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For Ethiopia’s Underemployed Youth, Life Can Center on a Leaf

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A farmer collecting khat in Infranz, a village in the Amhara region of Ethiopia. The young and underemployed are increasingly chewing khat, a psychotropic leaf that has amphetaminelike effects. Credit Tiksa Negeri for The New York Times



By Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura | NewYork Times

Yeshmebet Asmamaw, 25, has made chewing the drug a ritual, repeated several times a day: She carefully lays papyrus grass on the floor of her home, brews coffee and burns fragrant frankincense to set the mood.

Then she pinches some khat leaves, plucked from a potent shrub native to this part of Africa, into a tight ball and places them in one side of her mouth.

“I love it!” she said, bringing her fingers to her lips with a smack.

She even chews on the job, on the khat farm where she picks the delicate, shiny leaves off the shrubs. Emerging from a day’s work, she looked slightly wild-eyed, the amphetaminelike effects of the stimulant showing on her face as the sounds of prayer echoed from an Orthodox Christian church close by.

Ethiopians have long chewed khat, but the practice tended to be limited to predominantly Muslim areas, where worshipers chew the leaves to help them pray for long periods, especially during the fasting times of Ramadan.

But in recent years, officials and researchers say, khat cultivation and consumption have spread to new populations and regions like Amhara, which is mostly Orthodox Christian, and to the countryside, where young people munch without their parents’ knowledge, speaking in code to avoid detection.

“If you’re a chewer in these parts, you’re a dead, dead man,” said Abhi, 30, who asked that his last name not be used because his family “will no longer consider me as their son.”

Most alarming, the Ethiopian authorities say, is the number of young people in this predominantly young nation now consuming khat. About half of Ethiopia’s youth are thought to chew it. Officials consider the problem an epidemic in all but name.

The country’s government, which rules the economy with a tight grip, is worried that the habit could derail its plans to transform Ethiopia into a middle-income country in less than a decade ― a national undertaking that will require an army of young, capable workers, it says.

Khat is legal and remains so mainly because it is a big source of revenue for the government. But there are mounting concerns about its widespread use.

As many as 1.2 million acres of land are thought to be devoted to khat, nearly three times more than two decades ago. And the amount of money khat generates per acre surpasses all other crops, including coffee, Ethiopia’s biggest export, said Gessesse Dessie, a researcher at the African Studies Center Leiden at Leiden University.

That payoff, and the dwindling availability of land, has pushed thousands of farmers to switch to khat, he said. The changes have come as the government has pushed farmers off land that it has given to foreign investors in recent years.

Men chewing khat near the bank of the Nile River in Bahir Dar. Khat is legal and generates more money per acre than any other crop in Ethiopia. Credit Tiksa Negeri for The New York Times

Often associated with famine and marathon runners, Ethiopia is trying to change its global image by engineering a fast-growing economy, hoping to mimic Asian nations like China. It has poured billions of dollars into industrial parks, roads, railways, airports and other infrastructure projects, including Africa’s largest dam.

In cities across the country, skyscrapers grow like mushrooms, and along with them, dance clubs, restaurants and luxury resorts. According to government statistics, the country’s economy has been growing at a 10 percent clip for more than a decade.

But for all the fanfare surrounding what is often described as Ethiopia’s economic miracle, its effects are often not felt by the country’s young people, who make up about 70 percent of the nation’s 100 million people. There simply are not enough jobs, young people complain, often expressing doubt over the government’s growth figures.

It is because of this lack of jobs, many say, that they take up khat in the first place ― to kill time.

“It’s a huge problem,” said Shidigaf Haile, a public prosecutor in Gonder, a city in northern Ethiopia, which was rocked by violent protests last year, mainly by young people over the absence of jobs.

More than half of the city’s youth now chew khat, Mr. Shidigaf said. Many gather in khat dens away from prying eyes.

“It’s because there is a lack of work,” he added, saying there were numerous cases of people who were so dependent on the leaves, sold in packs, that they turned to petty crime. The government recognizes the problem, he said, but so far it has not been tackled directly.

“It’s bad for Ethiopia’s economic development because they become lazy, unproductive, and their health will be affected,” he said.

Khat’s effects vary depending on the amount consumed and the quality of the leaf, of which there are at least 10 varieties, according to growers. Some people turn hot and agitated. Others become concentrated on whatever is at hand to such an extent that they block out everything and reach “merkana,” a quasi-catatonic state of bliss. Chronic abuse, the American government warns, can lead to exhaustion, “manic behavior with grandiose delusions, violence, suicidal depression or schizophreniform psychosis.”

Dependency on khat is more psychological than physical, according to Dr. Dawit Wondimagegn Gebreamlak, who heads the psychiatry department at Addis Ababa University in Ethiopia’s capital. Chewing it “is quite a complex cultural phenomenon,” he said, adding that simply banning it would be difficult, given its role in cultural rites among certain religious groups.

Mulugeta Getahun, 32, studied architecture but works as a day laborer.

“I chew khat when I don’t have a job,” he said. “Nothing entertains me more than khat.” Sitting in a bar here in Bahir Dar, about 340 miles from Addis Ababa, where he was coming off a high, he drank “chepsi,” a home-brewed millet wine that helps neutralize the effects of stimulation.

A group of men sat around drinking the homemade liquor and chewing khat, an act that could be considered illegal under the current state of emergency.

After last year’s protests, and their subsequent violent crackdown by security forces, the government prohibited communal activities because meetings were seen as a threat to public order and a potential gathering place for dissidents.

Still, the young are defiant.

There are “bercha-houses,” secret khat dens, where young people congregate in cramped rooms, bobbing their heads to Teddy Afro, a popular Ethiopian pop singer whose lyrics are considered veiled criticisms of the government.

There are hide-outs on the banks of the Nile River, where young people stretch themselves out under mango and banana trees, chewing khat and throwing peanuts in their mouths.

Even a guesthouse where Mengistu Haile Mariam, the authoritarian ruler ousted by the current governing party 26 years ago, stayed during the summers was recently overrun by young people celebrating the end of their studies, some chewing khat in one of the bleak Soviet-style rooms with the curtains drawn.

Yared Zelalem, 17, and Yonas Asrat, 27, chewed khat on the side of a street in Addis Ababa, waiting for the odd job of washing cars to come their way. They had been chewing for five hours already, and it was still early afternoon.

