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Desperate choice of Ethiopia dump landslide survivor: run or die

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Desperate choice of Ethiopia dump landslide survivor: run or die

By Chris STEIN

Landslide

People survey the damage done to dwellings built near the main landfill of Addis Ababa on the outskirts of the city on March 12, 2017

(AFP) — One minute, Zemed Derib stood negotiating with her precocious siblings who had locked themselves inside their uncle’s home as a prank.

The next, the playful scene gave way to horror as the hillside of the rubbish dump above them collapsed.

With terrified screams of neighbours filling the air, Zemed abandoned her doomed sisters and took to her heels, outrunning the torrent of fetid dirt that swallowed homes and killed at least 113 people in Africa’s second most-populous country, Ethiopia.

“I ran away, but finally, when I turn my face, nothing was there. Everything changed into black,” Zemed said as she sat clutching a portrait of her mother Yeshi Beyene, one of the victims of the disaster at Koshe, the country’s largest rubbish dump situated on the outskirts of the capital Addis Ababa.

On Saturday, a week after the tragedy, men in face masks and rubber aprons waited for excavators to move aside the waste to carry out their search for the dead.

Zemed, wearing all black, is mourning the loss of seven relatives, including her three younger sisters and a baby girl born days earlier who had not yet been named.

Zemed’s family lived among a community of hundreds who had built homes on the side of Koshe’s main slope and spent their days scavenging for valuable rubbish trucked in from neighbourhoods around this city of about four million people.

– Accident waiting to happen? –

The settlement is now buried under a wall of black muck and the landslide left a jagged, crescent-shaped cut in the side of the landfill’s rise.

Friends and relatives gathered under the watchful eyes of dozens of police officers, who harassed AFP journalists conducting interviews with victims’ family members in a private home and forced them to delete photos and videos they had taken.

Koshe residents say their status at the dump has long been contentious. The government last year tried to move the dump to a different site, only to back down in the face of protests from people living near the proposed new location.

Meanwhile, bulldozers have flattened parts of the landfill to make way for a biogas plant, one of many infrastructure projects the government of Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn has pointed to as evidence of its efforts to develop Ethiopia, where poverty is rampant despite years of rapid economic growth.

While some residents have speculated that the plant’s construction destabilised the hillside, communications minister Negeri Lencho said investigators from the United States and Ethiopia will have the final say on what caused the disaster.

The government has promised to find accommodation for people who lost their homes in the calamity, but Zemed said her surviving relatives have nowhere to stay and have lost everything they own.

“It’s changed into mud,” she said. “Everything is changed into mud.”

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Happiness Ranking: From Oslo To Addis Ababa And Beijing

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Happiness Ranking: From Oslo To Addis Ababa And Beijing

Happiness

Smiles of all ages in Hamar, Norway – Christoffer Horsfjord Nilsen

(World Crunch) –It’s official: Norway has toppled Denmark to become the world’s happiest country in 2017. Or, to put in local linguistic terms, the world’s lykkeligste country. This year’s rankings, which came this morning to coincide with the International Day of Happiness, surely has left more than one Danish unhappy, or ulykkelig (yes, Norwegian and Danish languages are close).

The World Happiness Report is an annual UN survey which ranks 155 countries by their state of global happiness, based on criteria including GDP per capita, life expectancy, freedom to make life choices, generosity and public trust. As expected, developed Western nations dominate the list, and nations of the African continent make up most of the bottom part. Worse, the report shows that “only two African countries have made significant gains in happiness over the past decade”: Sierra Leone and Cameroon. A situation that booming demographics are unlikely to change.

Ethiopia, which ranked 119 and where a state of emergency was imposed in mid-2016 amid student protests, is a good indicator of the continent’s current situation. As Italian journalist Enrico Caporale reports for La Stampa, the country has one of the highest population growth rates in the continent and it “is projected to reach 210 million people in 2060, up from the current 99 million.” And like many other African countries, the former Italian colony is being caught in a vice between Chinese “neocolonialism” and a process of “Islamization” fostered by Gulf monarchies.

“Outside the airport, at the first traffic light, my taxi jockeys for position with a economy car driven by a man who appears to be Chinese. ‘Since they began arriving a few years ago I see them everywhere,’ my Ethiopian taxi driver complains. ‘We used to call white people ferenji, which means foreigner, but now we mainly use it for the Chinese. They’ve built everything here.”

Back in China, there is little doubt that this expansion abroad has helped accelerate a quarter-century of rather stunning economic growth. But how has the rise to becoming the world’s No. 2 economy translated on the happy front? Monday’s UN report notes that China remains stuck down in the 79th slot on the World Happiness Report, demonstrably no happier than they were before the economic boom. 伤心 Sad.

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A Global Competition For Influence In Ethiopia : World Crunch

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A Global Competition For Influence In Ethiopia : World Crunch

Global

Ethiopian attendants receiving training at a railway station in Addis Ababa – Li Baishun/Xinhua/ZUMA

By Enrico Caporale
LA STAMPA
English edition WORLDCRUNCH

slam making major inroads in the east African nation. China pumping millions into infrastructure and industry. An Italian reporter gauges changes in the former colony.

ADDIS ABABA –  On the flight from Rome to Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital, flight attendants hand out Chinese-language magazines. And in the city’s Bole International Airport, the only cigarettes available are of the made-in-Chinese variety. Marlboros aren’t an option.

Outside the airport, at the first traffic light, my taxi jockeys for position with a economy car driven by a man who appears to be Chinese. “Since they began arriving a few years ago I see them everywhere,” my Ethiopian taxi driver complains. “We used to call white people ferenji, which means foreigner, but now we mainly use it for the Chinese. They built everything here: the African Union (AU) headquarters, the new light rail system, the Modjo-Hawassa highway, even the railway to Djibouti.”

Here in Ethiopia, where the Italian Empire went to ruin in the ashes of World War II, China is building a new empire of its own.

Heading out from the capital of one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies, another feature of the landscape catches the eye. A minaret soars over every urban center, community, or village that appears in the distance — many have even more than one. “Those are all financed by oil money,” the driver explains. “For the last 20 years Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Kuwait have been building mosques here.”

Global

Chinese drivers in a test train on the Ethiopia-Djibouti railway — Photo: Zhou Xiaoxiong/Xinhua/ZUMA

It doesn’t take long upon arriving in Ethiopia to understand the forces at play. While China builds roads and highways in exchange for access to the country’s lucrative natural resources, the monarchies of the Arabian Gulf establish their influence in rural areas by building mosques and spreading Sunni Islam.

Journalist and Africa expert Howard W. French says that Chinese “neocolonialism” began in Ethiopia about two decades ago, in 1996. That year, in a visit to Addis Ababa, then-Chinese President Jiang Zemin proposed the establishment of the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation (FOCAC). Upon his return to China, Zemin urged industrialists to invest in Africa. Since then the Chinese presence on the continent has grown and become ever more visible, with Chinese-built roads, railroads, and industrial hubs popping up across Africa.

Buckling under the pressure of a food crisis and an influx of refugees escaping long-running instability in the Horn of Africa, the Ethiopian government sold the country’s best land to Chinese investors, who used it to produce grain for export.

The new railway linking Addis Ababa to the port of Djibouti, 750 km away, grants the landlocked nation access to the sea and was built by the China Railway Group (CREC) and the China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation, a subsidiary of the China Railway Construction Corporation (CRCC). The three-lane Modjo-Hawassa highway, at a cost of $700 million, is also being built by the Chinese, as was the $500 million light rail system that cuts through Addis Ababa’s traffic. The two-line system is the first to be built in sub-Saharan Africa.

Global

Some Ethiopians claim they have never seen so many people wearing the Islamic veil — Photo: William Palank

But Beijing isn’t solely interested in business investments on the world’s second-largest continent. China is building its first overseas military base in neighboring Djibouti, which will include an air force base, lodging for thousands of soldiers, and a deep-water port that can host large warships.

Investing in the future

The expropriation of land for these projects has run into intense opposition from local tribes in Ethiopia. Last summer, protests erupted across Oromia, the country’s largest and most populous region, spurring a brutal crackdown that killed thousands and forced the regime to declare a state of emergency.

“The fear now is that protesters and farmers will see radical Islam as a source of hope against the Orthodox Christian elite that rules the capital,” says a youth who asks to remain anonymous.

Other Ethiopians claim they have never seen so many imams and people wearing the Islamic veil as they do now. Ethiopia has ancient ties to Islam and was the site of the first ever hijra — the journey undertaken by the prophet Muhammad’s earliest followers to escape persecution in Mecca. It is also home to Negash, the oldest Muslim settlement in Africa.

Experts claim that despite this long history, the Gulf monarchies embarked upon a targeted “Islamization” of the country after the fall of the Soviet Union and Ethiopia’s communist dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam in 1991. This was done by building mosques in Muslim-majority areas and spreading their version of the Sunni faith in Islamic schools.

“In 1991 Riyadh took 2,000 young Ethiopians to study the Koran in Saudi Arabia, sending them back as imams two years later,” says an anonymous source. “That’s when burqas and minarets began to appear everywhere, and the Gulf monarchies want to build two mosques for every community.”

While China focuses on business interests, the Arab states seek to indoctrinate ordinary Ethiopians. Ethiopia has one of the highest population growth rates in Africa and is projected to reach 210 million people in 2060, up from the current 99 million. Their goals and tactics vary. But Beijing and the Arabian Gulf both see Ethiopia, whose global importance will only continue to grow, as an area full of promise.

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As Trash Avalanche Toll Rises in Ethiopia, Survivors Ask Why

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As Trash Avalanche Toll Rises in Ethiopia, Survivors Ask Why

By Hadra Ahmed and Jacey Fortin

Survivors

A funeral service last week for victims of a garbage landslide in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. At least 113 people were killed in the March 11 collapse, according to the government. Mulugeta Ayene/Associated Press

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (New York Times) — At the moment when she lost her home and family, Hanna Tsegaye was spending her Saturday night with a neighborhood friend.

Around 8 p.m. on March 11, Ms. Hanna, 16, heard a strange sound, like rushing wind, and felt the ground shake beneath her feet. She rushed outside and saw that an enormous pile of garbage at a nearby landfill had collapsed.

Her home, which had been a couple of hundred yards from the trash heap, was buried. So were her parents and two siblings.

At least 113 people, according to the latest government estimate, were killed when part of the Repi landfill, in the southwest of Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, collapsed. In the days since, grieving survivors have been tormented by a pressing question: Could this tragedy have been prevented?

“We don’t know how such a thing could happen,” a weeping Ms. Hanna said. “Hopefully, someone can tell us and find a solution for the future. I hope this can be a lesson for the government, and that they remember us.”

The disaster is at odds with the image Ethiopia wants to project as a rapidly developing country. Poverty rates have decreased by more than 30 percent since 2000, according to the World Bank, and government officials have claimed economic growth in the double digits over the last decade. Addis Ababa, home to the African Union, is a bustling city where new malls, hotels and apartment buildings are constantly being built.

Rescue operations at the Repi landfill the day after the collapse. More than a week later, the smell of trash and decomposing bodies was still wafting through the neighborhood. Mulugeta Ayene/Associated Press

But that has caused large-scale displacement for the poor in the capital. The government has been constructing high-rise apartment blocks on the edges of the city to house people at subsidized rates, but critics say those efforts have been plagued by corruption. Many of the displaced have resorted to building makeshift shelters in dangerous and undesirable areas, including on and around the Repi landfill.

