cities in Oromia, Amhara and Tigray regional states have become the “most serious issues that have challenged both,” according to one of the sources who wants to remain anonymous.

The issue of “diminishing lack of public confidence in the federal army and the federal police force” was also discussed in light of the October 26/2017 killings of ten civilians in Ambo, 125 km west of Addis Abeba, and the killings of more than a dozen civilians in Chelenko, East Hararghe zone of the Oromia regional state. “It was discussed in detail as one of the reasons for this lack of public trust,” said the other source who spoke to Addis Standard. The Oromia regional government and residents of both Ambo and Chelenko have blamed members of the national defense force for the killings.

Participants of the Security Council meeting have also discussed the “difficult issue of the recent ethnic based attacks” observed in some universities, as well as the mid-December 2017 killings in Ethio-Somali and Oromia regional states that claimed the lives of close to eighty civilians. “Both were raised as examples that the work of restoring law and order was far from achieved.”

Siraj Fegessa during the press briefing late Friday Afternoon

At a press briefing he gave late on Friday, after the day long meeting of the council, Siraj Fegessa told local media representatives that the overall security situation in the country “has improved: since the Council’s meeting in October. However, he said the Council recognized that more needs to be done to consolidate the gains made so far. He also said normal teaching learning processes have resumed in the universities that have experienced disruptions following ethnic based attacks and student protests “except for three universities”. However, Siraj didn’t mention the three universities by name. He also refused to take more questions from journalists saying there will be another briefing for the media in due course.

However, answering to one questions from a local reporter, Siraj said that the security crisis in Ethiopian Somali and Oromia adjacent zones were caused by border disputes and that since the first security council meeting police forces from both regions were made to vacate contested areas which were then manned by members of the federal army.

The issue of absence of the federal government’s commitment in dealing with the Oromia-Somali crisis as well as its “lack of resolve to resettle hundreds of thousands internally displaced Ethiopians” who were “victimized” by the violence, which began showing signs of escalation as far back as December 2016, “stood out as one of the hotly debated topics,” according to one of the two sources.

Representatives from the federal defense and police forces on their turn blamed lack of cooperation from their regional counterparts, especially in Oromia and Amhara regional states, which led to “several deaths of innocent civilians” during protests.  “A senior defense official said at the meeting that the federal government’s thinly spread budget has added to the already fragile dynamics between federal and regional security and intelligence officials in terms of coordinating their acts,” one of our sources said.

The meeting has discussed the possibilities of increasing more security measures to be coordinated between federal and regional states “to contain what was agreed as the most serious of all security threats”: such as road blockages, ransacking of state affiliated properties, including army vehicles and ethnic based attacks, according to our sources.

Meanwhile, Reporter, the weekly Amharic newspaper said in its Sunday edition that the federal police has established a special task force to investigate the “Qeerroo”  (The Afaan Oromoo term for “Young man”), but who the federal police believes were “clandestine” groups responsible for impeding the federal defense and federal police forces activities in eastern Ethiopia.

It is not clear if this decision is part of the security measures considered in the first security document. But many see the news as yet another crackdown against those who have continued staging ant-government protests especially in Oromia.

AS

The post Ethiopia: National Security Council Reflects On Yet Another Daunting Security Assessment appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.


Nothing describes the TPLF than a well organized criminal enterprise.

$
0
0

Berhanemeskel Abebe Segni

Birhanemeskel Abebe Segni

Nothing describes the TPLF than a well organized criminal enterprise. All the pretentions are gone. In the attached picture, the photo shows TPLF military/police officers’ openly torturing Oromo youth on the streets in Addis Ababa.

Now, in the attached Oromia Police letter, a TPLF defense force officer intentionally and purposely overrun and killed an Oromo national by car, ISIS style. The Oromia police hot pursuit to detain the criminal was unsuccessful after the offender took refuge in the TPLF operated military camp.

The TPLF operated military camp refused to hand over the criminal who took refuge in the military camp to the Oromia justice system disobeying Oromia court order. This is yet another key evidence of TPLF lawlessness and criminality in Oromia. Oromia Regional state should protect Oromo nationals from these criminals.

No Oromo national should be handed over under any pretext to the TPLF operated Federal Police, National Intelligence, and the so-called Ethiopian Defense Force. Besides, the Oromo people should socially exclude and defend themselves including by distance themselves from these criminals.