They both arrived in the capital 10 years ago looking for work, they said, after Mr. Zelalem’s parents died and Mr. Asrat’s family was kicked off its farmland to make way for a resort hotel.

Mr. Asrat looked morose. “Nothing has changed in the past 10 years except for my physical appearance,” he said, showing his home, a beat-up taxi with a foam mattress inside. “This country is only for investors.”

Mr. Zelalem, the 17-year-old, lives next door, in a boxlike structure with just enough space to fit his small frame. He was more determined.

“I want to become prime minister and change the country, and give jobs to young people,” he said, the words “Never Give Up” tattooed on his arm. He opened the door to his abode, which was fashioned out of corrugated metal. A backpack hung on a nail, next to a cutout of Jesus pasted on one wall. He took out his school notebooks, full of his meticulous handwriting.

“I want to study natural sciences, then become a doctor. Then I want to study social sciences to learn about politics,” he said, listing off his ambitions.

“In 20 years, you’ll see,” he added. “I’ll invite you to my office.”


Ethiopia flouting international laws over arbitrary detention – UN group

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Andualem Aragie Walle


By Africa News

Ethiopia is flouting its international human rights obligations particularly in the area of arbitrary detentions, a United Nations rights group has said.

According to the Human Rights Council’s Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Addis Ababa was flouting international laws of which it is a state party to. The particular law it added was ‘The International Convention on Civil and Political Rights.’

The U.N. body in a recent document denounced the failure of Ethiopia to give it responses over the continued detention of an opposition figure, Andualem Aragie Walle. The group said its correspondence to the government dated May 2, 2017; has yet to be responded to.

It went on to decry the deprivation of rights of people being held by government without formal charges as is the case with Andualem. They quoted portions of international laws that Ethiopia was openly flouting by their current action.

“When it is clearly impossible to invoke any legal basis justifying the deprivation of liberty (as when a person is kept in detention after the completion of his or her sentence or despite an amnesty law applicable to him or her)

“When the total or partial non-observance of the international norms relating to the right to a fair trial, established in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and in the relevant international instruments accepted by the States concerned, is of such gravity as to give the deprivation of liberty an arbitrary character.”

Andualem Aragie Walle, a prominent opposition politician in Ethiopia was first arrested in 2005 before being pardoned two years later.

He was arrested again in September 2011 and forcibly taken to the Maekelawi prison. Together with other opposition leaders, they had protested the outcome of the country’s 2010 elections. According to the most current charges he is being held under the country’s 2009 anti-terrorism laws.

He began his political career in 2000 when he helped found the Ethiopian Democratic Party. He later became involved with the Coalition for Unity and Democracy (CUD) before becoming Vice President of the Unity for Democracy and Justice (UDJ).

He also served as Press Secretary for the UDJ newspaper and as an executive committee member of Medrek, the largest opposition coalition in the country.

Ethiopia is notorious for massive crackdown on dissent especially on opposition elements and on members of the press. It is ranked among the worst jailers of journalists according to media right organizations.

Prominent Ethiopians fleeing political persecution: Lilesa, Tsegaye, Teferi

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By Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban | Africa News

Ethiopia has recorded one of the highest asylum seeking moves by a government official. But before Baye Tadesse Teferi – a top official close to the Prime Minister, there were two other major asylum seeking instances.

One of the most publicized being that of Feyisa Lilesa, the long distance runner who took the anti-government gesture to the Rio Olympics. He was shortly followed by one of the country’s biggest television stars.

The similarity for all three personalities being: they all openly stated fleeing political persecution and all headed to the same destination, the United States.

October 2017: Baye Tadesse and the fear of political persecution

Baye Tadesse Teferi, was part of the Ethiopia’s official delegation to the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) in New York weeks ago.

The Ethiopian delegation has since returned to Addis Ababa but he remains in the U.S. He confirmed to the Voice of America’s Amharic service that for political reasons he had opted to seek asylum in the United States.

The Protocol Chief of Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn thus quits after serving over two years with the government. Ethiopia’s economic successes have long been eclipsed by what political and rights watchers call a systemic and institutionalized crackdown on media and political dissent.

The East African nation has been severally called upon to open their political space and to tolerate dissenting political views.


August 2016: Lilesa takes Oromo protest symbol to the Olympics

Feyisa Lilesa, left Addis Ababa with the country’s Olympic team for Rio 2016 games Brazil but little did anyone suspect he will make name more for a protest sign than his action on the tracks.

The long distance athlete became famous after he made an anti-government gesture at the end of his track event. He crossed his arms above his head as he finished the event as a protest against the Ethiopian government’s crackdown on political dissent.

He won the silver medal in the men’s marathon after finishing the 42 kilometer race. He later claimed that his life was in danger. He sought for and was granted asylum in the United States and has been living there since leaving Rio.

He has often left to participate in marathons across the world. His family at the time said they supported his asylum move. His wive and two kids were subsequently allowed to join him in the U.S.

September 2016: Actor Tsegaye goes into exile

Barely a month after Lilesa’s episode, popular Ethiopian actor, Znah-Bzu Tsegaye, told VOA Amharic service that he had sought asylum in the U.S. after leaving the country in July 2016.

At the time, Tsegaye – who is from the Amhara region, said his decision to go into exile was linked with the heavy security crackdown on anti-government protesters in the Amhara and Oromia regions.

In an interview with the VOA’s Amharic service, he chastised the security forces for carrying out “atrocious actions” and disclosed that until the regime is changed, he will not return home. “It is sad to respond with bullets to people’s demand for their rights,” he said.

Tsegaye is a screen star in Ethiopia having featured in popular films and soap operas. Local media reports that he is a household name in the country’s entertainment circles.

(ESAT Video) Latest News in Ethiopia (Oct. 4)

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Latest News in Ethiopia (Oct. 4)


ARDUF statement on forthcoming nations, nationalities and peoples day celebration in the Afar Region

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Do the Ethiopian nationalities have cause to celebrate their so called “day” in the Afar region?


ARDUF Press Release

This year’s Nations, Nationalities and Peoples “Day” is to be celebrated in December 2017, in Samara, the capital city of the Afar Region. The forthcoming is the 12th round of those Jamborees prepared in the name of EthiopianAfar regional map, Ethiopia Nations, Nationalities and Peoples “Day”. A brochure issued by the federal authorities’ states that Nations, Nationalities and Peoples day is celebrated in “commemoration of the people of Ethiopia’s ultimate triumph against the repressive and oppressive regime that had deprived them of their rights in their own nation”. They are of course, referring to pre-1991 oppressive regimes and not the present regime. The Ethiopian Nations, Nationalities and Peoples are being deprived of their legitimate rights and fundamental freedom and liberty by the current regime in their own nation. This is the tip of the ridiculous mockery that provoke outrage and wrath in those regions in particular and the whole country in general. It is not only” the peace between its people” that is conspicuously and unmistakable absent in those days between Ethiopian peoples.