“The government must take responsibility for what happened and come up with a better plan for a sustainable solution for these people,” said Girma Seifu, who was the only opposition member in Parliament until a 2015 election gave the governing coalition every seat.

Ethiopia has been under a state of emergency since October, enacted after months of sometimes deadly protests by demonstrators demanding more political freedom.

Repi is now a mass grave. More than a week after the collapse, a horrible smell of trash and decomposing bodies still wafts through the neighborhood, which is crowded with survivors, mourners and volunteers. Corpses are still being pulled from the refuse.

“The idea that they died buried in dirt, just like they lived in dirt, is heartbreaking,” Mr. Girma said.

A security worker at the site, who did not want to give his name for fear of retribution, said that he thought the death toll could exceed the government’s estimate by hundreds of victims, and that many families were finding it difficult to identify the recovered bodies.

A victim’s coffin was lowered into a grave in Addis Ababa last week. Bustling development in the capital has pushed many of the poor to build shelters in dangerous areas like landfills. Mulugeta Ayene/Associated Press

Repi, which covers more than 60 acres and whose vast heaps of waste are blanketed by a noxious haze, has been Addis Ababa’s main dumping ground for about half a century. The site is also known as Koshe, derived from the Amharic word koshasha, or dirty.

Hundreds of people used to comb through the refuse every day, looking for scraps to use or sell, even though basic landfill infrastructure for drainage, containment and odor control was essentially nonexistent.

The government had planned to shut down the site and open a new landfill outside the capital early last year. But that was in a town called Sendafa in the Oromia region, home to the country’s largest ethnic group, the Oromo, who have long complained of marginalization at the hands of the government.

Oromo grievances erupted into widespread protests starting in late 2015, and security agents often responded with deadly force. After Oromo farmers blocked garbage trucks from dumping at the Sendafa site in July, Repi had to resume its role as Addis Ababa’s main dumping ground.

Some work has been done there in recent years. A project to capture and flare methane fumes, to limit greenhouse gas emissions, has been operational since 2013.

A funeral service last week. The government is starting an inquiry into the landfill collapse, which is at odds with the image Ethiopia wants to project as a rapidly developing country. Mulugeta Ayene/Associated Press

There is also a major project under construction, set to open this year, that aims to burn 1,400 tons of Repi garbage daily and generate 185 gigawatt-hours of electricity annually. Cambridge Industries, the development and construction company that is spearheading the project, estimates that it could power 25 percent of the capital’s households.

Samuel Alemayehu, the East Africa managing director for the company, commended the government for investing in renewable power. But he said the deadly landslide was “absolutely horrific” and “should not have happened at all.”

The government has not yet given a cause for the collapse, but is starting an investigation, said Negeri Lencho, a government spokesman.

He added that officials had created a committee “to provide victims with sustainable support because they have lost their homes, and the government is responsible for resettling these people.”

Community members have volunteered time, money and supplies in the aftermath of the disaster. Martha Tadesse, 26, a photographer, used to tutor students in the Repi area. Now, she is attending funerals and helping to organize donations of baby food, clothing and sanitary pads.

“I do see many people being involved, due to social media,” she said, adding that people have been reaching out to offer help.

But for those who lost their homes and families, this outpouring of support came too late. Repi has long been considered a blight on the city’s outer limits, and the people who live in the area describe a lifetime of governmental neglect — made worse by discrimination from their compatriots.

Adane Kebede, a young man who lost friends in the collapse, said other Ethiopians had sometimes refused to speak with him because he grew up near the landfill.

“No one considered us worthy” before the disaster, he said. “But death does not discriminate. We are now visible. Hopefully the world will know our sorrow.”

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Ethiopia offers new land for floriculture and horticulture to Dutch firms

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Ethiopia offers new land for floriculture and horticulture to Dutch firms

(Hortipoint) — Ethiopia wants to transform a 1,500 ha State-owned farm north of Hawassa into a new land area for floriculture and horticulture activities, according to an article published in the Dutch Floriculture publication Vakblad voor de Bloemisterij.

The Netherlands government will support the development of the project and help to find investors. According to Niek Bosmans from the Embassy of the Netherlands in Addis, sustainability will be at the core of this project, which will be implemented on land which was used by the government since long ago.

This project is part of the plan of Ethiopia to double its agrarian output. A similar project of 200 ha was already carried out in the area of Bahir Dar.

Floriculture

Below is a Google translated version from Dutch:

Ethiopia wants a former state farm of 1,500 hectares to turn on new ‘horti- / floriculture’ area. The Dutch government helps the integral development and the search for investors.

Ethiopia wants to double its agricultural production. Several initiatives by the Dutch government before the country develops and there is often involved. This time it is a former state farm north of the city Hawassa, about 275 km in Addis Ababa. According to Niek Bosmans, agricultural counselor for the Dutch Embassy in Ethiopia, is the approach to develop a highly durable production area along with growers. Sustainable on all fronts, not just in the field of environment and labor. Therefore, knowledge and experience of Dutch comes in handy, says Bosmans. He wants to organize a meeting in the Netherlands in late February for producers who want to invest in the area. “Flower growers are welcome but also growers who want to cultivate in Ethiopia vegetables or other crops.”

For edge Worth Ende plans for activities near Hawassa started a few years ago. By and large they agree with what is around Bahir Dar, nearly 500 km north of Addis Ababa, something previously used for a plot of 200 hectares. There in 2016 by the troubles only made on the site. Bosmans notes that with growers, suppliers and governments is still interested in developing land in Ethiopia. The Dutch government is proposing a number of additional conditions, such as transparent processes and the involvement of local people. The riots in 2016 have claimed Bosmans various political causes that have not all been resolved. About the misuse of land in the new horticultural area in Hawassa will be no discussion, according to him. The land has long been owned and used by the government.

Google Earth is easy to see the “square blocks” that the state farm has brought a large piece of land under cultivation. The dark stain left is part of the Lake Hawassa.

More about this project and Ethiopia can be found in the Magazine of Friday, January 13th, 2017.
Google Translate for Business:Translator ToolkitWebsite TranslatorGlobal Market Finder

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Ten killed as Samburu, Borana herders clash in Isiolo – Citizen Digital

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Ten killed as Samburu, Borana herders clash in Isiolo

By Josiah Mugo For Citizen Digital

Samburu, Borana herders clash in Isiolo

Kenya (Citizen Digital) — Ten people were killed in fresh clashes pitting Borana and Samburu herders in Kom area of Isiolo on Monday.

According to Isiolo County Commissioner George Natembeya, six of the victims were Boranas, four Samburus with the number of injured Boranas remaining unknown as they fled the area using motorbikes.

Natembeya said that the Borana attackers from Merti and Garbatula gained access to the Samburu camp by use of motorbikes, attacked and escaped using the same bikes, a clear pointer that the attack was premeditated.

The county boss, however, indicated that a contingent of security officers has been dispatched to the area to comb through in search of more casualties as well as help restore calm.

Kom area has always been subject to conflict as it is the only place in the region where herders from Samburu, Marsabit and Wajir counties converge during the drought seasons due to the presence of water and grass throughout the year.

The native Borana elders reserve the area for use during the dry seasons and allow other pastoralist communities to graze their animals upon request up to specified boundaries, but the situation gets bloody every time the visitors defy the agreement.

He warned that the region would only become free of clashes once a disarmament exercise is successful, calling for support in terms of adequate security personnel and machinery to conduct the disarmament exercise soonest possible.

The office of the county security team has only been registering the illegal firearms in the hands of the public with the hope that the exercise would curb irresponsible use of the weapons.

Natembeya now says that the water and grass in the area could be enough for all the animals if shared peacefully.

Tension is still rife in the area as the visitors refuse to back off from the area for fear that their animals will die once they leave Kom and go back to their land.

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“#Women’s Inferno in #Ethiopia”, hosted by MEP Liliana Rodrigues

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“#Women’s Inferno in #Ethiopia”, hosted by MEP Liliana Rodrigues

European Parliament, Brussels

Inferno

The Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO), in collaboration with the People’s Alliance for Freedom and Democracy (PAFD) and MEP Liliana Rodrigues (S&D), will be holding a conference entitled ‘Women’s Inferno in Ethiopia’ at the European Parliament in Brussels.

The primary aim of the conference is to raise awareness about the deteriorating condition of human rights in Ethiopia. This focus comprises the human rights abuses faced by marginalised ethnic groups, and more specifically, the rife sexual and gender-based violence that disproportionately affects women in these communities. To this end, the conference will centre on the plight of women from Ogaden and Oromo, but also from Benishangul-Gumuz, Gambella, and Sidama.

Two years have passed since UNPO’s conference entitled ‘Minority Women’s Rights: an Ethiopian Inferno?’, and now the organisation seeks to bring these issues back to the table with a particular spotlight on sexual violence. Bringing together a variety of internal and peripheral perspectives, this conference will converge around broad issues, such as the state of human rights in Ethiopia, and around more detailed concerns regarding institutionalised rape and other forms of gender-based violence.

The conference programme will soon be available. For further information, please contact Julie Duval (j.duval@unpo.org).

Selected comments from UNPO facebook:

Denboba Natie · 48:49 Thanks for becoming voices for voicelessly brutalised peoples of Ethiopia

Oromoo Dammaqe · 55:03 Thank you UNPO WELL DONE !

Denboba Natie · 58:14 We’re actively working to engage EU members to show practical support instead of lip services.

Denboba Natie · 1:02:00 Mamaya in a modern world this is a diplomatic campaign…armed struggle will its own wing. Therefore, UNPO is groups of dedicated MEPs. Therefore I advise you to see it in this light

Abbagiddi Guye · 2:09:49 Bekele Gerba & other political prisoners are on hunger strike protesting prison conditions. Consequently prison officials have prevented them from meeting with their lawyers and family.

Mamaya Umar · 1:02:21 I dont even know how this people call government of ethiopia…if you cause genocide you cant be gov..anymore but terrorist…just cus they hav gov license that doesnt make them less terrorist

Utubaa Lammii · 11:16 Good job Dr. Shugut Galeta representative of OLF Diplomatic affair in behave of Oromo.

Salah Ahmed · 1:09:26 The Ethiopian armed forces had just did something you can’t never imagine. They had 9 moth pregnant female forced to lie down on her stomach. This Terrorist groups jumped on her back. She lost her child fainted for them to do anymore harm to her. They left her and dead infant there. The locals took her to the nearest clinic to save her life. Her lifeless child was buried while she was getting treated at that clinic. I can have any human right activist connect this lady when i cleared their authenticity.
Leyla Cabdulaahi Ibraahim · 2:09:06 TPLF needs to be held responsible for their horrific acts!!!!
Leyla Cabdulaahi Ibraahim · 44:46 Thank U Graham for Always supporting Ogaden People
Abbagiddi Guye · 1:49:05 Thanks again buddy TPLF is ISIS of Ethiopia
Mintid Midnimo · 50:51 Ogadenia, Oromia and other notions and nationalities deserved to be free from dictatorship government of Ethiopia
Sukan Chakma · 48:27 Thank you UNPO for being there to support the unheard voices

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ONN: Dr. Trevor Trueman Chairman of Oromia Support Group


Oromo: Our cause is just but demands perseverance and more of it from us!

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Oromo: Our cause is just but demands perseverance and more of it from us!

