Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Obama Administration’s Ethiopia Policy: Double-talking Democracy while Conniving with Tyranny April 28, 2015


On a recent visit to Ethiopia, Wendy Sherman, Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, publicly made the following bold declaration: “Ethiopia is a democracy that is moving forward in an election that we expect to be free, fair, credible and open and inclusive. In ways that (sic) Ethiopia has moved forward in strengthening its democracy. Every time there is an election, it gets better and better.”
Ethiopians and Freedom House, among others, are flabbergasted by this blatant hypocrisy about the ideals of U.S. foreign policy and the implicit contempt for the Ethiopian people. Ms. Sherman must surely have read at the very least her own State Department’s annual reports on the human rights situation in Ethiopia, including the frank account of the rigged 2005 elections, the draconian methods used to cede just one seat in parliament are controlled by the ruling party in 2010, and the ongoing witch hunt against the opposition just weeks before the May 2015 parliamentary elections which will surely produce an electoral outcome that would shame any “elected” dictatorship.
This has compelled us to release a letter we sent in October 2014 regretting the convenient omission of human rights abuses in Ethiopia in Mr. Obama’s effusive praise of the Ethiopian regime for its record on economic growth and the fight against terrorism. Accompanying our letter is the generic recent response of empty rhetoric we received from the White House.
We remain unimpressed and deeply disappointed. The Ethiopian Diaspora must redouble its efforts to press the cause of the desperate Ethiopian youth at home and in the treacherous journeys of exile.
ETHIOPIAWINNET: COUNCIL FOR THE DEFENSE OF CITIZEN RIGHTS
www.ethiopiawin.net            sourse ecdef

Friday, April 24, 2015

Letter from an Ethiopian prison to John Kerry April 24, 2015


April 24, 2015

Natnael Feleke has been imprisoned for a year without trial. In a letter smuggled out of jail, he asks the US secretary of state to stop supporting the Ethiopian regime

by Natnael Feleke from Kilinto prison | The Guardian
US secretary of state John Kerry with blogger Natnael Feleke
US secretary of state John Kerry with blogger Natnael Feleke in Addis Ababa, 2013. Photograph: Endalk Chala
Dear John Kerry,
I first came to know about you back in 2004, during the US presidential election, when you were running for office against George Bush. At just 17 years old I knew little about US politics – or politics in general – but I discussed the campaigns with my schoolmates.
A year later, the historic 2005 Ethiopian national election took place. This election differed from previous votes in that the lead up to it was mostly democratic. This left many Ethiopians hoping they would witness the first elected change of government in the country’s history. But it was not to be.
After the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front realised they couldn’t win the election without rigging the vote, the true face of the regime emerged.
After polling day, we saw civilian bloodshed, and the arrest of thousands – including journalists and opposition leaders.
I was only young then, but the election gave me my first real experience of politics. It also left me with a strong desire to follow the repressive situation that was unfolding in Ethiopia.
It was this interest and commitment that led my friends and I to form the bloggers’ and pro-democracy activist group we called Zone 9.
The birth of Zone 9
All nine members of the blogging group are young and passionate about encouraging Ethiopia’s democracy.
We aimed to create a platform for Ethiopian youth to discuss political, economic and social issues when we launched our blog, with the motto, “we blog because we care”.
Although our arrest came two years after launching, our site was blocked in Ethiopia early on, but we continued to share our views via social media.
Finally, the regime took drastic measures: in April 2014 they arrested six members of Zone9, and three other journalists too.
We are now facing between eight and 18 years imprisonment.
This hasn’t come as a surprise. Whenever Ethiopians exercise their constitutional rights to free expression, the regime resorts to its security apparatus to silence them.
My charges are tied up with our meeting back in 2013. We met in Addis Ababa University: the minister of foreign affairs Tedros Adhanom invited me and a couple of others for a discussion, in which I raised my concerns about the regime’s tactics to push young citizens away from participating in politics.
I highlighted the negative impact this was having on the political sphere. I told you that I was risking a lot merely by expressing my thoughts freely. At that time, my arrest was only an abstract possibility.
An Ethiopian court granted police 10 more days to investigate six bloggers and journalists
All members of Zone9 (left to right): Endalk Chala, Soliyana Shemeles, Natnael Feleke, Abel Wabela, Befeqadu Hailu, Mahlet Fantahun, Zelalem Kibret, Atnaf Birahane, Jomanex Kassaye. Photograph: Endalk Chala
The conditions
The regime continues to silence any form of dissent using the strict anti-terrorism proclamation.
Since the 2005 Ethiopian election the government have prosecuted more than 200 people – journalists, dissidents and activists – and has shut down many weekly magazines and newspapers, sending most journalists into exile.
In the last eight months alone 17 journalists have been forced to flee the country.
This has made it nearly impossible for citizens to exercise their constitutional rights.
It is quite common for the federal police and the national intelligence and security service (Niss) to use force to solicit confessions from suspects. My friends and I fell victim to this type of mistreatment at the police crime investigation sector, commonly known as Maekelawi.
The abuses they are reported to have committed there include beatings with electric wire, forcing heavy physical exercise, lengthy interrogations with no rest, and keeping people in solitary confinement until suspects agree to incriminate themselves, or others. The mistreatment is more extreme under Niss.
My fellow bloggers and I spent the first 85 days of our arrest at the police station. We were given a 20-minute toilet break twice a day. In case of emergency, we found an understanding officer, or a bucket.
The rooms were crowded, filled with suspects from all over the country. We slept and ate in the little space available.
The suffocation was sometimes unbearable.
Halt the millions
The investigation has so far been a farce.
I have been, for instance, repeatedly asked what kind of relationship I had with you, and why I was invited to ask a question on the BBC’s Hardtalk program, hosted by Zeinab Bedawi, when it was filmed in Addis Ababa in May 2013 to mark the 50th anniversary of the African Union.
But to be honest, the amount of time I will be spending in prison is not the most pressing issue on my mind right now. Rather, I am worried about what will happen unless the international community, and specifically your government, assumes a firm stance on Ethiopia, demands progress with democratisation, and halts the millions of dollars pouring the regime’s way.
Having said this, I want to assure you that I understand the question of liberty and democracy in Ethiopia should be primarily answered by Ethiopians ourselves.
Ultimately, it is the “willingness to suffer and sacrifice [for our cause]”, in the words of Nelson Mandela, that will determine our fate.
Your sincerely,
Natnael Feleke
sourse ecdef