This huge Carnival Festivities of this round of Nationalities “DAY” will be celebrated massively, while 99% of the Afar population do not have basic necessities of life, such as water, food, clothing, shelter, housing and healthcare. Meanwhile, thousands of Oromo citizens who were displaced from Ethiopian Somali Region are being tracked in Lorries and freight to safer places in their home region, namely; Oromia. It is reported that 50,000 Oromos were so far displaced from Ethiopian Somali Region. The scene looks like any African civil war dramas we are all familiar with. Somalis are displacing Oromos from Jijiga only but from neighbouring Somali Republics like Somali-land & Punt-land. Here in Ethiopia Konsos fight Burjis, Afars fight Issa- Somalis, Amharas fight Tigrais in Wokayet-Tsegede and Neuers fight Anwaks and so forth. It looks as if it is every body’s war against everybody. Settled farmers against cattle herders, natives versus new-comers and so forth. Everybody seems to be at each other’s throat. Allowing the so called Liyu Hayle (Liyu Polis) armed militias of every regions to engage in illegal acts of armed aggression to occupy each other’s territories by use of force is a serious disaster especially when the local militias are under ambitious and out of control local prospective war lords are in collusion with greedy TPLF army Commanders. The so called Liyu Hayle forces, in all regions, have categorically failed to maintain law and order, peace and security within their local jurisdictions. As a result of TPLF failed policy and bad governance the recurrent clashes are crossing the threshold into full- blown bloody civil war.

In spite of all those upheavals, the preparation in Afar land is being finalized for the forthcoming “Day” of Nationalities under the slogan “peace among its Peoples.” The Festival flyer states that the stadium, collection hall, internal roads and other infrastructure constructions continue to be build. The Festivities Preparatory Committee making the poor Afar people to donate money and livestock. The Committee announced that 701 camels, 10,513 goats and sheep and 175 cattle were received from Afar herders. This is from a Region where people live on handouts from the central government because of the recurrent drought, man-made hunger, oppression, discrimination, gross human rights abuses and deprivation of economic and social development packages. The ruling officials of the Afar region are proud to build “1 Stadium” for 1 billion and 600 million Ethiopian Birr, while their people are facing unprecedented severe economic and social hardship and health problem. Afar region is the most neglected, marginalised and underdeveloped regions in the country. Investors are called upon to invest in the Afar Region. The Afar Diasporas are also invited to come to celebrate the big “Day”. We are told delegates were even sent to European capital cities, such as Brussels and London to convince the Diasporas Communities to attend the Festival. Everything is ready for the big Jamboree but the only conspicuously absentee is the “peace and development” which they are supposed to “celebrate” on “their Big Day”.

The Ethiopian Nations, Nationalities and Peoples have little to “celebrate”. Above all, the Afars of all groups have definitely little cause to celebrate. Afars will join their fellow Ethiopians in Samara in displaying their music and dancing in their traditional dress and decoration but having little to pay tribute to. On the contrary, today they are all busy in bundling together to get rid of this called TPLF, while TPLF which in turn is busy in hoodwinking everybody in its irresponsible behaviour of instigating one group against another group to maintain its divide and rule policy. They are deliberating in Mekelle City, the capital of Tigray State on how to refine their “divide and rule” machinations. But, the Ethiopian Nations, Nationalities and Peoples have too little “to celebrate on the so called “Nationalities Day” but every cause to stand and rebel in unison to uproot TPLF/EPRDF, the cause of all their misery and calamity.

Victory to ARDUF (UGUUGUMO)
Long live the Struggle of Ethiopian People!

Military Command Centre (MCC) Information Desk of ARDUF
Afar Revolutionary Democratic Unity Front (ARDUF)

Almaz Ayana and Five Other African Athletes Nominated for IAAF Athlete of the Year Award

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By Fredrick Nugugi | Face to Face Africa

Six African athletes, three men and three women, have been nominated for the upcoming IAAF Athlete of the Year Award. The six are part of a list of 20 athletes released on Monday by the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) as contenders of the prestigious award.
The list, which comprises of 10 male and 10 female athletes, was prepared by an international board of experts in athletics, including representatives from at least six continental zones of the IAAF.

“This week marks the opening of the voting process for the 2017 World Athletes of the year, ahead of the IAAF Athletics Awards 2017,” IAAF said in a statement on Monday.

The world athletics body also announced that this year’s athletes of the year will be unveiled on November 24 in Monaco, Europe.

Top African Athletes

Among the six African athletes nominated for the esteemed award is the South African 400m world record holder Wayde van Niekerk, Kenya’s female 5,000m marathon champion Hellen Obiri, and Ethiopia’s long-distance female runner Almaz Ayana Eba.

The other three include Kenya’s Elijah Manangoi, a middle-distance runner, South Africa’s track and field athlete Luvo Manyonga, who specializes in Long Jump, and Caster Semenya, a South African middle-distance runner and 2016 Olympic Gold medalist.

The six will battle it out with other world-class athletes like Mohamed Farah of Great Britain, Sam Kendricks of the United States, Anita Wlodarczyk of Polland, Sally Pearson of Australia, among others.

According to IAAF, a three-way voting process will determine the finalists. The process involves casting of votes by the IAAF Council, IAAF Family and athletic fans within the six continental zones.

The IAAF Council and Family will cast their votes via email, while fans will do so through the organization’s social media platforms.
“The IAAF Council’s vote will count for 50% of the result, while the IAAF Family’s votes and the public votes will each count for 25% of the final result,” the statement further reads.

They also promised to post each nominee’s graphics on Facebook and Twitter before the end of the week. Voting closes on October 16, after which the athletics body will announce the three male and three female finalists.

Then the male and female World Athletes of the year will be declared live at the IAAF Athletics Awards 2017 in Monaco.

The IAAF Athlete of the year Award recognizes excellence in the various athletic sports organized by the IAAF, including track and field events, cross country racing, road races, and race-walking.

Previous winners of the prized trophy include the Jamaican men’s 100m champion Usain Boltand the Kenyan men’s 800m champion David Rudisha.