By Abbaa Ormaa

THESE are the times that try men’s souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country; but he that stands by it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly: it is dearness only that gives every thing its value. Heaven knows how to put a proper price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an article as FREEDOM should not be highly rated. Britain, with an army to enforce her tyranny, has declared that she has a right (not only to TAX) but “to BIND us in ALL CASES WHATSOEVER” and if being bound in that manner, is not slavery, then is there not such a thing as slavery upon earth. Even the expression is impious; for so unlimited a power can belong only to God.Thomas Paine, December 23, 1776

If we really want FREEDOM, we have to be not only the summer and sunshine soldiers, but also the winter soldiers. In fact we need more of winter SOLDIERS!

The Oromo people have been subjected to mass atrocities and slavery in the hands of Abyssinian and subsequent modern day Ethiopian warlords from the North of Oromia for a little over a century. Once the Abyssinian warlords reached Oromo country, they called the Oromo names, degraded their culture, degraded their language, and humiliated them in their own home. They called their annexation “integration” to mask its true name, COLONIZATION. Abyssinians brought corrosive anti-democratic culture with them and corrupted few Oromos here and there. The Oromo people are here today only because of Oromo values rooted in the time tested Gadaa, the oldest democratic institution. It worth mentioning that Abyssinians adopted the name “Ethiopia” as official name around 1920 to mud the water and confuse the willing by creating the false narrative of make–believe history of 3000 years.

To this day, the Oromo people and Oromia are under occupation, this time by the minority Tigray-elites. The minority Tigray-led regime is using terrorism and fake development as cover to continue their mass atrocities against the Oromo people. Following the heroic and historic uprising, the qeerro/qarree-led Oromo protest movement in Oromia, that rocked the regime from its foundation, the Tigray elites trained and enlisted the Somali Liyu police to mass murder Oromos and terrorize Oromo villages.

Unfortunately, in the face of all these, the diaspora Oromo has become emotionally reactive. We react to bad news with vigor and urgency while the story is fresh. Every time the regime commits heinous crimes against the Oromo people, we protest, decry, and then go back to business as usual while our adversaries plan for their next target. A good example is what happened following the Ireecha-massacre of 2016, one would have thought ok this should be it. But unfortunately, it came and passed as if nothing happened leaving thousands dead, tens of thousands jailed. Our outrage did not last. Mourning and protesting is a necessary thing but not going to change the behavior of a genocidal regime. Killing and intimidations are their weapons.

Helping our fellow mourners, prisoners, and exiles is a norm for a society but not sufficient to address the root causes of the endless killings and injustices. As we continue to help victims of Tigray-elites atrocities, we should also be asking the question FOR HOW LONG WE MOURN OUR DEADS, IMPRISONED, EXILED, AND PUSHED ASIDE IN OUR OWN HOME? Eventually one has to give way. The Tigray-elites made it clear that the choice is binary, either we submit to them or wiped out altogether, or we take back our country and free our people. I am afraid that the way we are, we are not up to the challenge unless we figure it before it is too late.

If we don’t grow up as people, get our acts together and figure out how to end these nonstop mass atrocities against our people, we will soon be referred as the people who once lived in the horn of Africa.

If we are true to our aspiration, we must do the hard work of organizing and pulling together our limited resources to confront this regime and other foes. We must figure out a way to marshal our minds, hearts, and resources to get rid of this oppressive regime and the conditions that made it possible for crooks and thugs to control the levers of power and abuse us all together. Until we do that, we will be in the same predicament year after year crying and mourning.

If we are to change the fate of our people, we must evaluate and reevaluate our weaknesses as people first and for most. Our political and civic organizations are reflections of us, the people. The weaker we are, the weaker they are. In searching for this unity, let us insist on accountability from our political and civic organizations. Whenever we give money to groups and organizations in the name of Oromo, let us make sure that the money we give is used to unite us not to divide us. We must make sure that our support that is not used to feed oversized egos of individuals turning them into a cult than a rational leader.

I am pleased to have learned that the much anticipated Global Gumii Oromia (GGO) is finally to be materialized. GGO’s ambition to bring all Oromos around a table “to critically understand and confront our ideological, leadership and organizational shortcomings and to develop central organizing ideas and strategic plans at the grassroots level for our national movement” is a noble goal and the people behind it deserve our appreciations. This is a great start. But it is up to each and every Oromo to play our part in materializing our people’s aspiration for equality, justice, and freedom by encouraging and becoming stake holders in Oromo organizations that stand for our common vision and that understands the roll of the diaspora is a supportive role. The ultimate deciders are the people on the ground in Oromia.

GGO is a work in progress and it takes all of us to create this forum where we sit together around a table and do what our forefathers did, address our differences, strengthen our unity, mend fences, and defend our country, protect our elders, women, and children. I wish GGO success and I will be there to do my part! Our cause is just, too big, and too important to be left to few.

Yes, there are lots of chaffs in the name of Oromo running around but it is up to us, the Oromo people, to separate the wheat from the chaffs and huddle around the wheat to take on the tyrants.

http://www.globalgumioromia.com/registration/

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Letter on Ethiopia to the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs / Vice-President of the European Commission Mogherini

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Letter on Ethiopia to the EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs / Vice-President of the European Commission Mogherini

Source: Human Rights Watch

Federica Mogherini

High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs /
Vice-President of the European Commission
Rue de la Loi, Wetstraat 200
1049 Brussels

Brussels, March 23, 2017

Dear High Representative Mogherini,

EU high representative

Armed security officials watch as protesters stage a protest against government during the Irreechaa cultural festival in Bishoftu, Ethiopia on October 02, 2016. © 2016 Getty Images

Human Rights Watch wishes to express our deep disappointment over the one-sided statement issued by your office during your official visit to Ethiopia last week. In the public statement of March 17, 2017, you focus only on the important European Union partnerships with Ethiopia on humanitarian assistance, migration, refugees, and economic growth, and reiterate your support for the dialogue with the political opposition currently underway.

In our view the statement was a missed opportunity to state publicly and unequivocally that Ethiopia’s repressive response to freedom of expression and peaceful assembly –  illustrated by the government’s brutal crackdown on protests– is not conducive to Ethiopia’s long-term stability or the EU’s ability to partner with Ethiopia on areas of mutual interest.

As you are aware, Ethiopia’s widespread human rights violations against its citizens means that Ethiopia is a country producing refugees and asylum seekers seeking safety.

Since November 2015 state security forces have killed hundreds and arrested tens of thousands of protesters, plunging Ethiopia into a human rights crisis. A state of emergency, called in October 2016, prescribes sweeping restrictions that go far beyond what is permissible under international law, eliminating what little space there was for the peaceful expression of critical views. The government has detained over 20,000 in “rehabilitation camps” since the state of emergency was declared, according to official figures. Widespread and long-standing restrictions on media and civil society groups continue to be enforced. Opposition leaders remain in detention on politically motivated charges, including Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC) leader Dr. Merera Gudina, who was arrested following his attendance at a briefing on November 9 in Brussels organized by an MEP. Just three weeks before your visit, he was charged with “outrages against the constitution” and faces up to life in imprisonment.

Harassment through criminal charges, arbitrary detention of political opposition members and supporters, restrictions on financing, and registration problems have decimated opposition parties since the 2010 election. Actual or perceived members of opposition parties have difficulty accessing the benefits of development and humanitarian assistance, including that provided by the EU and its member states. This partisan system ensures that Ethiopians in rural or drought-vulnerable areas of the country are dependent on the government, bolstered by EU support, for their livelihoods, food aid, employment, and health care. This further constricts the space for political expression, dialogue and further undermines the effectiveness of opposition parties. From the government’s perspective, the strategy has been successful — the ruling party and its affiliates won 100 percent of the seats in federal parliament in 2015 despite strong anti-government sentiments in many parts of the country as the protests would later illustrate.

Dismantling opposition parties, imprisoning critical opposition voices, and then inviting whomever remains to engage in a dialogue is not the “right direction,” as your statement said. Nor is having such a dialogue in the shadow of a state of emergency with wide-ranging restrictions on free expression rights. Moderate, yet still critical opposition voices, including Dr. Merera, should be part of any credible dialogue with the opposition, and this should have been stressed privately and publicly to the prime minister as critical for any meaningful dialogue. Your expression of support for political dialogue without acknowledging the systematic destruction of legally registered opposition parties and the suppression of basic human rights is not constructive to the EU’s partnership with Ethiopia.

Discussing economic partnerships during the state of emergency that followed 18 months of brutality partly triggered by the government’s abusive economic development approach illustrates our concern with your recent statement. The Ethiopian government has ignored the rights of those displaced by investment projects, failing to properly consult and compensate them. It begs the question: what polices or safeguards is the EU insisting are in place to ensure that economic development occurs with professed EU commitments to human rights respected?

In this light, the EU-Ethiopia Business Forum should be postponed until the abusive provisions of the state of emergency are lifted. Moreover, the government should make progress on implementing reforms that are crucial for a rights-respecting business environment, such as the repeal or substantial amendment of the Charities and Societies Proclamation.

The contrast between recent statements by the European parliament and the European Union could not be more stark. Parliament has consistently issued strong statements about the government’s brutal crackdown, including a resolution adopted in January 2016 that stated “respect for human rights and the rule of law are crucial to the EU’s policies to promote development in Ethiopia.” The resolution also stressed that the “EU should measure its financial support according to the country’s human rights record and the degree to which the Ethiopian Government promotes reforms towards democratization.” Parliamentary subcommittee hearings on Ethiopia followed in October. European Parliament actions signaled to the Ethiopian government and its people that there are repercussions for brutality against their own citizens – brutality that undermines European priorities in the Horn of Africa.

In contrast, the EU’s tepid approach, epitomized by your recent statement merely sends the message to the Ethiopian government that its repression and brutality carries no consequences or public condemnation from its most trusted friends, donors, and partners.

As all recognize, Ethiopia is an important partner of the EU in the areas of migration, development and economic growth. But these partnerships are dependent on long-term stability in Ethiopia and, thus, should be dependent on respect for basic human rights.

A further downward spiral in the human rights situation in this country of 100 million people could lead to dramatically increased humanitarian needs and out-migration from Ethiopia, all of which would contravene European and Ethiopian interests. This is where the EU’s focus should be.

We strongly urge you to use future meetings with Ethiopia’s leadership to publicly and unequivocally call for the release of key opposition leaders such as Dr. Merera and Bekele Gerba, the lifting of abusive provisions of the state of emergency, an international investigation into the crackdown on government protests, and the repeal of longstanding restrictions on media and civil society. And as stated in the European parliament resolution, it would be beneficial to clarify what progress on human rights you expect from Ethiopia to maintain ongoing EU support. The European Union’s interests in Ethiopia are best served by taking a principled stance on the importance of human rights protections.