Thursday, April 23, 2015

Police violence on protesters in Addis Ababa


By Reuters
April 22, 2015


ADDIS ABABA - Demonstrators hurled stones and police fired teargas as emotions ran high at a mass rally in Ethiopia's capital on Wednesday commemorating 30 compatriots shot and beheaded by Islamic State militants in Libya, witnesses said.
Protesters started gathering at Addis Ababa's Meskel Square at dawn to denounce Islamic State. “We will not bow down to terrorism!” one placard carried by a young boy said. Another read: “The world must be united against terrorism.”
One man at the government-organized rally, who said he was a university professor, said many in the crowd were angry that jobless Ethiopians still felt they had to travel to places like Libya in the hope of crossing over to a better life in Europe.
He also accused the authorities of clamping down on free speech. “Even the chanting [at the rally] was led by the government,” he said. “We do not have the power to speak.”
Ethiopia's government dismisses accusations from rights groups that it stifles critics and opponents.
The rally was called to show solidarity with families of those killed and to mark the start of three days of national morning. Scuffles erupted moments after Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn spoke.
When some in the crowd hurled stones, police fired a teargas canister, witnesses said. Several people were detained and at least four police officers were seen being driven away, they added.
The prime minister urged Ethiopians not to travel across the Sahara to reach Europe. “We should strengthen our resolve against any form of terrorism and extremism,” he added in his speech.
Although Ethiopia's economy is growing fast, unemployment remains high. Many opt to trek across the Sahara in a bid to reach Europe via Libya, where Islamic State militants have gained a toehold after seizing large parts of Syria and Iraq.
Ethiopia has confirmed that those killed in the video,posted at the weekend, were its citizens. Family members have so far named two of them.
“I am in pain. The innocent son of a poor mother butchered like he was,” said Ahaza Kasaye, the mother of one of those identified, said, propping herself up with a walking stick. “But I am heartened to see so many Ethiopians mourn him.”
The killings have stunned a nation where relations between Ethiopia's Christians and Muslims have long been relatively peaceful. Muslim lawmakers in parliament on Tuesday read out verses in the Koran preaching tolerance.



Ethiomedia.com - An African-American news and views website.
Copyright 2013 Ethiomedia.com. 
Email: editor@ethiomedia.com

Monday, April 20, 2015

ISIL በሊቢያ ኢትዮጵያውያን ክርስቲያኖችን በማረድ እና በጥይት ገደለ

Zehabesha Amharic

  • 3911
     
    Share
(ዘ-ሐበሻ) ISIL ወይም ISIS በሚል የሚታወቀው ቡድን በሊቢያ 30 ኢትዮጵያውያን ክርስቲያኖችን ግማሹን በማረድ ግማሹን በጥይት መግደሉን በለቀቀ ቪዲዮ አስታወቀ::
ethiopian killed
Ethiopian killed by ISIL
ethiopian killed by isil 1
ethiopian killed by isil 3
ISIL በለቀቀው የ29 ደቂቃ ቪዲዮ በሊቢያ ሁለት ግዛቶች ውስጥ ማለትም ባርካ እና ፋዛን ከተሞች ውስጥ እነዚህን ኢትዮጵያውያን ክርስቲያኖች በጥይት እንዲሁም ሌሎቹን ሲያርዷቸው አሳይቷል::
ማስክ ያጠለቁት እነዚሁ የISIL አባለት ኢትዮጵያውያኑን የያዟቸውና ከላይ በተጠቀሱት ከተሞች ሕይወታቸውን ያጠፉት ከምስራቅ እና ደቡብ ሊቢያ እንደተያዙ ለዘ-ሐበሻ የደረሰው መረጃ ይጠቁማል:: ክርስቲያኖቹ ሃይማኖታቸውን እንዲቀይሩ አልያም የተለየ ታክስ እንዲከፍሉ ከመታረዳቸውና ከመገደላቸው በፊት እንደተጠየቁ የዘገበው አሶሺየትድ ፕሬስ ኢትዮጵያዊያኑ በባህር ዳርቻ አካባቢ ሕይወታቸው ተቀጥፏል ብሏል::
በርካታ ኢትዮጵያውያን ወደ አውሮፓ ለመሻገር የሰሃራ በረሃን በማቋረጥ ሊቢያ በሚገቡበት ወቅት ለበርካታ ችግሮች በተለይም ለተገዶ መደፈር; ለኩላሊት መሰረቅ እንዲሁም ለመገደልና ለመታሰር ሲበቁ ቆይተዋል::
ISIL የወሰደውን እርምጃ ተከትሎ በርካታ አስተያየቶች እየተሰጡ ሲሆን ጋዜጠኛና አክቲቭስት አበበ ገላው በፌስቡክ እጹ የሚከተለውን አስፍሯል::
ለዚህ ሁሉ ተጠያቂው ወያኔ ነው!
በየመንና በደቡብ አፍሪካ የተከሰተው ሰቆቃ ሳያንሰን ዛሬ ደግሞ በሊቢያ ISIS ኢትዮጵያዊያን ክርስቲያኖችን ሰብስቦ ማረዱን አረዳን። ኢትዮጵያዊው በአገሩ ክብርና መብት ተነፍጎ፣ በአስከፊ ድህነት ይሰቃያል፣ ከመሬቱ፣ ከቤቱ ከቀዬው ይፈናቀላል፣ ታፍኖ በየእስር ቤቱ ይታጎራል፣ ይገደላል፣ በሃሰት ይከሰሳል፣ ሰቆቃ ይፈጸምበታል። የተሰማኝ ሃዘን ጥልቅ ነው። ቸሩ አምላክ የነዚህን ምስኪን ሰማእታት ነፍስ ይታደግልን፣ ለቤተሰቦቻቸውም መጽናናትን ይስጥልን።
በስደትና በሽሽት ምድር ተዋርዶ መኖር ሳይበቃው በቁሙ ይቃጠላል፣ እንደ በግ ይታረዳል። የዚህ ሁሉ ችግር ዋነኛ መንስኤ ወያኔዎች ኢትዮጵያን ለጥቂቶች ምድራዊ ገነት ለብዙሃኑ ደግሞ ምድራዊ ሲኦል በማድረጋቸው ምክንያት መሆኑ ህሊና ላለው ሁሉ ግልጽ ነው። ለአንድ ህዝብ ከዚህ የከፋ የቁም ሞት የለም። ኢትዮጵያዊ ሁሉ በያለበት በቃ ብሎ የሚነሳበት ግዜ አሁን ነው። አገሩን ያላስከበረ ትውልድ ከዚህም የከፋ ይገጥመዋል። ለዚህ ሁሉ ተጠያቂው ወያኔ ነው። በቃ ብለን በአንድነት የምንነሳበት ግዜ አሁን ነው። ሊነጋ ሲል ይጨልማል!