The Plight of Ethiopia’s Internally Displaced Persons

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A woman drags by a limp leg the carcass of one of her few remaining prized black-headed sheep away from her family’s domed shelter fashioned out of sticks and fabric that stands alone amid the desiccated scrubland.


Across Somali Region of Ethiopia, there are 264 sites containing around 577,711 internally displaced persons (IDPs) according to a survey conducted by IOM between May and June 2017.

By James Jeffrey | Africa Business Magazine

“Once they are all dead we will go to one of the settlements,” says the Somali-Ethiopian pastoralist who is dealing with the fallout of the latest drought afflicting the Horn of Africa. Last year, Ethiopia’s highland region was affected.

This year, the lowland Somali region in the southeast has been hit, devastating the herds of the pastoralists who live there. Across the region, whose ethnically Somali inhabitants are Ethiopian nationals, there are 264 sites containing around 577,711 internally displaced persons – also known as IDPs – according to a survey conducted by the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) between May and June 2017.

Most of them have spent all their reserves trying to keep their few remaining animals alive and are left with nothing. “For those who have lost everything, all they can now do is go to a government assistance site for food and water,” says Charlie Mason, humanitarian director at Save the Children Ethiopia until June this year. “They have no coping mechanisms left.”

But the scale of numbers means the government is overwhelmed – many sites have reported no access to food – hence international assistance is sorely needed. However, international aid is often more geared toward those who crossed international borders.

Lack of attention

“Refugees get global attention – the issue has been around a long time, and it’s just how people look at it, especially if conflict is involved,” says Hamidu Jalleh, working for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in the region. “Weather-induced IDPs haven’t reached that level.”

Continue reading this story at Africa Business Magazine

Ethiopia’s ethnic federalism is being tested

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By The Economist

For centuries the city of Harar, on the eastern fringes of the Ethiopian highlands, was a sanctuary, its people protected by a great wall that surrounded the entire city. But in the late 19th century it was finally annexed by the Ethiopian empire. Harar regained a bit of independence in 1995, when the area around it became the smallest of Ethiopia’s nine ethnically based, semi-autonomous regions. Today it is relatively peaceful and prosperous—and, since last month, a sanctuary once more.

In recent weeks thousands of Ethiopians have poured into areas around Harar, fleeing violence in neighbouring towns (see map). Nearly 70,000 people have sought shelter just east of the city. Several thousand more are huddling in a makeshift camp in the west. Most are Oromo, Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group. Its members clashed with ethnic Somalis in February and March, resulting in the death of hundreds. The violence erupted again in September, when more than 30 people were killed in the town of Awaday. Revenge killings, often by local militias or police, have followed, pushing the death toll still higher. In response, the government has sent in the army.

Ethnic violence is common in Ethiopia, especially between Oromos and Somalis, whose vast regions share the country’s longest internal border. Since the introduction of ethnic federalism in 1995, both groups have tried to grab land and resources from each other, often with the backing of local politicians. A referendum in 2004 that was meant to define the border failed to settle the matter. A peace agreement signed by the two regional presidents in April was no more successful.

When the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) swept to power in 1991 after a bloody 15-year civil war, federalism was seen as a way to placate the ethnic liberation movements that helped it to power. The previous regime had been dominated by the Amhara, the second-largest ethnic group (the Eritreans broke away to form a new state). Eventually ethnic loyalties would wither as people grew richer, went the thinking of the Marxist-inspired EPRDF.

But the way federalism was implemented caused problems from the start. New identity cards forced people to choose an ethnicity, though many Ethiopians are of mixed heritage. Territories often made little sense. In the Harari region, a minority of Hararis rule over much bigger populations of Oromos and Amharas, a source of resentment. Boundaries that were once porous became fixed, leading to disputes.

For years the EPRDF sought to dampen the tension by tightly controlling regional politics. But its grip has loosened over time. Local governments have grown stronger. Regional politicians are increasingly pushing ethnic agendas. The leaders of Oromia, the largest region, have drafted a bill demanding changes to the name, administration and official language of Addis Ababa, the capital, which has a special status but sits within Oromia. They have stoked ethnic nationalism and accused other groups of conspiring to oppress the Oromo.

Politicians in the Somali region are no more constructive. They have turned a blind eye to abuses by local militias and a controversial paramilitary group known as the Liyu. The region’s president “has a fairly consistent expansionist agenda”, says a Western diplomat. “He may have spied an opportunity.” The federal government, now dominated by the Tigrayan ethnic group, was rocked by a wave of protests last year by the Oromo and other frustrated groups.

Many complain that the rulers in Addis Ababa are doing too little. They have been slow to respond to the recent violence, fuelling suspicions that they were complicit. “We are victims of the federal government,” shouts Mustafa Muhammad Yusuf, an Oromo elder sheltering in Harar. “Why doesn’t it solve this problem?”

Federalism may have seemed the only option when it was introduced in 1995. But some now suggest softening its ethnic aspect. “In the past the emphasis was too much on ethnic diversity at the expense of unity,” says Christophe Van der Beken, a professor at the Ethiopian Civil Service University. “The challenge now is to bring the latter back.”


Ethiopia’s Con Artistry and American Complicity

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One of the best books ever written on tyranny captures the essence of spin and misinformation as part of the strategy to maintain power and privilege. Sadly, we recycle untruths to the point where a new generation of people who inherit this earth fall victim to this phenomenon. The abnormal becomes normal; and the public wonders with disbelief if there is any way out. In countries such as Ethiopia where independent media and journalism are literally criminalized, ordinary citizens are denied the right to know the truth. The regime in power in Ethiopia may not “burn books” to limit access to critical information and to knowledge or flog or hang innocent people who oppose it in public view. It is much more sophisticated than that. But its actions amount to the same thing. There are tens of thousands of people, especially youth, whose whereabouts is still unknown.

It is up to us to dig deeper and deeper and understand why tyranny in Africa persists. We cannot do this if we do not read books and research papers; attend forums or challenge one another constructively and civilly. We cannot fight spin and misinformation about Ethiopia if we do not value intellectual and moral integrity or if we are unable to advance the interest of the country and its 105 million people ahead of party, ethnicity or religion.

This leads me to my commentary.