As for the TPLF military camp that disobeyed the Oromia court order, the Oromia Regional State should order the immediate closure of the camp and the removal of those officers from Oromia Region and hold the administrators of the camp accountable.

 

The post Nothing describes the TPLF than a well organized criminal enterprise. appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Federal high court reverses decision to summon gov. officials as defense witnesses, angering defendants; sentences seven on contempt of court

$
0
0

 

Mahlet Fasil

Addis Abeba, January 11/2018 – The Federal High Court 4th criminal bench has today dismissed its own decision to summon high level government officials as defense witnesses in the case involving senior opposition party officials from the Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC).

 

In its ruling on August 18th, the court issued a letter to summon the high level government officials as defense witnesses for four of the 17 defendants in the case. They are from first to fourth defendants respectively: Gurmesa Ayano, Dejene Taffa, Addisu Bulala and Bekele Gerba Dako.  The list of witnesses submitted by the four defendants included Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn; Lemma Megersa, President of the Oromia regional state; Dr. Abiy Ahmed, Secretariat of the OPDO, the party governing the Oromia region; Abadula Gemeda, former speaker of Ethiopia’s House of People’s Representatives (HPR); as well as Chaltu Nani, Mayor of Lege Dadhi town in the Oromia regional state special zone.

All the senior government officials summoned by the court to appear have missed the three day defense hearing which was scheduled from 26 to 28 December 2017. Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn’s office was the first to send a letter to the federal court stating a “busy schedule” as the reason for the Prime Minister’s absence. However, on Dec. 28, the Secretariat of the OPDO Central Committee has sent a letter to the court asking for a new appointment date for its high level officials to appear in court as defense witnesses as per the court’s letter to summon them all. The letter also stated the officials were unable to attend the court due to “urgent meeting about the country” that they were attending at that moment.

But today, the judges have dismissed the court’s earlier decision to summon the defense witnesses saying due to their demanding public duties, these witnesses will not have time to appear in court for issues that are big and small. During the three day defense witness hearing in December, prison administration officials have also failed to bring Andualem Arage, another key witness summoned by the court as defense witnesses for Bekele Gerba, saying he was a high security prisoner.  Andualem was the Vice President and Press Secretary of the opposition, Unity for Democracy and Justice party, who is himself sentenced to life in prison on terrorism charges.

Speaking to the judges this morning, Bekele Gerba, first secretary general of OFC, said that it was unbecoming of the court to say that the defendants’ attempt to have witnesses as if it has no substance and to dismiss its decision to summon the witnesses. On his part Dejene Tafa also protested the decision saying the court had accepted government officials as prosecutors’ witnesses and should have extended the same right to the defendants. Addisu Bulala also told the judges that for two years since they were detained  they have “performed the court’s drama” but they were not willing to continue anymore. “You may as well drag our bodies to the court,” said Addisu.

Contempt of court verdict after protest 

The court sentenced all four defendants Gurmesa Ayano, Dejene Taffa, Addisu Bulala and Bekele Gerba, to six months in prison for contempt of court after all of them have fiercely protested the court’s decision to dismiss the summon, including singing a protest song.

Three more defendants from a separate file: Ibrahim Adem, Elias Kedir and Addisu Ahmed, were also sentenced to three months in prison for contempt of court. The trio were at the court to defend a separate terrorism charges against them after having been accused of links with Patriotic G7. All the three have joined the other four in their protest inside the court room by clapping. When asked by the court, they said they did so to “support their brothers.”

Background

All the defendants, originally 22, have spent more than 18 months in jail (and 14 months after they were formally charged) when on July 13/2017, the court acquitted five of the 22 defendants, reduced the terrorism charge against Bekele Gerba to criminal charges, and ordered the remaining 16 to defend the terrorism charges brought by the federal prosecutors.

The court’s decision came after Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn pledged to release “some prisoners” who are currently being prosecuted and to pardon some political leaders who have already been convicted and are serving their sentences as part of the government’s attempt to create a space for a national dialogue. Many have expected the likes of senior opposition political party leaders and members such as Bekele Gerba among those to be released.

Now, even without having to hear from the defense witnesses, the court has adjourned a date to give its key verdict on January 18/2018.

AS

The post Federal high court reverses decision to summon gov. officials as defense witnesses, angering defendants; sentences seven on contempt of court appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia’s lawmakers approve ban on foreign adoptions

$
0
0

Ethiopian lawmakers have approved a ban on foreign adoptions amid concerns about mistreatment of children overseas.