ከሊቢያ ትሪፓሊ 700 ስደተኞችን ይዞ የተነሳው መርከብ ሰምጦ ከ700 ተጓዦች ውስጥ የተረፉት 28 ብቻ ናቸው ከሞቱት ውስጥ ከግማሽ በላዩ ኢትዮጵያዊና ኤርትራዊ መሆናቸው እየተነገረ ነው።


Saturday, April 18, 2015

“አምባሳደሩ ወዳገራቸው መመለስ አለባቸው” የናይጄሪያ እንደራሴዎች “አሁን የተፈጠረው ጊዜያዊ ክስተት ነው” ሃይለማርያም


xenophobia
* “ወደ አገራቸው መመለስ ለሚፈልጉት ድጋፍ ለማድረግ ዝግጁ ነን” ቴድሮስ አድሃኖም
በደቡብ አፍሪካ በሚገኙ አፍሪካውያን ላይ የተጀመረው ጥቃት ያስቆጣቸው የናይጄሪያ እንደራሴዎች በደቡብ አፍሪካ የሚገኙት አምባሳደር ወደ አገራቸው እንዲመለሱ ውሳኔ አስተላለፉ፡፡ የሩዋንዳውን ፕሬዚዳንት በማስተናገድ የተጠመዱት ጠ/ሚ/ር ሃይለማርያም ደሳለኝ በደቡብ አፍሪካ “የተፈጠረው ጊዜያዊ ችግር ነው ብለን እናምናለን” በማለት አስተያየት ሰጡ፡፡ ውጭ ጉዳይ ሚ/ር ቴድሮስ ከየቦታው ሃሳብ እየሰበሰብኩ ነው፤ “ወደ አገራቸው መመለስ ለሚፈልጉ ድጋፍ እናደርጋለን” አሉ፡፡ በደቡብ አፍሪካ የሚገኙ ኢትዮጵያውያን ግን የመመለስ ፍላጎት እንደሌላቸው ይናገራሉ፡፡
ሰሞኑን በደቡብ አፍሪካ የተነሳው አሰቃቂ ግድያና ዘረፋ ብዙዎችን እኤአ በ2008 የተከሰተውን እንዲያስታውሱ አድርጓቸዋል፡፡በወቅቱ ከስድሳ በላይ አፍሪካውያን የተገደሉና የበርካታዎች ንብረት የተዘረፈ መሆኑ ይታወቃል፡፡
ሰሞኑን በተነሳው ሁከት ሶስት ኢትዮጵያውያን መሞታቸውንና አስከሬናቸውን ወደ ኢትዮጵያ መላኩን ከዚያው የወጡ መረጃዎች ቢጠቁሙም የኢህአዴግ ባለሥልጣናት ግን የሞተው አንድ ብቻ ነው ማለታቸውን ኢቲቪ ዘግቧል፡፡
ከኢትዮጵያውያኑ ሌላ ዜጎቿ እንደሞቱባት የምትጠቀሰው ናይጄሪያ በድርጊቱ እርምጃ ለመውሰድ ዝግጅቶች እያደረገች መሆኑ ተሰምቷል፡፡ የናይጄሪያ እንደራሴዎች በደቡብ አፍሪካ ላይ የከረረ እርምጃ እንዲወሰድ እየሞገቱ ነው፡፡ የናይጄሪያ ተወካዮች ምክርቤት በጉዳዩ ላይ ሰፋ ያለ ውይይት ካደረገ በኋላ በደቡብ አፍሪካ የሚገኙት የናይጄሪያ አምባሳደር ወደ አገራቸው እንዲመጡ አጽድቋል፡፡
sa2sa4በተለያዩ ድረገጾች ላይ የተነበበው ይህ ዜና እንደሚያስረዳው የተከበሩት እንደራሴዎች እጅግ በጋለና አገር ፍቅር ስሜት በወገኖቻቸው እንዲሁም በአፍሪካውያን ላይ የሚደርሰውን ጥቃት አውግዘዋል፤ ኮንነዋል፡፡ የኤዶ ግዛት እንደራሴ ረቂቅ ሕጉ ላይ የናይጄሪያ መንግሥት ከደቡብ አፍሪካ ጋር ያለውን ዲፕሎማሲያዊ ግንኙነት እንዲያቋርጥ የማሻሻያ ሃሳብ አቅርበው ነበር፡፡ ሃሳቡን የዴልታው እንደራሴ በአጽንዖት የደገፉ ቢሆንም ውሳኔ ድምጽ ላይ ሲደርስ አምባሳደሩ ወደ አገራቸው በአስቸኳይ እንዲጠሩ የሚለው ሲያልፍ ማሻሻያው ግን በቂ ድምጽ ሳያገኝ ቀርቷል፡፡ ማሻሻያውን የደገፉ እንደራሴዎች በጉዳዩ ላይ እንደሚሰሩ የተሰማ ቢሆንም አምባሳደሩን ወዳገራቸው ማስመጣቱ በፍጥነት እንዲፈጸም ፕሬዚዳንት ጉድላክ ዮናታን የጉዳዩን አስቸኳይነት ለፕሬዚዳንት ያዕቆብ ዙማ እንዲገልጹ ውሳኔ አስተላልፏል፡፡
በኢትዮጵያ ጉብኝት የሚያደርጉትን የሩዋንዳ ፕሬዚዳንት እያስተናገዱ ያሉት ሃይለማርያም ደሳለኝ በደቡብ አፍሪካ የደረሰውን በተመለከተ በእንግሊዝኛ ድምጻቸውን አሰምተዋል፡፡ ጠ/ሚ/ሩ ታሪክን የዘነጋ በሚመስል ለስላሳ አነጋገር “ደቡብ አፍሪካ ከቅኝ አገዛዝም ሆነ ከአፓርታይድ አገዛዝ ነጻ እንድትወጣ ድጋፍ መስጠታችን ይሰማናል” በማለት አጭሩን ንግግራቸውን አሰምተዋል፡፡ ሲቀጥሉም “አፍሪካውያን በፈለጉበት መኖር” እንደሚችሉ ከገለጹ በኋላ “አሁን የተፈጠረው ጊዜያዊ ክስተት ነው ብለን እናምናለን፤ የደቡብ አፍሪካ መንግሥትና ፓርቲ ተገቢውን እርምጃ እንደሚወስድ እንጠብቃለን” በማለት ወደ ግብዣቸው ተመልሰዋል፡፡
በአሜሪካ የውጭ ጉዳይ መ/ቤት አራተኛዋ ባለሥልጣን የሆኑትን የበታች ጸሃፊ ዌንዲ ሸርማንን በማስተናገድ የተጠመዱት ቴድሮስ አድሃኖም በፌስቡክ በለቀቁት አጭር መልዕክት “በደቡብ አፍሪቃ ከሚገኙ አንዳንድ ወገኖች” ጋር በስልክ እየተነጋገሩ መሆናቸውን እና ምን መደረግ እንዳለበት ከየቦታው እስካሁን ሃሳብ በመሰብሰብ ሥራ ላይ መጠመዳቸውንsouth-africa-foreigners የሚገልጽ እንደምታ ያለው መልዕክት አስተላልፈዋል፡፡ “ወደ አገራቸው መመለስ የሚፈልጉትን” ለመደገፍ መዘጋጀታቸውን በዚሁ መልዕክት ገልጸዋል፡፡
ነዋሪዎችን ከየመኖሪያቸው በማፈናቀል፤ መኖሪያ በማሳጣት እና በግዳጅ ባልፈለጉበት ቦታ በማስፈር የሰብዓዊ መብት ጥሰት መፈጸሙ በተለያዩ ዘገባዎች በማስረጃ የሚነገርለት ኢህአዴግ ወደ አገር ለመመለስ ለሚፈልጉ ዝግጅቱ ማድረጉን ቢገልጽም በደቡብ አፍሪካ የሚገኙ ኢትዮጵያውያን ግን ሁኔታው አስፈሪ ቢሆንም ወደ አገራቸው መመለስ እንደማይፈልጉ ሲናገሩ ተደምጠዋል፡፡ አንዳንዶችም “ከአገራችን የወጣነው የኢኮኖሚ ጥገኝነት አስገድዶን ብቻ አይደለም፤ የመኖር ኅልውናችን አደጋ ላይ በመውደቁም ጭምር ነው” ሲሉ ተሰምተዋል፡፡
ለጎልጉል አስተያየታቸውን የሰጡ እንዳሉት “ደቡብ አፍሪካውያን ኢትዮጵያዊ ስለተባልን አገር ያለን መስሏቸው ከአገራቸው እንድንወጣ ይነግሩናል፤ በህይወት እያለን ወደ ኢትዮጵያ ሄደን በደኅንነት መኖር ስለማንችል እኮ ነው ስንሞት አስከሬን የምንልከው፤ ይህንን ግን የተረዱት አይመስለኝም” በማለት ሃሳባቸውን ተናግረዋል፡፡
sa9እኤአ በ2000 መጀመሪያዎች አካባቢ በአገራቸው የሚኖሩ ነጭ ሰፋሪዎችን ያባረሩት የዚምባብዌው ፕሬዚዳንት ሮበርት ሙጋቤ በዚሁ የደቡብ አፍሪካ ጉዳይ ላይ መግለጫ ሰጥተዋል፡፡ ከሁለት ሚሊዮን በላይ ዜጎቿ ደቡብ አፍሪካ እንደሚኖሩ የሚነገርላት ዚምባብዌ የዜጎቿን ጉዳይ ቀዳሚው ስፍራ የሰጠችው መሆኑ ተሰምቷል፡፡ በተለይ ግን ሙጋቤ ጉዳዩን አስመልክቶ በላኩት መልዕክት እንዲህ በማለት በደቡብ አፍሪካውያን ላይ ተሳልቀዋልዘልፈዋቸውማል፡፡
“ደቡብ አፍሪካውያን አንድ ነጭ በህይወት እያለ በጥፊ ለመምታት ሙከራ እንኳን ስለማያደርጉ (ስለሚፈሩ) ነጭ ሲሞት ሃውልቱን ይደበድባሉ፤ ነገር ግን አንድ ጥቁር የሌላ አገር ዜጋ በመሆኑ ብቻ በድንጋይ ወግረው ይገድላሉ፡፡”