African nations continue to suffer from two interconnected sources: internal elites and high priced foreign lobbyists or what some American scholars call “spin doctors.” Ethiopian society is among the top tier of nations that suffers from economic and political capture and external collusion using lobbyists for pay. The marriage between the two goes back to the colonial era when imperial powers recruited and groomed “promising African leaders” amenable to personal and family inducements, cajoling, flattery, bribery, corruption and the delusion that they are “civilized Africans.” Western leaders called some of the most repressive leaders in Africa such as Museveni and Meles “Renaissance men.” Within the Ethiopian context, the term “renaissance or transformation” is abused and overused to the point that it has lost meaning in the same way as growth. Word matter. Many of us are persuaded by overhyped terms.

The colonial strategy of cajoling, providing inducements, promoting ethnic, regional, sectarian, religious and class division succeeded throughout Africa, the Middle East and South Asia. This was done at enormous social costs to newly independent countries. When the colonial masters left; “black elites” replaced them as the new rulers. Most of Africa’s leaders became the new thieves of state and government. Sadly, these thieves of state and government had partners in foreign countries. Thieves of state and government leased or sold precious mines and increasingly farmlands at prices that are criminal. Infrastructure contracts for mega projects such as dams, rails, roads, ports, auditoriums etc. by African bureaucrats are riddled with legions of bribery and commissions.

Lending institutions worsened the situation by colluding with national elites regardless of their misdeeds. The growth story we often hear about Ethiopia is not shared by the vast majority of the population. Yet, the IMF and others “spin and misinform” with incredible assurance using “incredible or make-believe data.” Nothing is said about bribery, corruption, illicit outflow of billions, mismanagement, civil conflict and instability. Nothing at all!!

A staggering amount of between”$36 billion to $69 billion” of capital was stolen and taken out of Africa in 2014 alone. Ethiopia is among the top that bleeds. “More wealth leaves Africa every year than enters it – by more than $40bn (£31bn) – according to research in the U.K. that challenges “misleading” perceptions of foreign aid.” The amount of foreign aid that African nations receive is miniscule compared to the amount of money taken out of the continent each and every year. Africa would be better off without aid than with aid if its wealth was kept and invested within the continent. Africa would be better of if its educated youth had opportunities at home.

Imagine what food aid dependent Ethiopia could do with $30 billion that David Steinman reported was stolen from the Ethiopian people by its rulers (Forbes, Ethiopia’s Cruel Con Game, March 3, 2017). What is stolen is the entire amount American aid to the Ethiopian people. This aid was not granted to enrich thieves of state and government and their families. It was intended to improve the lives of the poor and make them self-reliant and productive.

Can these monies be reprieved? This depends on change in government. Democratic countries are in a better position to go after illegal or illicit outflow of funds from their countries. They have well established institutions to bring corrupt officials to a court of law. In most developing countries, especially in Sub-Saharan Africa, North Africa and the Middle East, the rule of law does not apply. Independent civil society organizations (CSOs) do not exist. Persons who advance the rule of law and expose corruption risk their lives.

Why should Africans care anyway?

Poor and backward countries need all the capital they can get in order to build social and physical infrastructure. Bribery, theft, corruption and illicit outflow deprive them of the requisite capital to improve the lives of their citizens by investing in education, health, maternal and child care, safe drinking water, sanitation, better nutrition. Because of its enormous adverse impact on wellbeing, illicit or illegal diversion of billions of dollars of precious capital from poor countries such as Ethiopia is corrosive and a crime.

Just think of the volume of money that is stolen and taken out of Africa, including Ethiopia. Global Financial Integrity (GFI), the most reputable monitoring institution has done more than any other think tank to show the magnitude of the problem and its adverse impact on the poor. It reports that “Illicit financial flows from developing regions grew at an average rate of 8.5% to 10.1% a year between 2005 and 2014 (the latest year for which data is available). The funds are mainly moved through fraudulent invoicing of imports and exports, in a bid to avoid taxes and hide large sums.”
Global Justice Now along with a coalition of UK and African economic justice advocates claim that “the rest of the world is profiting more than most African citizens from the continent’s wealth…… African countries received $162bn in 2015, mainly in loans, aid and personal remittances. But in the same year, $203bn was taken from the continent, either directly through multinationals repatriating profits and illegally moving money into tax havens, or by costs imposed by the rest of the world through climate change adaptation and mitigation.”

Last week, I commented on the World Bank’s assessment of regional disparities in growth and development in Ethiopia. I drew attention the need for equitable distribution of aid and federal budget to mitigate the deepening and worsening destabilization in Ethiopia. I was therefore struck by an IMF End of Mission press release dated September 26, 2017 that offered a rosy picture of the Ethiopian economy.

In brief, an IMF mission headed by Mr. Julio Escolano concluded as follows:
  • Real gross domestic product is estimated to have increased by 9 percent in 2016/17.
  • Prudent budget execution led to a lower-than-planned fiscal deficit, estimated at 2.5 percent of GDP.”
At the conclusion of the mission, Mr. Escolano said that the “The Ethiopian economy showed strong resilience in 2016/17 amid continued weak global prices for Ethiopia’s key exports and re-emergence of drought conditions in parts of the country. Real gross domestic product (GDP) is estimated to have increased by 9 percent in 2016/17. Government interventions to mitigate the social impact of the drought, in collaboration with development partners, were timely and effective, thus limiting its human cost.” The report offers a partial and partisan story. It may as well be written by TPLF/EPRDF cadres. A resilient economy does not beg for food aid. People would have enough to eat. Youth do not leave their country in droves.

This report reminds me of William Easterly provocative book, “The Tyranny of Experts: Economists, Dictators, and the Forgotten Rights of the Poor.” Mr. Escolano forgot the Ethiopian poor completely. It is because of the fact that the IMF does not expect him to be socially conscious or responsible to ordinary Ethiopians. Doctoring facts is a well-established tradition. It is therefore not that hard to be skeptical of conclusions that have no soul. A few examples will illustrate the gap in analysis.
  • The IMF failed to mention Ethiopia’s growing debt burden that has now reached an unsustainable level and has affected investments in critical social and economic sectors including infrastructure.
  • Export earnings have been falling for a number of years. This is in part fueled by corruption and massive illicit outflow.
  • The popular revolts in Oromia, Amhara, Konso and other regions have restrained the flow of foreign direct investment and tourism.
  • Economic activity has stalled in Bahir Dar, Gondar, Dessie, Awassa and other parts of the country.
  • The IMF It failed to mention the destabilizing effects of internal ethnic conflicts between Oromo and Somali Ethiopians.
  • The cost of living continues to rise.
  • Unemployment among youth has not abated.
  • The root causes of the unrest are unresolved.
  • Growth is spatially and socially is uneven and unjust (the World Bank).
  • Ethiopia’s private sector is squeezed by TPLF owned enterprises (UNCTAD).
  • The business climate is not favorable to a diverse set of Ethiopian economic actors; and the regulatory environment is suffocating (World Economic Forum/Freedom House).