The approval came after rare heated debate as some lawmakers worried that the East African nation does not have enough child care centers to handle the effects of the ban.

Ethiopia had been among the top 10 countries for adoptions in the United States, according to State Department figures released last year. Actress Angelina Jolie is among the people who have adopted a child from the country.

But the death in the U.S. in 2011 of an Ethiopia-born girl, with her adoptive mother convicted of homicide by abuse, led to an outcry back home, with Ethiopia that year reducing foreign adoptions by 90%.

The U.S. in November warned that Ethiopian authorities continued to tighten restrictions on adoptions and that the State Department would continue to engage Ethiopia’s government “to address its concerns.”

Ethiopia’s new National Child Policy says orphans should grow up only in their homeland while honoring their culture and traditions. “They should either be adopted locally or supported by a guardian family, tutor or help them to reunite with biological parents or relatives,” it says.

The state-affiliated Fana Broadcasting Corporate quoted a legal affairs official at the legislative body, Petros Woldesenbet, as saying the ban on foreign adoptions will “help alleviate the identity and psychological problems of children.”

The law take effect once it is published in the government legal gazette, which is expected in the coming weeks.

The number of foreign children adopted by U.S. parents dropped almost 5% in 2016 to 5,372, continuing a steady decline over more than a decade, according to State Department figures. Department officials have suggested the numbers could rise if the U.S. adoption community helped to address some countries’ concerns about ethics and oversight.

Adoption advocates — and the State Department — have cited Africa as an area where adoptions may increase.

The post Ethiopia’s lawmakers approve ban on foreign adoptions appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Billionaire Al-Amoudi transferred from Ritz-Carlton detainees to Al-Ha’ir prison

$
0
0

 by Middle East Monitor

The Saudi authorities have transferred the remaining detainees being held in the Ritz-Carlton hotel to Al-Ha’ir prison, south of Riyadh, Al-Araby Al-Jadeed news site reported.

Sources told the news site that nearly 60 detainees were transferred to the most high security prison in the Kingdom. The prisoners include Prince Al-Waleed Bin Talal as Prince Turki Bin Abdullah and a number of government officials who refused to make the large financial paymentsfor their release.

Saudi Arabia has used the Al-Ha’ir prison to detain political activists demanding reforms, as well as terrorism suspects. Two days ago, authorities transferred 11 princes who had gathered outside the Al-Hakam Palace in Riyadh to the prison.

Read: Twitter user reveals new details about the arrest of 11 Saudi princes

According to eyewitnesses, the security services including the police, the Royal Guards and army units which have surrounded the hotel over the past two months have nearly disappeared from the hotel’s vicinity, while online a hotels booking site listed the Ritz-Carlton as available for booking as of next month.

#MBS

The Saudi authorities detained nearly 200 princes and senior officials in an “anti-corruption” purge last year. The Saudi authorities are seeking to secure $100 billion in settlements from the detainees in exchange for their freedom.

The post Billionaire Al-Amoudi transferred from Ritz-Carlton detainees to Al-Ha’ir prison appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia’s TPLF must fix its disease, not symptoms

$
0
0

Teshome M. Borago

tplf-1-satenaw-newsAfter over 2 years of courageous Ethiopian protests and thousands of innocent lives lost, the TPLF ruling party has thrown crumbs and meaningless promise at the Ethiopian people once again. This week, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn first announced that “political prisoners” will be released. Suddenly, many naive international human rights organizations and leaders praised the regime. But just one day later, his TPLF handlers told him to reverse everything, accusing the media of “misquoting” his announcement. So, Hailemariam now completely rejects that “political prisoners” even exist in Ethiopia; therefore he claims that it is due to his party’s graciousness that “imprisoned or convicted politicians and others” will be pardoned.

When have we witnessed this drama before?

It was of course in 2007 when TPLF put on a masterful show of pardoning prominent opposition officials of the CUD party who were incarcerated right after winning the 2005 national election. That was a historic election where TPLF used its OPDO Oromo cadres to defame and attack the CUD party; just like it is currently using the Somali Liyu Police to attack the Oromo-Amara (#Oromara) alliance. The strategy failed then and CUD mobilized millions to win even populated regions of Oromia and 99% of the city votes. In response, TPLF declared state of emergency in 2005, killed hundreds of protestors and held opposition leaders as hostage. When most Western Powers denounced these barbaric acts, TPLF later freed the prisoners as a diversion tactic to portray an illusion of reform and change. However, after the prisoners release, the human rights situation in Ethiopia actually got worse and the ruling party decided to kick out even the small opposition figures in its parliament, successfully becoming a one-party tyranny like its Derg predecessor.