ማሳሰቢያ፤ በተለይ በስም ወይም በድርጅት ስም እስካልተጠቀሰ ድረስ በጎልጉል የድረገጽ ጋዜጣ® ላይ የሚወጡት ጽሁፎች በሙሉ የጎልጉል የድረገጽ ጋዜጣ®ንብረት ናቸው፡፡ ይህንን ጽሁፍ ለመጠቀም የሚፈልጉ ሁሉ የዚህን ጽሁፍ አስፈንጣሪ (link) ወይም የድረገጻችንን አድራሻ (http://www.goolgule.com/) አብረው መለጠፍ ከጋዜጠኛነት የሚጠበቅና ህጋዊ አሠራር መሆኑን ልናሳስብ እንወዳለን፡፡

Friday, April 17, 2015

ደቡብ አፍሪካውያን ጥላችን በመቃወም ታላቅሰልፍ አደረጉ

My CMS


ሚያዝያ ፰(ስምንት) ቀን ፳፻፯ ዓ/ም ኢሳት ዜና :-በደቡብ አፍሪካ የውጪ ሀገር  ዜጎች ላይ የተፈጸመው ጥቃት  ያስቆጣቸው በርካታ ደቡብ አፍሪካውያን  ደርጊቱን  ለማውገዝ  በደርባን  ታላቅ ሰልፍ  ማድረጋቸውን የአገሪቱ የመገናኛ ብዙሃን ዘግበዋል።
በ10 ሺዎች የሚቆጠሩ ደቡብ አፍሪካውያን እና የውጭ አገር ዜጎች በሰልፉ ላይ  ተገኝተዋል። “የውጪ ሀገር ዜጎችን ማጥቃትና ማሳድድ ይቁም!” የሚል መፈክር ያነገቡት የደርባን ነዋሪዎች፤ በጥቃት ፈጻሚዎቹ ላይ ተቃውሟቸውንና ቁጣቸውን ገልጸዋል።
ሰልፈኞቹ ትናንት በደርባን የተፈጸመውን ድርጊት  ከማውገዝ ባሻገር ለውጪ ሀገር ዜጎች ያላቸውን አጋርነት በይፋ አረጋግጠዋል።.
ሰሞኑን በደርባን በተፈጸመው ጥቃት በትንሹ 5 ሰዎች መገደላቸውንና የበርካታ ሰዎች ሱቆች መዘረፋቸውን ቢቢሲ አመልክቷል። ከሟቾቹ ውስጥ ሶስቱ ኢትዮጵያውያን ናቸው።
በደርባን የሚገኙ ኢትዮጵያኖች ራሳቸውን ከጥቃት ለመከላከል አስፈላጊውን እርምጃ እየወሰዱ ነው። በደቡብ አፍሪካ የሚገኘው የኢትዮጵያ ኢምባሲ ወኪል ወደ ደርባን በማቅናት ኢትዮጵያውያኑን ማነጋገሩን የደሰረን መረጃ ያመለክታል።  ኢትዮጵያውያን በወገኖቻቸው ላይ የደረሰውን ጥቃት የማህበራዊ የመገናኛ ብዙሃንን በመጠቀም እያወገዙት ነው።
በደርባን የተፈጸመው እርምጃ በጆሃንስበርግም ይደገማል የሚል የስልክ መልእክት ተላልፎአል በሚል፣ በከተማዋ የሚገኙ የውጭ አገር ነዋሪዎች ሱቆች ተዘግተው አርፍደዋል።
እንደ አውሮፓውያኑ አቆጣጠር በ2008  ዓመተ ምህረት በውጪ ሀገር ዜጎች ላይ በተፈጸመ ተመሳሳይ ጥቃት 62 ሰዎች እንደተገደሉ መዘገብቡ አይዘነጋም።
የዙሉ ንጉስ የውጪ ሀገር ሰዎች ሻንጣቸውን ሸክፈው ወደሀገራቸው መሄድ አለባቸው በማለት ያደረጉት ንግግር  ለጥቃቱ  መጀመርና መባባስ ዋነኛ  ምክንያት መሆኑ ተመልክቷል። እርሳቸው ግን ለችግሩ ተጠያቂ አይደለሁም በማለት አስተባብለዋል።
ጥቃቱ መፈጸሙን ተከትሎ ማላዊ ዜጎቿን ከደቡብ አፍሪካ በማውጣት ቀዳሚዋ ሀገር ስትሆን፤ ዚምባቡዌም ድርጊቱን በይፋ በማውገዝ በውጪ ዜጎች ላይ የሚፈጸመው ጥቃት እንዲቆም ጠይቃለች።