In theory, IMF’s governance does not allow its professional staff to get involved in the internal affairs of the client country. However, they are free to use statistics and insights from government officials and to arrive at their own independent conclusions. The conclusions reached by the IMF are always in line with official government policy. The pattern observed in the past is this. The regime takes any favorable assessment of the current socioeconomic and political situation by governments, experts and multilaterals as further proof that its policies and programs are advancing the welfare of the Ethiopian people.

This reinforces my general theme that it is the TPLF core that benefits the most from the “Tyranny of experts.” Favorable assessment justifies other interventions such as the use of lobbyists to stymie H.R. 128 that has widespread support in the U.S. Congress. The TPLF is well known in deploying the latest tools in influencing policy makers in key countries, most notably, the U.S. It does this successfully by hiring expensive lobbyists whose luxurious life style in the Washington Metropolitan area is legendary. Ironically, the same regime that spends public funds “begs” for humanitarian aid. Ethiopia is still unable to feed its starving millions.

Early this year, the TPLF Ambassador to the U.S. hired an American firm, S.G.R. LLC Government Relations and Lobby at a cost of $1.8 million or about $150,000 per month. The firm’s primary job is to provide lawmakers a rosy picture of Ethiopia as a “reliable ally in the fight against terrorism and fundamentalism in the Horn of Africa; and as a beacon of stability and remarkable growth in a region replete with chaos, civil war, hunger and instability.

The lobbyists hired are expected to remind American policy-makers that Ethiopia is a major and reliable ally in the war against the spread of terrorism and fundamentalism in the entire Horn of Africa. It is reported that a high level Ethiopian delegation on a visit to the U.S. in connection with the Annual meetings of the U.N. General Assembly met with key U.S. government Officials and members of Congress and asked them to postpone deliberation of H. R. 128 until Ethiopia’s “Parliament” deliberates on “substantive policy changes,” including the opening-up of “political space.” This is the reason why deliberation of the bill has been postponed.

Some knowledgeable sources also opine that Ethiopia has threatened the Trump Administration that it will “cease supporting America’s efforts on the war against terrorism” in the event the Bill passes. How an American legislative body would be held hostage by a tyrannical regime that depends on American aid for its survival is debatable. The Ethiopian Parliament is a mouth piece of the TPLF and not an independent deliberative body.

Independent observers believe that the prospect of political reform in Ethiopia is as remote as it has ever been. Just last week, the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention issued an “opinion finding that the detention of opposition politician Mr. Andualem Aragie by the government of Ethiopia is arbitrary” and is “a violation of international law…. The independent panel of five human rights experts from around the world—called for Mr. Aragie’s release.”

Speaking on behalf of Freedom Now that sponsored the petition, Ms. Kate Barth, Director said “The Ethiopian authorities have repeatedly used the 2009 Anti-Terrorism Proclamation to silence legitimate political opposition members and government critics. Andualem Aragie is in prison because he dared to expose this injustice. We call on the Government of Ethiopia to respect the Working Group’s opinion and immediately and unconditionally release Mr. Aragie and his co-defendants.”

This highly respected and promising leader was one of the founders of the Unity for Democracy and Justice Party (UDJ), one of the largest multiethnic and multi-faith parties in Ethiopia. Mr. Aragie was arrested, jailed and sentenced because he criticized the 2009 draconian Anti-Terrorism Proclamation and had “admonished the Ethiopian government for its practice of imprisoning political opposition members under fabricated terrorism related charges.”

Hundreds of Ethiopian political prisoners including journalist Eskinder Nega, Professor Merera Gudina and Bekele Gerba, both prominent leaders of the Oromo Federal Congress, Mamushet Amare, also a highly respected and notable opposition figure who was also leader of All Ethiopian Unity Party (AEUP) and numerous others are toiling in jail. These and numerous 0thers are jailed with the deliberate intention of depriving Ethiopia of alternative leadership.

I commend the United Nations Working Group that concluded rightly that “The Government of Ethiopia had committed numerous violations of international law in arresting and detaining Mr. Aragie, including the denial of his rights to a fair trial, freedom of expression, freedom of association, and freedom to take part in public affairs and improper discrimination against Mr. Aragie on account of his political beliefs. The Working Group also condemned Ethiopia’s misuse of the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation to imprison government critics. In addition to affirming Mr. Aragie’s right to release, the Working Group stated that he should be compensated.”

In summary, the IMF rosy picture fails to present a true picture of a dire reality in Ethiopia; while the UN working group says it like it is. I should like to add that other political prisoners who toil in jail deserve to be released and compensated.

Prime Minister Hailemariam should be challenged to take concrete steps that show a desire for meaningful change.

The current target of the expensive lobby paid for by Ethiopia’s poor is HR 128. An American hired firm “killed” a similar bill a few years. Co-sponsored by 68 members of Congress, H.R. 128 has been endorsed by both Republicans and Democrats at the sub-committee and committee levels. Numerous Senators have indicated their support.

American officials should not be tricked into believing that the TPLF dominated regime would reform itself. It hasn’t reformed itself for more than a quarter of a century; and would not go beyond cosmetic change in the near term. Instead, they should trust the Ethiopian people and their resolve to defend their country, themselves and their future against terrorism. The Ethiopian regime is creating a fertile ground for terrorism under the pretext of fighting it.

H. R. 128 is consistent with America’s overarching values of inclusive and good governance, the rule of law, respect for human rights and democracy. It is in America’s long-term interest for Congressional leaders not to permit the stalling of this vital legislation. It should be passed.

Prime Minister Hailemariam Dessalegn’s government has an ample opportunity to demonstrate to the Ethiopian people and to the world community that it is willing and ready to:

  1. Release all political prisoners.
  2. Deal with the root causes that triggered the popular revolts in the Oromia, Amhara, Konso and other regions.
  3. End the use of excessive force by security forces.
  4. Investigate extrajudicial killings and enforced disappearances and make officials accountable for crimes against humanity.
  5. Allow the UN High Commissioner’s request for independent rapporteurs to investigate human rights abuses.
  6. Open up political, civic and religious space immediately.
  7. Guarantee freedom of expression, association, assembly
  8. Engage opposition groups within and outside and outside Ethiopia in a consultative process towards a meaningful transition of political power.
  9. Engage ordinary citizens in the policy and budgetary allocation process.
  10. Allow expert debate on Ethiopia’s development model.
  11. Establish an expert commission to investigate corruption and illicit outflow at all levels; and bring those responsible to a court of law.