Kind regards,

Lotte Leicht
EU Director
Human Rights Watch

CC:

  • Secretary General of the European External Action Service (EEAS), Ms Helga Schmid
  • Deputy Secretary General for Political Affairs, EEAS, Mr Jean-Christophe Belliard
  • Deputy Secretary General for Economic and Global Issues, EEAS, Mr Christian Leffler
  • Chair of the EU’s Political and Security Committee, Ambassador Walter Stevens
  • Managing Director for Africa, EEAS, Mr Koen Vervaeke
  • Director, Deputy Managing Director for Africa, EEAS, Ms Birgitte Markussen
  • Head of Division, Horn of Africa, East Africa and Indian Ocean, EEAS, Ms Claudia Wiedey
  • Managing Director for Human Rights, Global and Multilateral Issues, EEAS, Ms Lotte Knudsen
  • Director, Deputy managing Director for Human Rights, Global and Multilateral Issues, EEAS, Mr Marc Giacomini
  • Head of Human Rights Division, EEAS, Ms Mercedes Garcia Perez
  • Chair of the Council’s Africa Working Party, Mr Riccardo Villa
  • Head of the EU Delegation to Ethiopia, Ambassador Chantal Hebberecht
  • EU Special Representative for Human Rights, Mr Stavros Lambrinidis
  • Head of Cabinet of the High Representative / Vice-President Mogherini, Ms Fabrizia Panzetti
  • Deputy Head of Cabinet of the High Representative / Vice-President Mogherini, Mr Oliver Rentschler

 

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Ethiopia’s deadly rubbish dump landslide was down to politics, not providence

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Ethiopia’s deadly rubbish dump landslide was down to politics, not providence

Fadila Bargicho believes divine intervention saved the life of one of her two sons when a landfill site collapsed near Addis Ababa. The reality is more prosaic

In the rubbish

A rescue worker holds a photo of missing children following the fatal landslide at the Reppi rubbish dump on the outskirts of Addis Ababa. Photograph: Tiksa Negeri/Reuters

By William Davison in Addis Ababa

(The Guardian) — It was only a misplaced shoe that prevented Fadila Bargicho from losing a second child when an avalanche of rubbish crushed makeshift houses, killing at least 113 people in Addis Ababa earlier this month.

An impatient Ayider Habesha, nine, had left his older brother searching for his footwear. He headed to religious lessons in a hut next to the towering dump. Ayider was buried alive with his six classmates and teacher when a chunk of the open landfill gave way on the evening of 11 March. His body was recovered two days later.

“He could not find his shoe and that was God’s way of saving one of my children,” Bargicho says of her 16-year-old son, Abdurahim, who usually attended the classes with his brother.

While Bargicho sees divine intervention at play in the incident, the collapse at Reppi landfill was an avoidable, manmade disaster.

In 2011, the French development agency (AFD) gave Addis Ababa’s government 34.6m euros (£17.3m) to close and rehabilitate Reppi and build a new landfill site at Sendafa, about 25 miles outside the capital in Oromia state.

Oromia has been engulfed by violence since November 2015. The unrest has been fuelled by concerns over a masterplan to integrate the development of Addis Ababa – a metropolis of about 5 million people – with surrounding Oromo areas. While federal officials insist the blueprint would mean harmonious progress, activists cast it as another land grab that would mean the eviction of thousands more Oromo farmers as the capital expands.

Police and rescue workers watch as excavators dig in search of missing people at the Reppi rubbish dump in Addis Ababa. Photograph: Tiksa Negeri/Reuters

The AFD funding also covers retraining for the hundreds of people who picked through the waste at Reppi for valuable items, some of whom died in the landslide.

When Reppi was established in the 1960s, it was in the countryside. Now it is surrounded by shops and houses, which have encroached on an expanding rubbish mountain.

Rubbish started being sent to Sendafa, rather than Reppi, in January last year. But operations were suspended seven months later after protests by local farmers, who said the Sendafa site was poisoning water and killing livestock.

The trucks returned to Reppi, where rubbish had been dumped without being treated, compacted or otherwise managed for half a century. Authorities knew Reppi was unstable and over capacity when they resumed operations, according to Nega Fantahun, the head of the city government’s solid waste recycling and disposal project office, the responsible agency.

“One cause is the return to Reppi. It’s not the only reason, but it’s one cause, one reason, it aggravates it,” he says of the landslide.

The government hasn’t given up on Sendafa, a joint initiative of the city and Oromia region. But activity at the fenced-off site is limited to work on buildings and other infrastructure. Black sheeting covers a shallow bulge of rubbish to try to reduce the smell. An eight-metre high net was constructed to prevent waste blowing on to adjacent farmland but, when a gust of wind arrives, several plastic scraps soar into the air and tumble over the fence into the fields.

In rolling farmland next to the landfill, local opposition to the project is fierce. Gemechu Tefera, 40, a farmer, says maggots from the landfill have ruined food, cattle have died from toxic water, and a dog brought a human hand back from the site. Consultation was so inadequate that residents thought the site would become an airport, the group claims. “If they come again they will have to go through us. We will continue protesting. They will have to kill us first,” says Tefera.

The French financing included Sendafa’s construction and the closure of 19 hectares (about 47 acres) of Reppi’s 36 hectares between 2011 and 2013. Eventually, the plan is to transform the toxic site into a park. Seven hectares have been set aside for a separately funded $120m (£96m) waste-to energy plantowned by the state electricity company, which could deal with 75% of the city’s rubbish when it becomes operational later this year.

The AFD is waiting for notification from the city government to begin rehabilitating the remaining section of Reppi. That will only begin once the site is no longer being used for dumping, says Shayan Kassim, project manager at the French agency’s Addis Ababa regional office.

According to Kassim, consultants reported that the performance at Sendafa of the city’s contractor, Vinci Construction Grands Projets, was satisfactory and there were no irregularities in dealing with the impact on the community. Vinci worked with AFD and the authorities on improving Sendafa for a year after completion, and the government is undertaking more work following storms that caused some leakage into the nearby environment, he says.

“We know the municipality has had some problems with the landfill during the rainy season and we hope the additional works will correct them.”

The local administration responsible for the new landfill’s location supports the farmers’ pollution claims. Shimallis Abbabaa Jimaa took over as head of Bereke district government last year after the protests. He produced an October 2016 report from Oromia’s government that concluded water in a local well was not potable and the cause could be a river polluted by seepage from Sendafa. The area had been earmarked by the region as a productive cropping area and should not have been selected for waste disposal, says Jimaa.

The promised improvements could mean local acceptance of Sendafa but, given the strength of the resistance, that seems unlikely, he says. “No one agreed with the project so they rose in revolt.”

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Reminder to all Oromo Affiliated Media Outlets

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Reminder to all Oromo Affiliated Media Outlets

By Falmataa Sabaa (PhD)

While I was listening to RSWO Bitooteessa 23, 2017 (see below) reports of the annexation of Chinaksen, it blew my mind and I wanted to remind the Media Outlets focused to Oromo issue and other sympathizers of the nation of Oromia. Oromos are glad to have you all the media outlets reporting our cause to the Oromo nation and the globe.

It is clear that Oromos are struggling with colonizers of Oromia. The inevitable victory of Oromos could be around the corner or might take a while. It is highly desirable, therefore, that we have clear, detailed and non-controversial documents on the evil deeds of the alien taking place now and then in Oromia. Yoo dandeenye ammumma iyyu ishee buqifna, yoo dadhabne seenaa barsisaa ijollee keenya itti gudifina. Kanaafuu ragaa haqaa fuula addunyaatti dhiyesinee biyya abbaa keenyaa ittiin falmamachuuf ragaan keenya biffa hin shakisifneen kawachuu qabna. Senaanis galmesuuf ragnan haqaa fi gahaa ta’e barbaadamadha. Kun boree dha! We need to never forget prophetic words of our forefathers who stated the inevitable departure of the colonial hegemony, though.

Therefore, especially with issues related to scrambling of Oromia and Oromo genocide by the colonial power in Oromia, your efforts need to exponentially increase not to miss any. Because, it is becoming clearer than ever that the rulers of the Ethiopian empire, guided by their evil spirits and moving in the dark, could further intensify murdering of our people using any means available to them.

Hence, to unhide their hidden crime, Oromo affiliated media outlets should effectively plan so that you could maximize your share to reverse the burden on the Oromo and Oromia. The least your interview should contain: name and address of interviewee (respondent) and interviewer (which can be kept confidentially), subject of the interview (the question) and response of the respondent without further synthesis, the effects and time of the occurrence. Exhaustively generate responses and document the original data unprocessed. It is preferable to have video compared to only audio. Whenever possible it is important to document in multi-faceted access: hard copy, electronic copy (hard disk, external disk) and pictorial etc. You may use the generated information for your immediate purpose but never change the row data (response) intended for documentation so that its future credibility will not be compromised. Remember that habesha are now in tie for the fabricated lie because they fail to predict future verification.

Sabakoo Jabaadhu!


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EU: Remarks of Dr. Geleta, OLF, at a Conference on Women’s Interno in Ethiopia

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Opening remark of Dr. Shigut Geleta, Oromo Liberation Front, on a conference entitled ‘Women’s Inferno in Ethiopia’ held at European Parliament on 22 March 2017

Excellency Ms. Liliana Rodrigues (S&D), MEP and chairperson,

Your excellences Members of the European Parliament, Dear participants, Ladies and Gentlemen,

I would like to thanks the office of the Unrepresented Nations and Peoples Organization (UNPO) and the office of her Excellency Mrs. Liliana Rodrigues (S&D), MEP for Organizing this Conference.

I am honored for having an opportunity to give remarks on the present oppression and gross human rights violations committed by Ethiopian government on all peoples in Ethiopia on behalf of Peoples Alliance for Freedom and Democracy (PAFD). PAFD is a democratic alliance that was established in October 2015 to unite the efforts of five major organizations that represent the aspirations of more than 67% of the nations in Ethiopia. The Alliance intends to transform the current Empire of Ethiopia into free, democratic communities of nations who coexist peacefully, in freely chosen systems of governance.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

As it is unwaveringly confirmed from the electoral result of 2015 national election in which EPRDF claimed it won the 100% seat, nowadays, there is no distinction between legislative, judiciary and Executive body in Ethiopia; as well between party and state. All of them are interwoven in one, that is, EPRDF led by Tigray people liberation front. Thus, it is that the democratic processes in the country are hindered by EPRDF for it has decided to indefinitely clinch to power.  Despite being a state that is party to most United Nations human rights treaties and having specific provisions for democratic and fundamental human rights in its Constitution, the human rights situation in Ethiopia is still horrendous. At present evidences from reports of credible right groups show multitude of human rights violations in Ethiopia, particularly in Oromia, Ogden, Gambelia, Banishing Gomez, Sideman and Amhara regional states, stressing these violations amount to crimes against humanity and the issue of accountability needed to be addressed.

All these human rights violations are ironically underpinned by the geostrategic importance the Horn of Africa linked to the interest of war on terror, proximity to the middle East and international effort on control of piracy. Ethiopia is geopolitically situated to determine the stability of the Horn of Africa. However, the EPDRF that rules by force will neither bring peace to Ethiopia nor to the Horn of Africa, for as long as  the best majority of other nations and nationalities of Ethiopia are excluded from national politics. It is paradoxical that international donors like the European Union (EU) continue patronaging humanitarian and development aid into Ethiopia for its perceived stability role in the Horn of Africa, while the country is marred by volatilities of conflicts instigated by EPRDF regime
Women’s Inferno in Ethiopia

Ladies and Gentlemen,

Since the peaceful protests began in mid-November 2015, Oromia is ruled under martial law. The regime established command posts in every village in Oromia and control the movements of people. To make the matter worst, on 9th November 2016, the government declared the State of Emergency. The declared state of emergency was merely to justify the crimes that were already taking place. The regime armed forces forcefully enter individual houses and terrorize children, loot private property, beat, and kill individual at their own home and gang rape as a deliberate military strategy. All peaceful demonstrations were reacted by EPRDF with live bullets and lethal forces on protesting crowd at several places (see June 15, 2016 HRW Report). On Sept. 3, 2016, the Kilinto prison was set on fire and political prisoners were shot under the pretext that they had tried to escape. On Oct. 2, 2016, the regime used hand guns and helicopter gunships at large cultural ceremony (Irrecha) and murdered several people. It is reported that since November 2015, over 2,500 Oromos have been killed. The killing includes unharmful and vulnerable people including children from age 1 to elderly aged 80 and pregnant women All these amount to crimes against humanity that violate several UN Conventions and treaties that Ethiopia is a party to.