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

በርካታ የፌደራል ፖሊስ አባላት እና የአየር ሃይል የበረራ አስተማሪዎች ታሰሩ


ሚያዝያ ፯ (ሰባት) ቀን ፳፻፯ ዓ/ም ኢሳት ዜና :- ሰሞኑን ከፍተኛ የደህንነት ሃላፊዎች  ያስተላለፉትን ድንገተኛ ትእዛዝ ተከትሎ በፌደራል ፖሊስ አባላት የእጅ ስልኮችና የኢሜል አካውንቶች ላይ በተደረገ ፍተሻ፣ የተቃዋሚ መሪ ፎቶዎችን፣ አገራዊ ሙዚቃዎችንና ማንኛውም ፖለቲካዊ ይዘት ያላቸውን ጽሁፎች ከኢንተርኔት አውርደው በስልካቸው ላይ ያስቀመጡ ፖሊሶች ተይዘው የተወሰኑት ማእከላዊ ሲገቡ፣ የተወሰኑት ደግሞ ጃንሜዳ አካባቢ በሚገኝ እስር ቤት መታሰራቸውን የፖሊስ ምንጮች ገልጸዋል።
በድንገት የተደረገውን ፍተሻ ተከትሎ በአጠቃላይ ከ120 ያላነሱ ፌደራል ፖሊስ አባላት ሲታሰሩ፣ በፍተሻው በቀጥታ የተቃዋሚ መሪዎች ፎቶዎች ወይም ፖለቲካ ነክ የያዙ ጽሁፎች የተገኙባቸው 37 የሚሆኑ ፖሊሶች ማእከላዊ ተወስደው ታስረዋል።
ከ80 በላይ የሚሆኑት ደግሞ አጠራጣሪ የሆኑ ጉዳዮች አሉ በሚል ለተጨማሪ ምርመራ ጃን ሜዳ አካባቢ በሚገኝ ማቆያ እንዲታሰሩ ተደርጓል።
የፌደራል ፖሊስ አዛዦች የሚሰጡትን ትእዛዝ ላለመቀበል ያንገራግራሉ ተብለው አስቀድመው በተለዩ ፖሊሶች ላይ ደግሞ ክትትሉ መጨመሩን የደረሰን መረጃ ያመለክታል።
በዚህም መሰረት በአርማጭሆና ሰሜን ጎንደር የጸረ ሽብር ግብረሃይል ሃላፊዎች የሆኑት ኢንስፔክተር ስንታየሁ፣ ሳጅን አበበ እና ም/ል ሳጅን ብርሃኑ ተይዘው ወደ ማእከላዊ ተወስደዋል።
በእስር ላይ የሚገኙት የግንቦት7 ዋና ጻሃፊ የአቶ አንዳርጋቸውን ፎቶ ግራፍ በብዙ ወታደሮች ሞባይል ስልኮች ላይ መገኘቱን ምንጮች አክለው ገልጸዋል።
ከድምጻውያን ደግሞ የቴዲ አፍሮ፣ የብርሃኑ ተዘራና የፋሲል ደሞዝ ሙዚቃዎችን ከኢንተርኔት አውርዶ ማዳመጥ ኢህአዴግን እንደመክዳት እያስቆጠረ ነው ተብሏል።
በተመሳሳይ ዜና  ድሬዳዋ ውስጥ በበረራ አስተማሪነት ይሰሩ የነበሩ ሁለት መኮንኖች ሰሞኑን ተይዘው ማእከላዊ መታሰራቸውን የኢሳት ምንጮች ገልጸዋል። ስማቸውን እስካሁን ለማወቅ ባይቻልም፣ አብራሪዎቹ ቀድም ብሎ ከታሰሩት 4 አብራሪዎች ጋር ግንኙነት ነበራችሁ ተብለው መታሰራቸው ታውቋል።
የኤም 35 ተዋጊ ሄሊኮፕተር የበረራ አስተማሪ የነበረው የሻለቃ አክሊሉ መዘነ ወንድም ሰይፉ መዘነም ማእከላዊ ታስሮ በመሰቃየት ላይ ነው። የቀድሞው አንድነት ፓርቲ የአመራር አባል የነበረው መሳይ ትኩም ከፍተኛ ስቃይ እየደረሰበት ነው።
ገዢው ፓርቲ በደህንት ተቋማት ላይ ያለው ጥርጣሬ ከመቼውም ጊዜ በላይ ከፍ እያለ መምጣቱን የሚናገሩት ምንጮች፣ ተጨማሪ ፍተሻዎች፣ ድንገተኛ ግምገማዎችና እስሮች ሊኖሩ እንደሚችሉ ይገልጻሉ።
የጥርጣሬው መነሻ ምን እንደሆነ በውል ለማወቅ አልተቻለም። ይሁን እንጅ ስራቸውን እየለቀቁ የሚጠፉ የፌደራል ፖሊሶች ቁጥር መጨመር ስርአቱን ስጋት ላይ ሳይጥለው እንደማይቀር ምንጮች  ይገልጻሉ።My CMS 

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

We Say the Land is Not Yours: Breaking the Silence Against Forced Displacement in Ethiopia