(ESAT Video) Latest News in Ethiopia (Oct. 5)

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Latest News in Ethiopia (Oct. 5)



Acute malnutrition crisis and disease outbreaks in Ethiopia's Somali region

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By MSF

Three rainy seasons in a row without substantial rains have led to a humanitarian crisis in Ethiopia. Crops have failed, cattle have died and millions of people across the country are facing food and water shortages.

People in the Somali region are particularly affected by acute malnutrition crisis and disease outbreaks.

Malnutrition crisis

The drought in the region has contributed to the malnutrition crisis. In the Somali region’s Doolo zone, MSF is witnessing the highest numbers of young children with severe acute malnutrition it has registered since it started working there 10 years ago. The crisis is further burdening a population that has been affected by acute watery diarrhoea and outbreaks of other diseases such as measles.

MSF is running inpatient and outpatient nutritional therapeutic centres to help address the nutrition crisis. In 2017, teams have so far treated 12,284 children under the age of five with severe malnutrition in MSF’s emergency project in the Somali region.

Other parts of the region are affected by the current crisis and it is proving difficult for the humanitarian community to meet the needs appropriately. Humanitarian aid, especially food distributions, are often not reaching those who need it.

Disease outbreaks

MSF is also participating in the fight against acute watery diarrhoea and has treated 15,893 cases this year. Teams continue to engage in case management for measles patients and are now also treating patients with acute jaundice.

Beyond malnutrition and acute watery diahorrea, other outbreaks are imminent in the Somali region and the risk is increasing with rains expected to start in mid-October. Emergency preparedness needs to be scaled up to avoid a repeat of the past six months.

More aid needed

Humanitarian organisations need to adjust their models of implementation to meet the current health, nutrition, water and food needs to reduce disease rates and death among the population.

This requires the deployment of more staff and supplies to the hardest-hit zones and the provision of a comprehensive, robust and hands-on response to the population. Donors need to be flexible in order to adjust programme funding to the needs on the ground. Changes in addressing emergencies and outbreaks are also necessary.

Ethiopia and Sudan top diplomats meet exiled South Sudan VP Machar

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By Africa News

Foreign Affairs Ministers of Ethiopia and Sudan have met with former South Sudanese First Vice President Riek Machar.

Ethiopia’s Workneh Gebeyehu and Sudan’s Ibrahim Ghandour met with Machar in South Africa as part of efforts by the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) to maintain peace in South Sudan.

Machar, who leads the Sudan Peoples Liberation Movement – In Opposition (SPLM – IO) has been in exile in South Africa since renewed clashes between his forces and those of the government erupted earlier this year.

Reports last month indicated that Machar and other opposition elements had responded positively to a national dialogue body constituted by President Salva Kiir.

Machar’s forces have battled soldiers loyal to Kiir for more than three years. The country plunged into civil war just two years after independence from Sudan in 2011 after President Salva Kiir fired his then deputy Riek Machar.

The East African regional bloc, IGAD, at its 2017 Extra-Ordinary Summit in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa called upon both parties to return to the 2015 peace agreement whose implementation was abandoned following renewed violence. The agreement faltered after renewed conflicts in 2016 between the two parties.

Kiir declared ceasefire and launched the national dialogue body to organise the national peace dialogue expected to include the armed opposition to address the root causes of the conflict.


US ends Sudan trade embargo

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By AFP

The United States announced an end to its 20-year-old trade embargo against Sudan on Friday, citing what it said are improvements in Khartoum's human rights record.

Washington did not drop Sudan from its blacklist of state terror sponsors nor end its support for the international war crimes indictment targeting President Omar al-Bashir.

But the decision was nonetheless a breakthrough for Bashir's regime, which has engaged with Washington in a bid to end the international isolation that it has suffered since the bloody crisis in Darfur that broke out in 2003.

CONFLICT

Some human rights advocates denounced the move, the fruit of an intense 16-month diplomatic initiative that began under former US president Barack Obama, but other observers cautiously hailed it as a small step forward for the region.

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson published a report confirming the decision, and State Department spokeswoman Heather Nauert said the order would come into effect on October 12.

It came, she said, "in recognition of the Government of Sudan's sustained positive actions to maintain a cessation of hostilities in conflict areas in Sudan."

And she cited what she said was Sudan's sustained commitment to "improve humanitarian access throughout Sudan and maintain cooperation with the United States on addressing regional conflicts and the threat of terrorism."

Sudan welcomed the move, in a foreign ministry statement carried on the official SUNA news agency.

SANCTIONS

"The leaders of Sudan, the government of Sudan and the people of Sudan welcome the positive decision taken by American President Donald Trump of removing the economic sanctions completely," it said.

Specifically, US officials told reporters Sudan had refrained from new violence in three areas of its territory where its forces were accused of widespread atrocities: Darfur, South Kordofan and Blue Nile.

In addition it has improved humanitarian access to former conflict zones and halted its attempts to destabilise South Sudan, granted independence in July 2011.

The officials said US and Sudanese counterterrorism cooperation had improved and Khartoum was now helping regional efforts to hunt Joseph Kony's rebel Lords Resistance Army.

But work remains to be done, and Washington wants to see more improvement in Sudan's behaviour before there is any talk of restoring full diplomatic ties.

"This marks one step forward on a long and hard road where much more progress is needed," a senior administration official told reporters.

TERROR

As one of three countries designated a state sponsor of terror — in Sudan's case for allegedly sponsoring violent Islamist extremists — Khartoum remains under a US arms embargo.

Another official also cautioned that Sudan must comply with UN Security Council resolutions banning the import of weapons from North Korea.

"We will not necessarily take the government at their word," he said.

"We will be closely monitoring the situation, and they understand that we have zero tolerance for continued arms deals with North Korea."

In 2009, the International Criminal Court in the Hague issued an arrest warrant for Bashir, alleging he was responsible for five counts of crimes against humanity.

The US officials said that nothing had changed in Washington's support for this action, and that targeted US sanctions related to the Darfur conflict would remain in place.