The crimes have been committed directly or indirectly by the command of TPLF/ EPRDF officials, military commanders, and members of the security forces. Not only killings but also since November 2015, over 50, 000 Oromos were arrested and detained in different detention camps, without conviction or rare trails and several forced disappearances were recorded. These includes political leaders, journalists, artists and Oromos from all levels of society. Instead of searching for long lasting peace, the regime downplayed the issue to bad governance and reshuffled its cabinets and party appointees.

Ladies and Gentlemen,

The fight against the international terrorism is the highest priority for all peace-loving people. It is our believe that the international terrorism is a threat to world peace and against harmoniously living together of the world-population, and therefore with all methods must be inspected. However, dictatorial regimes like the TPLF/EPRDF, that put its own agenda by labelling all its political oppositions as terrorists and use its restrictive self-made Anti-Terrorism Proclamation (adopted in 2009) to justify arrests of journalists, members of the political opposition leaders and innocent civilians must be fought itself.  The government of Ethiopia is using highly armed “Somali Liyu police” for attacking Oromos living adjacent to Somali regional state causing thousands of deaths and “Boko Haram” type of kidnapping women. These all are aimed to move the turbulence from center to the periphery and use divide and rule policy.

Considering the current gross human rights violations under the unjustified state of emergency of Ethiopian regime, it is not enough to only issue statements and resolutions, but to make meaningful actions are needed to stop the crimes against humanity on innocent civilians. The international community and legislative bodies are required to use all their possible influences on the Ethiopian government and facilitate the release of all political prisoners, and to take practical action to promote fundamental democratic changes in Ethiopia.

The EU has bilateral and multi-lateral agreements with Ethiopia. Most of these agreements enshrined human rights protection, good governance, and democratic freedom. However, the EU has failed to force Ethiopia to abide by these agreements. Though major political change comes from the genuine struggle of peoples in Ethiopia, it is our belief that EU policy change on Ethiopia can significantly change the political situation of Ethiopia for good. No action from the international community immediately implies approval of the regime’s violent measures against defenseless civilians. In 2010, Human Rights Watch reported billions of euros for development aid are being diverted by the Ethiopian government to conduct political oppression. We would also like to mention that financial and diplomatic assistance from Western countries have been crucial in maintaining the dictatorial Ethiopian regime and its genocidal act. Regrettably, this trend has continued even under the present alarming situation of political turmoil and at a time the regime failed distributing humanitarian aid to Ogadeni where people are daily dying of malnutrition and cholera. As AI said A preventable disaster like the massive landslide recently happened at rubbish dump at Qoshi, near the capital Addis Ababa that costed hundreds of human lives clearly indicates the government’s irresponsibility on Human and Environmental safety.

Hence, the PAFD strongly appeals and calls all Ethiopia’s political democratic forces to continue their struggle for democratic change in unison and appeals to the EU Parliament and member states to play their role, by refraining from supplying aid to Ethiopia since it failed to respect the conditions that it has to uphold.

Thank you for your attention

Brussels, 22 March, 2017

 

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Macha Tulama Association Appeal to Oromo Diaspora

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Macha Tulama Association Appeal to Oromo Diaspora

Macha TulamaMarch 25, 2017

To: Oromo in Diaspora

Dear brothers and sisters, 

We are sending you our appeal letter to bring to your attention the critical condition under which the Oromo people are suffering currently and to earnestly request for your generous financial help once again.  We believe that you are fully aware of the continuous genocidal war that the Ethiopian regime is systematically perpetuating against the Oromo people.  Since the Oromo protest of 2014, thousands Oromo have been killed; thousands of them have been crippled, blinded and disfigured; and thousands of them have been imprisoned and tortured.  Under the current state of emergency, just after the Irreechaa massacre more than fifty thousand Oromo have been thrown into jails. Despite all these challenging problems and sufferings, our people are bravely struggling to restore our national pride and to liberate our country. By their blood and suffering, our people have restored our unity and humanity that suffered for more than a century. Thanks to your generous donations, MTA has been providing modest help to our people during such turbulent times.

Sadly, the plight of our people is never alleviated; it is rather worsened currently. Once again the Ethiopian regime has resorted to its old tactic of inciting ethnic conflict between the Oromo and its neighboring peoples in order to divert attention from the Oromo protest that has rocked the whole empire. The other main purpose of the regime is to weaken and destroy Oromo nationhood and Oromummaa. To carry out its evil missions, the Ethiopian regime is using “Liyu Hayil,” a force under the control of federal authority. Currently, in Eastern, South-East, South and south-west parts of Oromia, and Dambi Dollo, Oromo are in daily wars. Villages after villages are raided on a daily basis. Thousands are uprooted from their houses; thousands are killed or injured and in need of food, clothes and medicine. By the order of the so-called federal government, Oromo economic resources, particularly animals, are looted.

We believe that you can make a significant positive impact at this critical time. Our people have hope in us that we will respond to their sufferings because we are more fortunate to live in a peaceful country. We all owe to our people and to stand with them at this historical juncture. Therefore, we appeal to you for your donations.  At the same time, we deeply express our heart-felt thanks for your previous support for Oromo victims of Ethiopian state violence through the Macha Tulama Association, USA.

You can send your donations to: Macha Tulama emergency fund account

Routing Number: 052001633,

Account number: 446037323547

Swift code: BOFAUS3N

You can donate through:  https://www.gofundme.com/MTArelief

You can also donate through PayPal on the MTA website. We would like to let you know that every dollar of your donation will be dedicated to the humanitarian crisis in Oromia.  Once again, we thank you deeply and appreciate your contributions to the recovery of the recent Victims of “Liyu Hayl” that are injured, crippled, sick and hungry Oromo in Hararghe, Bale, Borana, Guji, and Dambi Dollo.

With best regards,

Asafa Jalata

Asafa Jalata Ph.D.

President, Macha-Tulama Association,

Washington, DC

 

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Why we should care if Ethiopia stops loving us

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Why we should care if Ethiopia stops loving us

Ethiopia

Stuart Grover is a former News Tribune reader columnist. Photo by Dean J. Koepfler The News Tribune

Tacoma, WA (The News Tribune) — I recently returned from three weeks in Ethiopia, an abysmally poor, highly primitive nation of more than 100 million people on the Horn of Africa. Ethiopia is also the cradle of civilization, from which humanoids migrated to Europe and beyond.

It was also probably the first nation to adopt Christianity and boasts ancient ties to Judaism stemming from the liaison between the Queen of Sheba and King Solomon. It houses the Ark of the Covenant in a monastery in Axum, as well as extraordinary churches hewn from solid rock.

Ethiopia remains a multicultural nation, comprising Ethiopian Orthodox, Muslim, Catholic and animist populations, which coexist harmoniously. Intermarriage carries no stigma, people accept differences and strife reflects tribal rather than religious divisions.

Ethiopians are not shy about expressing feelings. They show their disdain for the Chinese who are building roads and rail lines (not very well); their hatred of the Eritreans, with whom they have territorial disputes; and their unabashed love for America.

People were genuinely happy to meet us and (literally) embraced us. They see the U.S. as a promised land that welcomes newcomers.

Ethiopia participates in the United Nations peacekeeping force in South Sudan to help prevent the spread of terrorism in the region, and maintains cordial relations with Israel. We have had a long-term Peace Corps operation there, provided them foreign aid and offer humanitarian support through such nonprofits as Federal Way’s World Vision.

Ethiopians admire America’s openness and the welcome it has offered to refugees and immigrants. Large populations of Ethiopians reside in the Northwest (including the Puget Sound region), Washington, D.C., and the upper Midwest.

They have been made to feel welcome and found jobs that fill important niches. They pay taxes, obey laws and fit into their adopted communities. They feel safe under our system of law.

President Donald Trump has probably neither visited Ethiopia nor given it much thought. While I toured this extraordinary nation, he was taking actions and adopting policies that will alienate Ethiopia and lose America an important ally.

We stand in danger of losing the love and friendship of a country that offers a moderating voice in Africa and a lengthy history of cooperation with the U.S. The ban on Muslim immigration from seven countries was front-page news and under discussion by Ethiopia’s citizens. Even though Ethiopia wasn’t among the disfavored seven countries, they were shocked and disappointed, and America’s standing fell precipitously.

Proposed sharp cuts in foreign aid threaten our long-term policy of using “soft power” to maintain their friendship at a relatively low cost. They appreciate this support and would prefer to maintain these ties rather than accept Chinese investment.

However, budget cuts would leave Ethiopia to rely on aid (and pillaging of commodities) by our Asian rival. While Trump has torn up the Trans-Pacific Partnership and threatens to withdraw aid from Africa, China is working with a 62-nation group to expand its influence.

Ethiopians suddenly see America expressing dislike and disdain for immigrants and foreigners. The nationalist policies of Trump adviser Steve Bannon frighten and confuse Ethiopians

“How could they change this way? Aren’t all Americans immigrants?” one young man asked me.

Retreat from an open, receptive society, a decrease in economic trade and aid, a rejection of multinationalism, and the withdrawal of a welcome mat offered to nations long our friends and allies will not come without cost to the U.S. All undermine the regard that Ethiopia and other African nations hold for us.

They presage the loss of the trust, economic benefits and geopolitical advantages conferred by our historic relationships.

Stuart Grover of Tacoma was a 2016 News Tribune reader columnist. He holds a doctorate in history, has traveled extensively and maintains a strong interest in American foreign policy.

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“Knowledge for the World ” – from TASSC Discussion Forum

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“ Knowledge for the World ”

By Feyera Sobokssa, Torture survivor

World

Feyera Sobokssa

A professor from Johns Hopkins University once came to the Catholic University of America (CUA) to participate on a human rights training that was sponsored by both the CUA, the U.N. and the Torture Abolition and Survivors Support Coalition (TASSC) – International. I tried by best to explain to her about Revolutionary Democracy and the torture techniques that are being used by the minority regime of the Tigray Peoples’ Liberation Front (TPLF). I have shown her photographs and the bruises that were all over the a survivor’s thighs and arms as a result of severe torture.

The TPLF security forces were warning him not to show those bruises to anybody, even to his own wife, but he defied their warnings and managed to show it to both his wife, his friends,relatives while it was fresh. He also managed to show the photographs to as many people as possible including that professor. He couldn’t have managed to convince the professor from Johns Hopkins University if he didn’t retain those photographs while the bruises were fresh. The professor was finally convinced and said, “I thought I knew the world.” Is it not really fair to ask that the university whose slogan is “Knowledge for the World” doesn’t even know what was going on in Ethiopia?


Ode to My Mother – by Feyera Sobokssa


We kept on talking to the American people and we managed to create awareness about the persecution of the Oromo people and other marginalized nations and nationalities in the Ethiopian Empire. The Washington Post published the following: “History has not been kind to the Oromo people, whose complaints of subjugation date back to the last quarter of the 19th century, when they were colonized by the armies of Ethiopian Emperor Menilik II, said John Herbeson, an African Studies lecturer at Johns Hopkins University’s school of Advanced International Studies.” ~ Emily Wax, The Washington Post, April 1, 2012.

Before the publication of this article, Herbeson talked to activists at TASSC – International. I was there when he officially talked his grave concerns about the Oromo people and other marginalized people in Ethiopia..