April 14, 2015
Oakland, CA – We Say the Land is Not Yours: Breaking the Silence against Forced Displacement in Ethiopia, aWe Say the Land is Not Yours landmark report from the Oakland Institute documents testimony from members of several ethnic groups from different areas of the country,1 bringing forward the voices of those most directly impacted by land grabs and villagization. The Ethiopian government’s villagization program aims to resettle up to 1.5 million Ethiopians, mainly pastoralist and indigenous communities, from areas targeted for industrial plantations. These resettlements have happened without free, prior and informed consent, and when communities resist, they have been forcibly removed by means of violence, imprisonment, intimidation, political coercion, and the denial of humanitarian assistance.
“The Oakland Institute has released reports based on meticulous fieldwork and years of research, exposing the human rights abuses against indigenous and pastoralist communities in Ethiopia,” said Anuradha Mittal, the Oakland Institute’s Executive Director. “As the country now prepares for the national election in May 2015, it is important for communities that have been shut out and locked up, to tell their stories in their own words.”
Over the past few years, free speech in Ethiopia has been systemically withdrawn. International media and NGOs have documented the threats, arrests, and disappearances of those critical of government’s policies. To add to this is the lack of media freedom: Ethiopia is the second biggest jailer of journalists after its neighbor, Eritrea. Its broadcasting and telecommunications sectors are controlled by the state, and the minimal private media sector is heavily regulated and frequently censored.
“The context in which we release this report is one of torture, oppression, and silencing,” said Mittal. “A development strategy without ensuring its citizens freedom of speech and expression is not a development strategy but a scheme to benefit the ruling elites. Those basic human rights are not being upheld in Ethiopia. It is therefore urgent to make voices of those impacted heard.”
The report includes the voices of Ethiopians, some who remain in Ethiopia, and others who have fled to neighboring countries and have sought political asylum.
With the impending national elections, the government has escalated its crackdown on political opposition and dissent. This report brings forth the voices that are being silenced, to bring this oppressive situation to the attention of the members of the African Union, international community, and donor countries. The time is now to take decisive action.
To download a copy of the report, click HERE.
For more information on Ethiopia, click HERE.
1 Representatives of affected communities from Gambella, Benishangul, Hammer and Nyangatom in the Omo Valley, and refugees in Kenya, came forward to share their experiences.sourse ecdef

Friday, April 10, 2015

Donald Levine, Sociologist and Former Dean of the College, 1931-2015


April 10, 2015
The University of Chicago
Whether he was teaching his students about sociology through martial arts or leading them to the Point during the University’s annual Kuvia celebration, Prof. Donald Levine believed in education without boundaries.Donald Levine, Sociologist and Former Dean
“[T]he intense communication that flourishes here occurs well beyond the classroom,” Levine told entering College students at Opening Convocation, 1982. In the years to come, he said, they would learn everywhere: “in the residence halls, at the supermarket, on the playing fields, inside the coffeehouses and on the streets of Hyde Park.”
Levine, the Peter B. Ritzma Professor Emeritus of Sociology, died April on 4 after a long illness. He was 83.
An adventurous and open-minded intellectual, Levine, AB’50, MA’57, PhD’57, made wide-ranging contributions to the field of sociology, alongside his lasting impact on the University as dean of the College from 1982-87.
John W. Boyer, current dean of the College, said Levine served “brilliantly” in that position.
“As an alumnus of the College and later as a prominent faculty leader, Don was a strong and passionate advocate for student rights and student welfare, and a firm believer in the power and efficacy of general education as a defining principle of the College’s educational programs,” Boyer said.
“I’M ON VERY GOOD TERMS WITH THE DEAN”
As dean, Levine reaffirmed the importance of the College’s liberal arts education. “[E]ven from a practical point of view of occupational success in later life, the best thing you can do is acquire a wide range of intellectual abilities,” he told the Chicago Sun-Times in 1982.
He used his deanship to draw attention to the non-academic aspects of College life as well. Levine worked to expand the academic advising program, strengthen the residential house system and encourage students to venture outside Hyde Park. He attracted national attention for his decision to change the school’s official song to replace “sons” and “men” with gender-inclusive terms like “children” and “us.”
With several colleagues, he created the College’s annual wintertime festival, Kuviasungnerk/Kangeiko, which began in 1983. The celebration was, in many ways, a reflection of Levine’s seemingly indefatigable good humor. “You can’t change the weather, but you can change your perception of it,” Levine said. “We wanted to blast away winter doldrums with some fun.”
Kuvia also honored Levine’s belief that education should cultivate both body and mind. A fourth-degree black belt in Aikido, Levine taught a College course that incorporated sociological theories of conflict resolution along with a weekly three-hour “lab” focused on the theory and practice of the Japanese martial art.
Levine, then dean of the College, knew the course seemed unconventional to some, but “I’m on very good terms with the dean of the College, you see,” he said.
INTELLECTUAL DIALOGUE
In his own undergraduate days, Levine met the renowned philosopher Richard McKeon, whose work on pluralism shaped Levine’s open-minded approach to sociology and social theory.
Over his long career, Levine published several works that are now considered landmarks of sociology. His “masterpiece,” according to former student Charles Camic, was Visions of the Sociological Tradition, published by the University of Chicago Press in 1995.
In that book, Levine traced the intellectual genealogy of the social sciences and argued that different traditions of social thought could productively inform one another. “It’s a brilliant analysis of theories and intellectual traditions, but also a very thoughtful effort to bring them into intellectual dialogue with one another,” said Camic, PhD’79, now a professor of sociology at Northwestern University. “The beauty with which it’s argued and the depth of his knowledge about these different intellectual traditions are astounding.”
Levine was also influential in promoting the work of German sociologist Georg Simmel and translated several of Simmel’s works into English. “He brought Simmel to awareness in the U.S.,” said Douglas Mitchell, a longtime editor at the University of Chicago Press, who worked with Levine throughout his career.
As a young scholar, Levine spent several years doing fieldwork in Ethiopia, which resulted in his first book, Wax and Gold: Tradition and Innovation in Ethiopian Culture. In 2004, Andreas Eshete, the president of Addis Ababa University, called Wax and Gold “an Ethiopian classic.”
Levine remained interested in Ethiopia throughout his life and served as an advisor on Ethiopia to the U.S. Senate, Department of State and other federal agencies. In 1999, he published Greater Ethiopia: The Evolution of a Multiethnic Society, an interdisciplinary study of Ethiopian history.
Levine used his experiences as dean of the College to inform his 2006 book, Powers of the Mind: The Reinvention of Liberal Learning in America, in which he explored the history of undergraduate education at UChicago and proposed ways to keep liberal education relevant in the modern world. “That’s one I think people will keep coming back to, more and more,” said Levine’s former student Dan Silver, PhD’08, now a professor at the University of Toronto.
Ethiopia, martial arts, intellectual history, pedagogy—the breadth of Levine’s interest and his openness to new ideas set him apart, colleagues and students say. “He was a great believer in different approaches in the hope that each could be enriched by the others,” Camic said. “I think it also came out of a deeper moral belief in the importance of human dialogue across all lines.”
Levine brought that spirit to his work as a teacher. Rigorous but never doctrinaire, Levine encouraged students to follow their own interests wherever they led. “His goal as a teacher was to produce students from whom he could learn later,” Silver said.
At the end of his life, Levine was at work on a book on the role of dialogue in social theory, according to his longtime friend and UChicago PhD student Jonathan Baskin. Baskin was surprised that Levine was trying to finish another book during his illness, but quickly realized the project brought Levine joy in his last months. “For me, it was inspiring to see someone who really did what he loved to the end,” Baskin said.
AN EMBODIMENT OF THE UCHICAGO SPIRIT
Levine’s colleagues and collaborators remember him for his generosity, thoughtfulness and positive outlook. Despite his many commitments, he was never too busy to read a former student’s work or send an email of praise. Mitchell remembers Levine making a surprise appearance at his most recent birthday party, flowers, card and balloons in hand—a memory that, for Mitchell, captures both Levine’s kindness and his game-for-anything sense of spontaneity.
“He lived in a way that expressed his commitment and love for ideas,” Baskin said. “He was one of the embodiments of the University of Chicago spirit for me. He expressed so many of its best qualities.”
Donald Levine is survived by his wife, Ruth Levine; his children, Rachel Levine, William Levine and Theodore Levine; and his grandchildren, Natanyel Bohm-Levine, Zoe Melnick and Ari Melnick.
A memorial service will be held on April 9, 1 p.m. at KAM Isaiah Israel Congregation, 1100 E. Hyde Park Blvd. Shiva will be at the Levine residence on April 9 and 11, from 6 to 8:30 p.m. with a minyan at 7 p.m. both nights. Memorial contributions may be made to the Nature Conservancy or the Jacob J. Weinstein Fund of KAM Isaiah Israel.  sourse ecadf