Will the same tactic work for TPLF again?

Ten years later, the TPLF seems to be using the same tactic to save its sinking ship.

The problem is that Ethiopia is too big and too diverse to be ruled with an iron fist forever. After 2005, even after TPLF destroyed the legal opposition; diverse members of its own coalition had began to crack. Having fed narrow tribal propaganda of Oromo nationalism (OPDO) and Amhara nationalism (ANDM) for two decades as a tool to undermine cosmopolitan Ethiopian nationalists, the TPLF finally got a taste of its own medicine since 2015. Land and power disputes took ethnic dimensions and sparked regional protests that the ruling party has yet to recover from.

The turning point of these isolated protests was when mostly Amara Gondar protestors (some armed with weapons and too close to TPLF’s hometown) began to strategically coordinate with Oromo protestors who suffocated the commercial routes of the center with their bravery and unflinching determination. Such Oromo-Amara alliance was recently fueled by their desperation to spread or nationalize their isolated movements, as well as inspired by Ethiopian nationalists like Teddy Afro, whose album in 2017 was featured in every major international media and quickly became an anthem for Ethiopians worldwide. Suddenly, even Oromo diaspora activists like Jawar Mohammed began to preach Ethiopian unity and virtually abandon divisive hot topics like tribalization of Addis Ababa and defamation of our patriotic ancestors. Jawar even defended Teddy Afro against government censorship as the #Oromara alliance grew.

This yearlong unity of Ethiopian protestors has cornered the TPLF ruling party and made several pockets of the nation completely ungovernable. The regime’s divide and rule policy has faltered.

And there is no sign that the new protests will end anytime soon. Unlike the systematic suppression of the urban opposition after the 2005 election, the TPLF will not be able to stop the current rural protests. For example, during the aftermath of that election, Meles Zenawi accelerated his program of the “One-to-five” network of spies around Addis Ababa. Since then, more Tigrayans have also migrated to the urban and many have become informers in every block of the cities, especially Addis Ababa.

Ironically, the same destructive “ethnic-federalism” structure that has made the country ripe for ethnic conflicts is also the same structure that might end up killing TPLF and its spy program. The ongoing protests have now proven that TPLF is unable to keep its important 1-to-5 spy program in the rural without the full support of OPDO and ANDM. Particularly in rural Oromia, once the program collapses, it is nearly impossible to restore this “one-to-five” structure without OPDO, due to language barriers and the shear size of the state. Also, unlike the millions of Amharas and southerners living inside Oromia towns, Tigrayans are almost nonexistent in much of the rural state. Therefore, OPDO or any Oromo opposition movement (if it has courageous leadership) will be more capable of defying the TPLF authority in the coming years. If the TPLF regime thinks it can throw crumbs and easily satisfy the protestors, it will be hugely mistaken.

Therefore, addressing only the symptoms of the tyranny by tackling minor corruption cases and releasing prisoners will not be enough. Ethiopia needs a permenant systematic change by fixing its undemocratic institutions at the judiciary, civil service, federal agencies and particularly the military which lacks independence from the TPLF. So far, the TPLF ruling party seems to be uninterested in genuine reform and it might even attempt to slide back to its brutal military solution.

It is upto the protest movements to force the regime and there are three more methods.

First, the Oromo and Amara protests must somehow take their movement to the center of Addis Ababa and that requires further de-ethnicization of their end goal and rhetoric. Secondly, the “Oromara” protests must be more disciplined and avoid attacking any Tigrayan businesses and civilians. Thirdly, the Oromo and Amara protests must reach out to other ethnic groups, particularly the Somalis, whose Liyu Police gang have become TPLF’s new lifeline. This third step requires not only political leadership among Oromo and Somali diaspora communities but also discipline back home to stop ethnic clashes or revenge killings that have led to massive displacement of civilians along the Oromia-Somali borders.

All these three strategies are vital to put more pressure on TPLF and set up a foundation for a transition to democracy.

Teshomeborago@gmail.com

The post Ethiopia’s TPLF must fix its disease, not symptoms appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Viewing all 8076 articles
Browse latest View live