Prophecy Fulfilled

I read an article that quoted Thomas Jefferson when I was under persecution by the TPLF Fascist regime. I took note of it and quoted it repeatedly on most of the articles I have written. My dream came true and we managed to launch an independent media, MWMF, for the Oromo and other marginalized people in the Horn of Africa. We were connected first at the Addis Ababa.University and we will move on and continue building the networks until real change comes true through our protracted struggle


FROM PLENTY TO POVERTY: ‘Garaacha Uffachuu?’ in Oromo Culture


Finally, I would like to emphasize that we must create and strengthen the advocacy department under MWMF. We should not assume that people of the world know what their governments are doing in collaboration with African dictators. We must talk to influential people, civil society institutions, faith institutions, the academia and human rights organizations.

Advocacy Closes the Gap

There are honest people who think their donations would reach the needy. Faith workers may not get the complete picture unless they are informed by people who have been the victims like the Oromos and the Somalis in the Horn of Africa. That is the major reason why we must work hard to create and strengthen advocacy in major cities of the world.

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Ogaden European Diaspora Association’s Open Letter to Mr. Louis Michel

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An open letter to Mr. Louis Michel

European Parliament
Rue Wiertz 60
BUR ASP 09G206
1047 Bruxelles
louis.michel@europarl.europa.eu

London, March 27, 2017.

Dear Mr. Louis Michel,

We, the Ogaden European Diaspora Association are writing you over your unconditional support of the brutal and minority leading group of Ethiopia. Besides the huge amount of aid money from the EU and other Western donors, Ethiopia remains one of the poorest country of the world. This is due to lack of good governance, democracy and basic human, social, economic and cultural rights.

Only 5% of Ethiopians, mostly from Tigrean ruling party get the benefit of 95% of aid given to this country. Since the EPRDF is on the power, poverty and marginalization of the majority nations have increased. Today, most of the Southern communities (Ogaden Somalis, Oromo, Gambella, Benishangul-Gumuz and Sidamo) are subjected to an earth scorching policy, war, exploitation of their resources, rape, displacement and denial of aid from any independent organization.

The case of Somali region is particularly alarming. In 2007, the late Ethiopian Prime Minister declared in a press conference in Addis-Ababa, that his army has launched a military and political campaign to contain the activity of the Ogaden National Liberation Front. Since then the civilians in this region experience killing, rape, destruction, forcibly eviction and closure of their region from the rest of the world.

Dear Mr. Louis Michel,

You grew up with, freedom, equal rights and personal liberty which does not exist in Ethiopia, how can you justify defending with beak and angle a merciless regime. A regime who since the last twenty-five years didn’t hear the will of his people and headed the country to an imminent explosion. A country, where any opposition party is allowed. Freedom of expression and assembly, free journalists, human rights organizations are also banned.

While the international organizations, civilians from the marginalized regions, human rights defenders as well as the political parties from Ethiopia are constantly asking for a legitimate change, besides that, you are eye witness and well aware of the suffering of the people, you are among the few who work for minority led regime and prevent any constructive change for this country.

Change is coming in Ethiopia, it’s a question of time. We would like to see you on the side of the voiceless humiliated, dehumanized civilians in Ogaden, Oromo, Benishangul-Gumuz, Gambella and Sidamo. We ask you kindly to use all your possible to press Ethiopia to open the Somali region in order people affected by the famine, and cholera be helped by the international NGO’s, as well as unfettered access to all these regions to investigate the human rights and humanitarian abuses committed by the Ethiopian army and their allied militia.

We thank you for your attention.

Ogaden European Diaspora Association

communauteogaden@net2000.ch

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Adwa and Abyssinia’s Participation in the Scramble for Africa: Has that Relevance to the Ongoing Oromo protests?

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Adwa and Abyssinia’s Participation in the Scramble for Africa: Has that Relevance to the Ongoing Oromo protests?

Mekuria Bulcha, PhD, Professor

Whenever an Oromo scholar or politician mentions Menelik or his conquest of Oromia, the scathing criticism that meets him or her is that history is irrelevant for the current crisis.  They are often advised to stop looking backwards and to focus on the future.  Meanwhile, the irony is that in the lead up to and weeks after the 121st anniversary of the Battle of Adwa, many Ethiopian scholars and politicians have been engaged in intense debate about this event. In fact, I am all for a debate about Ethiopian history; however, I was surprised when I read an article written by Teshome Borago entitled “Adwa: When Oromos fought Italy as Abyssinians” published on the Ethiomedia webpage on March 3, 2017. Borago wrote the article to commemorate the anniversary of Ethiopia’s victory over Italian forces at Adwa in 1896.  By and large, he talks about the victory of Adwa as an example of unity among the peoples of Ethiopia and calls on the peoples of Ethiopia to keep up that spirit of unity. But, the problem is that he did not stop there; he used the Oromo contribution to the victory at Adwa obliquely as a pretext to question the validity of Oromo grievances voiced by the ongoing protests. He laments the “new generation” Oromos’ failure to appreciate their forefathers’ contributions to the Adwa victory, and for not respecting the spirit of Adwa which was Ethiopian unity. He refers to their protests as an effort made in defense of “tribalism”. My criticism is that, using the victory of Adwa as a point of departure, Borago distorts not only Oromo and Ethiopian history, but also misrepresents the motives of the ongoing Oromo protests. Borago is not the only writer who has been labelling the Oromo struggle for freedom as a manifestation of “tribalism”, or to criticize Oromo views about Menelik and the creation of the Ethiopian state. There are dozens of commentators who, like him, have been distorting Oromo history and demonizing Oromo politics and scholarship. Haile Larebo has been one of the most vocal representatives of this group.

The views which are expressed in both Borago’s article and Larebo’s story about the Battle of Adwa, which was broadcast on March 22, 2017 on Aronios Radio are the points of departure for this article.  The purpose of the article is to critically assess the meanings of the Battle of Adwa for the Oromo and other non-Abyssinian peoples who were conquered and forcibly incorporated into the Ethiopian Empire by Menelik. The following questions will guide my discussion: (a) what were the conditions under which the Oromo and the other non-Abyssinian peoples participated in the Battle of Adwa? (b) What “benefits” did they derive from the victory at Adwa? (c) In what ways was the Battle of Adwa a turning point in Abyssinia’s participation in the Scramble for Africa? (d) What was the relationship between the peoples of the south including the Oromo and the Abyssinian state before and after Adwa?

Menelik’s army at Adwa: freemen, gabbars, captives and slaves

As Wendy James has aptly pointed out, “without the contributions of Ethiopia’s southern peoples, whose sweat and blood go unrecorded in Ethiopianist annals, the Battle of Adwa in 1896 might not have been won and Menelik II might not have gone on to build his empire.”[1] Obviously, one of those peoples were the Oromo. I am not denying Oromo contribution to the Ethiopian victory over the Italians at Adwa. My critique concerns the representation of the conditions under which their contribution occurred. I argue that Oromo human and material resources were not “contributed” voluntarily as Borago and Larebo want us to believe. By and large, they were robbed. To start, as Harold Marcus has stated, “Menelik had exploited the south and the south-west to purchase weapons.” He was “indirectly Ethiopia’s greatest slave entrepreneur and received the bulk of the proceeds” from the slave trade. Marcus wrote that being a Christian Menelik was not directly involved in the trade, but “Many slaves were however supplied by him.”[2] The “human merchandize” used in that trade were Oromos and others who were captured his conquest of the south. Pankhurst has also stated that “the supply of slaves was…swollen by large numbers of prisoners captured during Menelik’s southern campaigns.”[3] The evidence is extensive to present in this short article, but it is important to not here that Menelik covered in part the cost of the firearms used at Adwa with revenue from the export of human merchandize.

What is also equally important to understand is that the fighters who marched north carrying those firearms were not all freemen, but also a motley of captives, gabbars and slaves, including thousands of women. Most of them were Oromo, Walaita, Kambata and Gurage and were from territories which were conquered a decade or a few years prior to the Battle of Adwa.  They were used not only as fighters, but also providers of the services that made the fighting possible. They were bearers of firearms and supplies; they cooked for the fighters and looked after the horses and mules used by the fighters.  In this connection, a remarkable story emerges if we look closely at the case of Walaita which was conquered in 1894 just two years before the Battle. It is also interesting to note that Borago who writes that “several kingdoms volunteered and mobilized from every region in Ethiopia to fight at the Battle of Adwa” claims Walaita ethnicity.  According to archival evidence collected by the historian Tsehai Berhane-Selassie, one of the aims of the expedition against Walaita was slave raiding. She noted that it was carried out in order to replenish depleted manpower because of the severe famine of 1889-92, to pay outstanding debts to arms dealers, and to finance the impending war against the Italians.[4] Describing the battle the French business agent Gaston Vanderheym who accompanied Menelik on his campaign against the Walaita, expressed the “crushing effects” of newly acquired guns on the southern conquests as “some kind of infernal hunting were human beings rather than animals served as game” and “where no distinction was made between fighters and civilians.”[5] Prouty notes that according Menelik’s own chronicler, 118,987 Walaita were killed and 18,000 were enslaved. The King of Walaita Tona was wounded and captured and his kingdom was destroyed.[6] Martial de Salviac wrote that the captives were made to march in a single line in front of Menelik who “chose the most robust and had a cross marked on their hands with a sharp object.”[7] In fact, Menelik not only enslaved thousands of Walaita, he also drove 36,000 head of looted cattle all the way to Shawa. Two years later, the captives were used to transport food, weapons, ammunition from Shawa to Adwa in 1896.

The united country called Ethiopia, which according to Larebo and Borago existed centuries before Adwa, is a myth. The fact is that when he turned north to meet the Italians at Adwa, Menelik was in the midst of the conquest of the south. The entire Macha region – the Gibe and Leeqa states – was annexed only in 1886. Arsi was conquered in 1886 and Hararge in 1887. As indicated above, Walaita was conquered in 1894. The sores inflicted by the atrocities committed against the Oromo at Anole and Calanqoo in 1886 and 1887 by the conquering Abyssinian forces were still bleeding. Even Wallo’s conquest in the north was completed in 1878 after years of fierce battles between Menelik (then King of Shawa) and Emperor Yohannes IV on one side and the Wallo Oromo on the other.  What is most remarkable is Larebo’s assertion that the Ethiopian people were united from corner to corner at the time of Adwa. In his interview on Radio Atronos, he posits that there was not a single village in Ethiopia which did not send fighters to Adwa. The absurdity of this proposition is that the Gujii and Borana Oromo and more than 80 percent of what is today the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples (SSNP), Gambella, Benishangul, Ogaden were outside the reach of Menelik’s empire. Needless to stress that Larebo’s assertions are not true because the country not only lacked unity, but, geographically, Ethiopia as we know it today did not exist at that point.

Indeed, the Ethiopian empire was defended by the blood and bones of Oromo fighters, but their blood was shed not for love of country as Larebo and others would have us believe. While the Abyssinians were defending their freedom, the Oromo had no freedom to defend against the Italians. They had lost it to the Abyssinians during the preceding decade.  Their land was an Abyssinian colony. The “contribution” they were forced to make to the war effort saved the Abyssinians from European colonialism, but it did not help them to regain their own independence. There is no indication that they were beneficiaries of the victory over the Italians. In fact, as I will explain later, their contribution to the victory had reinforced colonial Abyssinian rule which Menelik had imposed on them a decade or two prior to the Battle of Adwa.