Thursday, April 9, 2015

Prominent Kenynan businessman Jacob Juma accused Ethiopia of supporting the terrorist group al-Shabab to destabilize Kenya.

TODAY: 4/10/2015, 11:03:54 PM
jacob-juma
Jacob Juma
Prominent Kenynan businessman Jacob Juma accused Ethiopia on Sunday of supporting the terrorist group al-Shabab to destabilize Kenya.
“Uhuru [Kenyan President] needs to ask African Union & UN to investigate Ethiopia on its secret supply of arms and support to Al-Shabaab. Ethiopia is a suspect.” Said Juma via Twitter.
“Jubilee government must deal with Ethiopia and Kenyan Somalis to end terrorism in our country. Ethiopia supplies Al-Shabaab with guns and intel.”
Juma believes Ethiopia wants to control the Horn of Africa by using the terrorist group to destabilize Kenya’s stability and its vibrant economy.
Juma maybe right. Eritreans have long suspected the Ethiopian regime of seeking to undermine Kenya’s economic position in the region so as to present itself as the more stable and viable option for Western companies.
Despite 6 million Somalis living in Ethiopia and its invasion and occupation of Somalia, not a single Al-Shabaab attack has been carried out within Ethiopia, adding more suspicion that the terrorist group maybe working with the Ethiopian dictatorship.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

ገዢው ፓርቲ የጦርነት ያክል ዘምቶብናል ሲሉ የኦፌኮ ሊቀመንበር ተናገሩ

My CMS

መጋቢት ፳፱(ሃያ ዘጠኝ) ቀን ፳፻፯ ዓ/ም ኢሳት ዜና :-የመድረክ አባል የሆነው የኦሮሞ ፌደራሊስት ኮንግረስ ሊ/መንበር አቶ በቀለ  እንደተናገሩት በመጪው ምርጫ ለመሳተፍ ድርጅታቸው በኦሮምያ የተለያዩ አካባቢዎች እጩዎችን ቢያሰማራም፣ እጩዎቹ እየታሰሩና
እየተደበደቡ በመሆናቸው መድረክ ቀጣዩን ሂደት ለመወሰን እየተነጋገረ ነው።
አቶ በቀለ በሆድሩ ጉድሮ አባሎቻቸው ቅስቀሳ እንዳያደርጉ መከልከላቸውን፣ በሜታ ሮቢ  ከ50 ያላነሱ ወጣቶች መታሰራቸውን፣ በግንደበረት የወረዳው አስተዳደር ሽጉጥ በማውጣት  አባሎችን ማስፈራራታቸውን ፣ ግንጭ ላይ ጽ/ቤታቸው መሰበሩን እና ሌሎችንም
እየደረሱባችው ያሉትን ችግሮች ተናግረዋል። ምርጫ ቦርድም ሆነ ፖሊስ መልስ ሊሰጡዋቸው እንዳልቻሉ የገለጹት አቶ በቀለ፣ ጥቃቱና ዘመቻው የማይታገስ ከሆነ መድረክ ስለሚወስደው እርምጃ እየተነጋገረ ነው ብለዋል።
የፊታችን ግንቦት የሚደረገው ምርጫ አለማቀፍ ትኩረት አልሳበም። የአውሮፓ ህብረትም ሆነ የካርተር ማእከል ምርጫውን እንደማይታዘቡ ይታወቃል  ገዢው ፓርቲ አንጻራዊ የሆነ ፉክክር ከሰማያዊ ፓርቲ እና ከመድረክ ይገጥመዋል ተብሎ ቢጠበቅም፣ በድርጅቶች ላይ
የሚደረሰው ጫና ብዙዎች ነጻ ምርጫ ይካሄዳል ብለው ተስፋ እንዳይጥሉ አድርጓቸዋል።

Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Ethiopia, Kenya and the leadership vacuum April 7, 2015 by Yilma Bekele


source ecadf

Somalia would take a long time to recover and start acting like a Nation. Kenya the sane among the group has entered the warring Nations club. South Sudan has become a playground for all its neighbors plus the UN, Chinese oil companies, IMF, NGO’s, Evangelical Christians and Israeli agents to mention a few of the actors. Eritrea is on UN and Western embargo crosshairs to make it submit like the others and Yemen across the sea is becoming a training ground for all Arab Air Force pilots.
 Armed police leave after entering the Westgate Mall in Nairobi