Ironically, like the naftanya elite, Borago and Larebo have few sympathetic words for the Oromo and the other conquered peoples of Ethiopia. It seems that they saw nothing wrong or immoral in the atrocities committed against them when they lay claim on Oromo loyalty to Menelik. They want the Oromo to see Menelik as their hero and an icon of their resistance against racism and colonialism. The Oromo admit that their forefathers had fought and defeated the Italian army together with Abyssinians. However, the war was not a joint undertaking, but an Abyssinian war with Italy. The Oromo were used as means to defend Abyssinia’s independence.  Few believe Larebo’s repetitious story about Menelik being the defender of the black race against white colonizers. As the Oromo scholar Tsegaye Araarsa has expressed the matter, to call the empire built by Menelik the beacon of black freedom is a blatant “distortion of history intended to galvanize legitimacy for his rule.”[8] It is a deceitful attempt to cleanse the history of the atrocious conquest from the stains of blood with which it was smeared. Given the great harm his conquest had inflicted upon them, one must be contemptuous of the Oromo to expect them to honor Menelik as their hero.  I know that there are Oromos who take pride in the valor which their forefathers had shown at Adwa, but I have also seen their pride giving way to bitterness as soon as they discover the “rewards” they had received for their heroic contributions to that victory. Several years ago one of the Oromo admirers of Menelik II sent me a note and a picture of the Oromo cavalry who fought at Adwa.

Adwa

Portrait of Oromo cavalry at Adwa

My friend who is an ardent “pan-Ethiopianist” was exhilarated when he read about the valor of Oromo fighters at the battle of Adwa in a book he came across. In the note he mentioned Fitawrari Gebeyehu as one of the heroes who made the victory at Adwa possible. Gebeyehu died in action leading the troops under his command in the forefront of the battle. However, he felt offended when he reflected on the fact that Gebeyehu’s name is rarely mentioned and his ethnic identity obscured by Ethiopian historiographers. He lamented, “The sad thing however is that Gebeyehu’s father’s name, Gurmu, is never mentioned in the history books. One day we will all be free from this and that type of racism little or big and the real patriots will be celebrated by all Ethiopians.” Gurmu is not a “genuine” Abyssinian name. However, Gebeyehu was not the only Oromo who was denied his social identity in Ethiopian history in that manner. Many Oromos who contributed to the defense of Abyssinia’s or Ethiopia’s independence were treated in that way. Even the ethnic origin of Haile Selassie’s grandfather was concealed. The reason was that the Abyssinian ruling elite were reluctant to recognize Oromos as partners in the making of Abyssinian-cum-Ethiopian history. As Hassen Hussein and Mohammed Ademo have expressed Gebeyehu’s “disappearance from Ethiopian history parallels the erasure of his people’s contributions from the country’s official historiography.” As the two authors have stated, “This is the root of Oromo ambivalence toward Ethiopia: the Oromo are good enough to fight and die for Ethiopia, but not live in it with their full dignity and identity.”[9] This also underpins the lukewarm Oromo attitude toward the history of Adwa.

That the role of Oromo fighters was crucial for Menelik’s victory at Adwa is undeniable, but the victory did not help them as a people in any manner. It is remarkable that Borago and Larebo who come from conquered and marginalized peoples in the south, the Walaita and Hadiya respectively, could miss the cause of the unenthusiastic Oromo feeling toward Ethiopia and “Ethiopiawinnet”. Presenting Oromo forefathers as significant players in defense of the Abyssinian Empire does not change that reality or disprove the fact that the empire was a colonial creation and the Oromo are its colonial subjects. The point is, the Oromo did not fight at Adwa as ethnic Abyssinians or citizens of Abyssinia as Borago and other commentators try to suggest. They fought for their colonizers. They were not the first people to fight a war for their enemies. Colonized peoples had done that throughout history. For example, over 1,355,300 Africans fought for the British in WWII.[10] They did not become Englishmen because of their contributions to British victory in that war.  They returned home and struggled for their independence. The Oromo have not been silent subjects because of the victory at the Battle of Adwa. Although their struggle has been sporadic, as reflected in the current uprising, the hope for independence is alive and strong.

Did the Abyssinians participate in the Scramble for Africa?

Teshome Borago is suggesting that a “united Ethiopia” was in place long before Adwa when he says “One has to wonder, how could [did] we win unless a multiethnic Ethiopian nation existed long before the so-called ‘Abyssinian colonization’? How can we defeat a European superpower without sharing a sense of common identity and destiny?” With these rhetorical questions he joins the numerous Habesha politicians and scholars who deny Abyssinia’s participation in the Scramble for Africa in the late nineteenth century. Concerning Abyssinia’s conquest and colonization of the Oromo and the other peoples in the south, the attitude of Habesha politicians’ and scholars’ is like that of climate change deniers. They ignore volumes of historical and scientific evidence that prove the reality of what they deny. However, to answer Borago’s questions, a multi-ethnic Abyssinian state and nation existed for sure long before the Scramble for Africa. Its main ethnic constituents were the Amhara and the Tigrayans with Agaw, Qimant, Falasha and Shinasha ethnicities. Its territorial base was, to a large extent, the current Amhara and Tigray Regional States and parts of highland Eritrea. One sees them as an Ethiopian nation since Abyssinia and Ethiopia often are interchangeably used.  In contrast, the Ethiopian nation Borago has in mind did not exist before Adwa and is not a reality even today. The reality Borago will not acknowledge is that in the Horn of Africa, there were nations like the Oromo, the Sidama, the Walaita, the Afar, Somali and the Kaficho that existed parallel to and independent from Abyssinia. The victory at Adwa not only saved Abyssinia from European colonization, it also encouraged Menelik to continue, with renewed vigour, the colonization of the rest of the Oromo territory and the greater part of what is now south and southwest Ethiopia. I will present, below, a summary of evidence gleaned from the works of scholars on Abyssinia’s colonial exploits during the Scramble for African. I will use “imperial ambitions”, “ideology” and “possession of firearms” as guiding themes to identify the parity of Abyssinia’s participation in the Scramble for Africa with that of the European imperialist powers of the day.

Imperial ambitions: The evidence for Abyssinian imperial ambitions is reflected in Menelik’s letter to European heads of state wherein he states “if Powers at a distance come forward to partition Africa between them … I do not intend to be an indifferent spectator.”[11] In the words of Gebru Tareke, impelled by “the appearance of European colonialist in the region”,[12] Menelik “embarked on a much larger scale of colonization in the 1880s” than what had been attempted previously. Bahiru Tafla wrote also that it was “European colonial acquisition in Africa [which] awakened imperialist interest in the minds of the Ethiopian rulers of the late nineteenth century.”[13] The influence of European imperialism on Menelik is articulated further by Elspeth Huxley who figuratively states that “the Abyssinians had caught a severe attack of the prevailing imperialist fever” and they “were the only Africans to join the scramble for Africa.”[14] In his Ethiopia: The Last Frontiers, John Markakis writes that Abyssinia “competed successfully in the imperialist partition of the region [Horn of Africa]. Not a victim but a participant in the ‘scramble’, Ethiopia doubled its territory and population in a burst of expansionist energy, and thereafter proudly styled itself the ‘Ethiopian Empire’. He notes that “the title [‘Empire’] is not a misnomer, since Ethiopia’s rulers governed their new possessions more or less the same way and for similar ends as other imperial powers were doing. The people who took the pride in calling themselves Ethiopians were known also as Abyssinians (Habesha).” He states that “Today’s ruling elite frown at the use of this name because it obstructs their effort to forge an inclusive Ethiopian national identity.”[15]Here, it is interesting to note that the Abyssinian use the term today, particularly in the diaspora, to differentiate themselves from other black peoples. When used as such, it has racial underpinnings as indicated by Hussein and Ademo in their article mentioned above.

Ideology: Asserting the colonial ideological factor in the creation of the Abyssinian empire, the conflict researcher Christian Scherrer notes that “European and Abyssinian colonialism occurred simultaneously, pursued similar interests, albeit from differing socio-economic bases, and this was reinforced by comparable colonial ideologies of the idea of empire and notion of ‘civilizing mission’ and the exploitation of the subjugated peoples.”[16] Writing on the ideological underpinnings of Menelik’s colonial conquests, Gebru Tareke, a historian from the north, has also stated that the Abyssinian ruling elite acted like the white colonial rulers in the rest of Africa. The language they used when describing their colonial subjects did not differ from the language the European colonialists were using. It was a language which was infused with stereotypes, prejudices and paternalism. He adds, “They [the Abyssinian elite] tried much like the European colonisers of their time, to justify the exploitability, and moral validity of occupation.” They “looked upon and treated the indigenous people as backward.”[17] One can add here that stereotypes and ethnic slurs about the Oromo, popular in Habesha discourse are the product of this colonial ideology.

Military technology: Obviously firearms were the other crucial elements in making the imperial colonial penetration of the African continent in the nineteenth century possible. Therefore, drawing parallels between the Abyssinian and European and Abyssinian colonial expansion during the Scramble, Margery Perham notes “The speed with which this great extension of the empire was made ….is explained by the …firearms which the emperor [Menelik] was obtaining from France and Italy. This same superiority was carrying the European powers at the same speed at the same time from the coast into the heart of Africa.”[18] The Swedish historian Norberg also says that “using the same military technology as the European powers”,[19] Menelik managed not only to conquer the neighbouring African territories, but was also able to garrison them with large forces called naftanya who controlled and lived on the conquered populations. As suggested by Richard Caulk, “the system of near serfdom imposed on wide areas of the south by the end of the nineteenth century could have not been maintained had the newcomers not been so differently armed.[20] A historian, Darkwah, notes that “Menelik succeeded in keeping the arms out of the reach of the [Oromo] enemy. He did this by imposing a strict control over the movement of firearms into his tributary territories and the lands beyond his frontiers.”[21]

Menelik was not a manufacturer of firearms, but was a keen importer of them. The bulk of firearms in his arsenal numbered around 25,000 in 1878.  According to Luckman and Bekele, he was able to import over one million rifles, a quantity of Hotchkiss guns and artillery pieces between 1880 and 1900.[22] For that purpose, he used more than a dozen French and Italian commercial agents and suppliers of firearms. In addition, European states were also supplying him with modern weapons in an attempt to use him as a proxy in their colonial scheme in northeast Africa.[23] As I will explain below, the support Menelik received from European powers in his Scramble for colonies was not limited to firearms; military training and diplomacy were also included.