Armed police leave after entering the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Photo: AP
That is the madness surrounding our country. It is also sad but true that our country has its fingers in all the conflicts in the neighborhood. We have been playing with fire for a while.
Ethiopian troops have invaded Somalia on behalf of others and many battles were fought with Somalia militias until the TPLF Army was compelled to withdraw in a hurry.
Ethiopia has fought with Eritrea and over one hundred thousand died for a few square mile of barren land that still is as empty and irrelevant as before.
Ethiopian solders and security agents routinely enter Kenyan territory pursuing what they declare to be ‘terrorist’ and kill Ethiopian opposition members. Kenya looks away.
Ethiopian impartiality was questioned regarding South Sudan peace talks and moving the venue was requested by the South Sudan Government.
Ethiopia’s regime made a deal with the recently departed Yemeni President to ignore International law and kidnap an Ethiopian opposition leader.
Ethiopia still entertains the indicted and wanted criminal Al Bashir of Sudan in our capital city in a deal to ignore the arrest warrant for not allowing Ethiopian opposition to operate from Sudan.
The Ethiopian government is one of the main causes of regional instability.
It is from the rouge regime in Addis Abeba our Kenyan cousins decided to learn a lesson regarding use of force to make a point. What made Kenyan leaders convinced that they would fare any better than their fellow Africans in getting militarily involved in Somalia’s internal affairs is not clear yet.
What we do know is that Kenya invaded Somalia in 2011. Kenya has not been the same ever since. It should be considered a watershed moment in their history. The reasons for the invasion were mostly due to internal politics and if Kenya was a person it would be considered a testosterone fueled decision. Such acts by individuals are usually egotistical in nature and absolutely blind to reason.
Kenya is fortunate in not having enemies. Ever since independence Kenyan Army has been getting fat and lazy. The Army stayed out of politics and the politicians stayed out of war. That formula worked like a charm and Kenya was seen as a sea of tranquility among the storm prone neighborhood. The Army became restless, the politicians became delusional. The war against terror by the West gave them the opportunity to go to places where no Kenyan has gone before. Suddenly Kenyan army was given new toys to play with, trained in the art of warfare and given a task to fight the new threat of terrorism.
The Kenyan politicians and the Kenyan people were happy when their Army crossed into Somalia. At last they felt the Kenyan Army was going to prove how strong their nation has become. The fact that war is a dirty business and the Somalis they are trying to bully are not a push over by any imagination did not occur to the leaders or their cheerleading citizens.
The fact that they witnessed what the kat fueled Somalis are capable of in their single encounter with the US Marines in Mogadishu, the fact that they were observers of the fate of the poor Peace Keeping Forces from Africa that were virtual prisoners in their barracks and being subjected to daily harassment, not to mention their ring side seat to watch the embarrassing retreat of the Ethiopian invading Army that barely crossed the border with the militias in hot pursuit did not seem to have impressed our Kenyan friends.
Today Kenya is paying the price for failed leadership. It is going to take a long time until a sane and able leader emerges that would question the failed policy and push reset the button. If experience is a lesson Kenya is looking at a very dismal future where the country’s priorities would change and instability would be the norm. The leaders of Kenya have a lot to answer.
As Ethiopians we are familiar with the concept of failed leadership. We are living examples of a devastated people and country due to our inability to have acquired the power to choose a leaders. In Ethiopia the power of the gun is what determines the person in charge. We have been attracting very disturbed individuals that have caused us untold misery.
That is why it was disconcerting to hear that the current TPLF puppet Prime Minster of Ethiopia making some ill-advised comments regarding the situation in Yemen. Our illustrious underling claims that our country stands with the deposed and expelled Prime Minister and supports the bombing of Yemen by Saudi Arabia led Arab countries.
This is what is called self-inflicted wound. It is said there could be over one hundred thousand Ethiopians in Yemen. They are all political and economic refugees. Ethiopians have no reason to go to Yemen other than the need to get away from their country to start new. It is the dismal economic condition, the miserable ethnic situation created by TPLF that compels our young people to venture to Yemen wishing and hoping for a better tomorrow.
Today they are caught in a civil war situation. The Yemenis are too busy killing each other to pay attention to our people. Our people that are mostly young and possess rudimentary education at most find themselves in a terrifying and dangerous circumstance.
Such situation requires careful analysis with protection of ones citizens taking a center stage overriding all other political concerns. A head of state does not shoot of his mouth without considering the implications of such loose talk. A normal country with leadership that responds to the needs of the people would look at the situation carefully and pick a solution that would not put its citizens in harm’s way.
The problem in Yemen did not start yesterday. It has been going on for over two months now. There was plenty of time for the Ethiopian government to consider removing its citizens from such a war zone. The current plight of our people is not new. We experienced the pain when Saudi Arabia disgracefully deported thousands of our citizens a year ago and our own government robbed them of their possessions when they arrived home.
It is dejavu time. Our regime is caught off guard and one month into the crisis they are talking about siding with one section of the warring faction and exposing our citizens to danger. We wish the puppet PM and his minders would learn a simple adage that goes ‘lead, follow or get out of the way.’ They as usual have decided to get on the way and put their Party’s interest ahead of the general welfare of the Ethiopian nation.
I am hoping our Kenyan friends will wake up and realize the use of military force comes with unintended consequences. Today it was reported that Kenyan Air Force bombed to Somali targets. It is baby steps like this that turn into full-fledged war that Kenya cannot afford nor win.
One would think that they would look at their neighbor to the North that is in perpetual war and learn a lesson. If I were Uhuru kenyata I would nip this idiotic idea in the bud and withdraw my troops from Somalia and find someone to talk to in both in Northern Kenya and Somalia.
As for our esteemed policy makers in Ethiopia I ask you whose interest are you serving-Ethiopia or the TPLF Party? Why would the regime that purports to look after the interest of its people go around pledging alliance with one of the factions while our people are stranded there?
The only concern of the ethnic regime is staying in power and that goal compels them to pimp our sovereignty to the highest bidder. It is not that they are smart and powerful but rather it is because we still lack the courage to question authority. They hold elections where they choose the opposition party and the candidate and we look with surprise and continue to do business as usual. They sign an agreement with a foreign power without consultation or discussion and we fume but let it slide. They take sides in a civil war endangering the lives of our people and we grumble and move on.
Ethiopia is one of the few countries in the world where elections have become a farce. This is the fifth attempt and it is going to be condemned by many and celebrated by a few. The people are not part of the play yet. The one with the gun and the purse would dictate and the people will follow. We Ethiopians have been doing that for millennia. In Ethiopia we the citizens allow the inmates to run the asylum.
Kenya stands a better chance of coming out of this crisis hopefully without much damage. There is a real vibrant opposition and the media is much developed than in Ethiopia. When the euphoria of the feeble and ineffective air bombings dies down and the cost is known the Kenyan people will put an end to it. Uhuru Kenyata has been in office very short and the opposition is watching his every move. He has to grow fast in the office for Kenya’s sake.
As an Ethiopian my advice to him is ‘do not mess with the Somalis.’ Let them sort out their clannish issues. Most of all do not listen to the foreigners whisper in your ear. They have their own interest and they can afford to make mistakes whereas in your case it causes death to thousands and unnecessary drag on the development of your country.
Compare Kenya To Ethiopia