Europeans in the making of the Ethiopian empire

The other dimension of the history of Abyssinia’s conquest of the south, which is bypassed silently by Ethiopian historiographers and is denied incessantly by Habesha politicians, is the involvement of European fortune seekers and mercenaries in the making of Menelik’s Empire. There is no research on how many Europeans were in his service but, whatever their number might have been, the role they played in his conquest of the south must have been significant.  Darkwah notes that “in 1877 a Frenchman named Pottier was employed in training a group of Shewan youths in European military techniques. Another Frenchman, Pino, was a regular officer in the army which was commanded by Ras Gobana. Swiss engineers, Alfred Ilg and Zemmerman were employed on, among other things, building bridges across the Awash and other rivers to facilitate movement.”[24]According to Chris Prouty, Colonel Artamonov together with other Europeans was attached to the forces commanded by Ras Tasamma Nadew in Ilu Abbabor. He adds that even Count Nicholas Leontiev, a colonel in the Russian army, was a commander of a force which was sent to conquer the southwest in the 1890s. Another Russian officer, Baron Chedeuvre was Leontiev’s second-in-command during the expedition. Several French and Russian medical officers were also attached to the Abyssinian forces, particularly those which were led by Menelik and European commanders. The Russian Cossack Captain Alexander Bulatovich wrote that with him, there were Lieutenants Davydov, Kokhovskiy and Arnoldi along with a command of Cossacks who had finished their term of service” and who were received in audience by Menelik and took leave from him and return to Russia in June 1898.[25]

Several advisors helped Menelik in different fields to build his Empire. The Swiss engineer, Alfred Ilg had served him in a variety of capacities including diplomatic contacts for 27 years. The Italians made not only material but also diplomatic contributions that enabled Menelik to compete effectively in the scramble for colonies. The idea and the contents of the circular letter which Menelik sent to European heads of state in 1891 delineating his territorial claims came, for example, from the Italian Prime Minister Francesco Crispi himself. Menelik was advised to send the letter to European heads of state because the European powers were about to meet in Paris and establish the boundaries of their colonies in Africa. The territories which were defined in the letter the Italians drafted for Menelik to claim extended “as far as Khartoum and to Lake Nyanza beyond the land of the Galla [Oromo].” [26]The territories were those which the Italians were planning to claim for themselves through Menelik as their proxy. However, the European support in firearms and diplomacy given to Menelik was a double-edged sword. It helped him to conquer the Oromo and amass resources to defeat the Italians at Adwa. That said, the conclusion we can draw is that Abyssinia’s participation in the Scramble for Africa is crystal clear. As the historian Haggai Erlich succinctly stated, “While rebuffing imperialism successfully in the north, Ethiopia managed to practice it in the south.”[27] It was also based on what is outlined above that Bonnie Holcomb and Sisai Ibssa have eloquently described the Abyssinian conquest of the south as manifestation of “dependent colonialism” and its outcome the “invention of Ethiopia”.[28] By that they meant the direct and indirect meshing of Abyssinian and European interests in the making of the Abyssinian-cum-Ethiopian Empire. Thus, notwithstanding the inconclusive arguments being orchestrated by denialists, the historical facts lead to the unescapable conclusion that Abyssinia was an active participant in the Scramble for Africa.

Where colonialism did not have race or color

Based on what I have described above, it is logical to construe that colonialism had no specific color or nationality in the Horn of Africa – its color was white and black and its nationality English, French, Italian or Abyssinian. The difference is in the degree of brutality used against the colonized peoples and the severity of exploitation exercised in the colonies. The intensity of demonizing Oromo scholars, activists and politicians who write and speak about the colonization of Oromia and the cacophony of denials expressed in the flora of written and oral commentaries will not change this historical truth.

That a black African force had defeated a white European army at Adwa in 1896 is beyond doubt. But, the representation of Adwa as an anti-colonial war and an African victory over colonialism is an atrocious lie. Indeed, Adwa was a turning point in the Scramble for colonies in the Horn of Africa; Menelik relinquished the role he was playing as an Italian proxy at the battle of Adwa, retained for himself the territories he had hitherto conquered using the firearms he had acquired partly from the Italians, with the understanding that they would be partners in the ownership of the territories he was conquering. He became a member of the colonialist club in his own right. In short, as colonialism lost its color at Adwa, military might became the decisive factor in the share of the African cake. The European mass media of the time reported that fact. The Spectator of 27 February 1897, for example, reflected the British view of the matter stating that, although Menelik, his queen, and his generals care little for human life, “this native dynasty of dark men,” nominally Christian is “orderly enough to be received into intercourse with Europe.” The European colonial powers recognized ‘the dynasty of dark men’, as their junior partner in the scramble for colonies. Soon after Adwa, both Britain and France negotiated and signed agreements that delineated the colonial borders with Abyssinia.

The whole story about the battle of Adwa is not written yet. Its bright side has been illuminated time and again. But it has ugly sides are deliberately concealed from proper scrutiny or distorted by self-appointed “gurus” of Ethiopian history with Professor Haile Larebo as their outstanding representative. In the following paragraphs, I will describe briefly some of the non-glamorous sides of the victory at Adwa, namely, the ‘recruitment’ of colonial subjects for the war efforts, their treatment in the aftermath of Adwa, and the atrocious treatment of black (Eritrean) prisoners of war.

The circumstances, under which the peoples of the south, such as the Oromo, who were conquered in the 1880s, and the Walaita, who were conquered by Menelik two years before the battle of Adwa, were made to march north and participate in the battle, remains uninvestigated. Did they march north to fight against Italian colonialism voluntarily? What had happened to them after the war? These questions are never raised or answered in the story. Were they rewarded for their contributions in the victory over the Italians? I will not delve into details, but the answer is a definitive ‘No’! They were, as indicated in the case of the Walaita, captives who were forced to march north and became cannon-fodder. The reward for those who had survived the war and returned home must have varied depending on their status. The probability for those who were slaves to remain as such was almost hundred percent. The probability that some were sold by their masters to cover expenses on their southward journey after the war or afterwards was significant. Thus, the Oromo, the Sidama and Walaita, who participated in the battle of Adwa, did not win any victory over colonialism for themselves. They helped a black colonialist to defeat a white colonialist in a war over colonies. They did not defend themselves or their peoples against the colonialists. They fought for their enemy and strengthened the grip of black imperialism on themselves by defeating its white Italian antagonist. It was after Adwa that Menelik imposed the notorious gabbar system on the conquered south. Slavery and the slave trade became even more rampant thereafter with the conquest of the rest of the south and southwest which became hunting grounds for captives and ivory.[29] Ironically, it was the Italian invasion of Ethiopia in 1936 which brought the outrageous institution and evil trade in human beings to an end. To suggest that it was a “united Ethiopia” that fought the Battle of Adwa or Ethiopia was united because of the victory achieved at Adwa is a charade.

In the interview he gave on March 22, 2017 to Radio Atronos, Larebo calls Menelik the most democratic emperor in world history and that Ethiopia was blessed to have had him as their ruler. However, this “most democratic” emperor had no mercy for black prisoners of war. In his book From Menelik to Haile Selassie II, (was used a history text book in grades four through seven in the 1960s in Ethiopia) the historian Tekle Tsadiq Mekuriya notes that “Menelik released the Italian and Arab [presumably Libyan] prisoners of war and gave them food and drinks, but he ordered with the approval of the head of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, Abuna Matewos, the mutilation of Eritreans caught fighting on the Italian side.”[30]According to another source, “The Italians taken prisoner were treated well but Ethiopian [Eritrean] troops (around 800) who had fought for the Italians were mutilated with their right hands and left feet being cut off.”[31] Where is the saint-like character Professor Larebo ascribes to Menelik? The cruelty with which the Eritreans were treated was similar to the crime committed against thousands of Oromo men and women whose arms and breasts were hacked off by the order of Menelik’s paternal uncle Ras Darge ten years earlier at Anole, in Arsi. The difference was that the Eritreans were Italian colonial soldiers while the Oromo were unarmed men and women who were invited to a meeting, which appeared to be for peacemaking, by Ras Darge many months after the Battle of Azule in September 1886. In that battle with the invading Abyssinian forces the Arsi Oromo lost some 12,000 warriors and were defeated.

(To be continued)

[1]James, W. “Preface” in Donham, D. & James, W. (eds.), The Southern Marches of Imperial Ethiopia: Essays in History and Social Anthropology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986, p. xiv.
[2] Marcus, H. The Life and Times of Menelik II: Ethiopia 1844-1913. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
1975: 140, 73
[3] Pankhurs, R.  Economic History of Ethiopia, 1800-1935. Addis Ababa: Addis Ababa University press, 1968: 102.
[4] Berhane-Selassie, T. “Menelik II: Conquest and Consolidation of Southern Provinces”, B.A. Thesis, History Department, Addis Ababa University, 1969.
[5] Cited in  Prouty, C. Empress Taytu and Menelik II: Ethiopia 1883-1910, Trenton, NJ: The Red Sea Press, 1996
[6] Prouty, C. ibid. p. 115
[7] De Salviac, M. An Ancient People in the State of Menelik: the Oromo, Great African Nation. Translated into English by Ayalew Kanno. 1901/2006: 354-355
[8] Araarsa, Tsegaye, Facebook post on March 1, 2016
[9] Hussein, H. & Mohammed Ademo, M. “Ethiopia’s Original Sin”, World Policy Journal, Vol. XXXIII, No. 3, World Policy Institute, Fall 2016
[10] Plaut, M. “The Africans who fought in WWII, BBC November 9, 2009.
[11] Marcus, H. ibid.
[12] Tareke, Gebru. Ethiopia: Power and Protest. Lawrenceville, N.J: The Red Sea Press, 1996:40
[13] Bairu Tafla, in Asmé, 1905 [1987: 405, fn. 584] [14] Huxley,  E. White Man’s Country: Lord Delamere and the Making of Kenya, 1967: 38-9
[15]Markakis, M. Ethiopia: The Last Frontiers, James Currey, New York, 2011, pp. 3-4.
[16] Scherrer, C.  “Analysis and Background to the refugee Crisis: The Unsolved Oromo Question”, in Scherrer, C. & Bulcha, M. War Against the Oromo and Mass Exodus FromEthiopia: Voices of Oromo Refugees in Kenya and the Sudan, 2002, p. 27
[17]Tareke, Gebru, ibid. p. 71
[18] Perham, M. (1969). The Government of Ethiopia, London: Faber and Faber, 1969: 294
[19] Norberg, V. H. “Swedes as a Pawn in Haile Selassie’s Foreign Policy: 1924-1952”, in Modern Ethiopia, Tubiana, J. (ed.), Rotterdam: A.A. Balkema, 1980:328
[20] Caulk. R. “Firearms and Princely Power in Ethiopia in the Nineteenth Century”, Journal of African History, XIII (4)
[21] Darkwah, R.H.K. Shewa, Menelik and the Ethiopian Empire 1813-1889, London: Heinemann.  1975: 207.
[22] Luckman, R. & Bekele, D. “Foreign Powers and Militarism in the Horn of Africa”, Review of African Economy”, No. 30, 1984.
[23] Pankhurst, R.  Economic History of Ethiopia, 1800-1935. Addis Ababa, 1968: 21.
[24] Darkwah, R.H.K. ibid. pp. 58-9.
[25] Bulatovich A. Ethiopia Through Russian Eyes: A Country in Transition, 1896-1898, translated and edited by Richard Seltzer, Lawrenceville, N.J: The Red Sea Press. Two volumes combined in the English translation, 1900/2000: 162
[26] Marcus, H. ibid. p.124
[27] Cited in Markakis, J. ibid. p. 3.
[28] Holcomb, B. & Ibssa, S. (1990). The Invention of Ethiopia: The Making of a Dependent Colonial State in Northeast Africa, Trenton, N.J.: The Red Sea Press.
[29] See Darley, H. 1926. Slaves and Ivory: A Record of Adventure and Exploration in the Unknown Sudan, and Among the Abyssinian Slave-Raiders, for a vivid description of slave raiding by the conquerors in these areas in the 1920s.
[30] Tekle-Tsadik Mekuriya, The History of Ethiopia: From Emperor Tewodros to Emperor Haile Selassie. In Amharic. Addis Ababa: Berhan ena Selam, Printing Press. 7th Edition, 1961 Eth. C (1968). p. 98.
[31] See Dugdale-Pointon, T. Battle of Adwa, 1-2 March 1896,
http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/battles_adwa.html, 19 February 2009. Accessed on 12 March 2017

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