DARFUR

"We continue to call for all those responsible for crimes in Darfur to be held accountable and to support... justice for all the victims of the crimes in Darfur," one said.

Reaction to the decision from experts was mixed.

Andrea Prasow, deputy Washington director of pressure group Human Rights Watch, said: "It sends the wrong message to lift these sanctions permanently when Sudan has made so little progress on human rights.

"Sudanese government forces continue to attack civilians, gun down peaceful protesters, and imprison human rights activists and Sudan's president is wanted for atrocity crimes in Darfur."

RELATIONS

But the International Crisis Group, which studies and promotes conflict resolution, gave a guarded thumbs up.

"This is a big day for Sudan," said ICG Sudan analyst Magnus Taylor, arguing that the US "five-track" diplomatic process had proved effective in convincing Sudan to cooperate.

"Sudan sees this as a first rung, albeit a big one, on the ladder towards normalisation," he said.

"If the US is smart it will use the momentum it has gained in its relations with Sudan and push for further improvements in the conduct of the Sudanese government."

In January, then US president Obama eased the sanctions with a view to lifting them completely after a six-month review.

But in July, President Donald Trump extended the review period to October 12, then last month, he removed Sudan from a list of countries hit by a US travel ban.


(ESAT Video) Latest News in Ethiopia (Oct. 6)

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Latest News in Ethiopia (Oct. 6)




Ethiopian General seeks asylum in U.S.

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By ESAT

An Ethiopian General has sought asylum in the U.S. after attending an international conference in Washington, DC last month.

Brigadier General Melaku Shiferaw has served with the military intelligence of the regime’s defense force and as a military attache in a number of African countries.

The General came to the United States last month with a delegation led by Foreign Minister Wokineh Gebeyehu to attend the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS, a coalition of 72 countries for a security partnership spearheaded by the U.S.

Shiferaw was promoted to Brigadier General in September 2016 and was a member of the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM), one of four parties forming the ruling EPRDF.

Brigadier General Shiferaw is the third General to leave the regime. Brigadier General Kemal Gelchu and Brigadier General Hailu Gonfa had also left the regime and sought asylum in Germany and Uganda respectively.

Over 20 Generals have left the regime, fired or forced into early retirement in the last 10 years.

Two Generals, Brigadier General Asamnew Tsige and Brigadier general Tefera Momo were thrown into jail accused of plotting a coup d’etat nine years ago.

Ninety per cent of the brass in the Ethiopian defense forces are from the Tigrayan ethnic group, which the oligarchy in power hails from. Those in jail or forced into retirement are Amhara and Oromo.

In a related news, the head of protocol for the Ethiopian Prime Minister has stayed behind after attending the 72nd United Nations General Assembly in New York.

Baye Tadesse Teferi told the VOA Amharic service that he made a decision to seek asylum in U.S. because on several occasions he had been threatened by members the security of the regime who wish to get access to the Prime Minister’s office without the proper security procedure.

He said he feared for his life cause Tigrayan intelligence and security who had on a number of occasions tried to get access to the office of the Prime Minister, but were stopped by him, hurled threats at him. He also said he was targeted because of his ethnic background as an Amhara.

Divisions and strained relations between people in official government position on one side and Tigrayan intelligence and security on the other has also been the reason for his decision to stay in the U.S., Teferi told the VOA.

Global church body to intervene in Ethiopia – Eritrea border dispute

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Global church body to intervene in Ethiopia – Eritrea border dispute

By AfricanNews

The World Council of Churches (WCC) has said it will pray and work for peace between Eritrea and Ethiopia in an attempt to partake in the resolution of a longstanding border dispute.

This was disclosed by a WCC delegation that visited the Eritrean Orthodox Tewahdo Church last month in what was labeled a historic visit by the body. It was the first time in over a decade that such a visit had been executed.

The delegation was led by WCC programme executive and convener for Africa, Dr. Nigussu Legesse and Fr. Dr. Daniel Buda head of the Ecumenical Relations. They were met at the Asmara International Airport by high ranking officials of the Eritrean Church.

The two parties held synod meetings following which the WCC delegation visited ancient monastries and archeological excavation sites dating back some 1,700 years.

“We came here with great expectations and we are looking forward to having constructive dialogue and encounters with the Eritrean Orthodox Church which is our WCC member church here in Eritrea and with other churches, religious communities and state authorities,” said Legesse during the synod meeting.


Ethiopia: Round Table Discussion held on Battle of Adwa in New York City

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By AT (One of the audience)

A Round Table Discussion on Battle of Adwa was held on Friday, October 6, 2017 in Harlem, New York City. The event was hosted by Ethiopian Community Mutual Assistance Association, Inc. (ECMAA). ECMAA has a non-profit 501 (c) (3) status, and is licensed by the New York Department State under the sponsorship of the Board of Directors. One of the it’s mission for Ethiopian residents living in metro NY, NJ, and CT is to organize discussion forum that will promote and enhance a positive cultural identity for the Ethiopian community.

The discussion about the battle of Adwa was inspiring. The invited speaker was the notable historian Dr. Ayele Bekerie. He reminded the participants that all Ethiopians citizens have responsibility to correct when someone systematically paint a negative picture about the battle of Adwa. Specifically, the elite must speak out about the battle of Adwa which is fully supported by impeccably researched facts.

Battle of Adwa is historical event that sparks a patriotic flame in all Africans heart. The invading Italian army was resoundingly crushed in March 1896, and became source of pride to Ethiopians as well as Africans. Our forefather strived to protect the country and paid the ultimate sacrifice. Adwa left its nostalgic mark in the memories of patriotic Ethiopians and Africans and deservedly so. The social composition of patriotic army were multiethnic from all parts of Ethiopia. The patriots carried out their fight, with cannons, guns, swords’ to the unmatched highly modernized enemy forces. Ethiopia freedom fighters has been multiethnic all along. The multiethnic freedom fighters unity, endurance and sacrifice is duly recognized as one of the great landmark in Ethiopia history. Because of their sacrifice, Ethiopia has existed as an independent country for a very long time.

The current ruler of Ethiopia, EPDRF, has imposed ethnic based federal system. Its constitution based on “nation & nationalities” which allows secession for ethnic group. Secession is a seed for civil war. Ethnic politicians promote EPDRF’s constitution. It encourages excluding all those who do not belong the same ethnicity from same area. Refer to the recent Oromo-Somali regional government conflict in Easter Ethiopia, where several thousand Oromo residents evicted. It was deadly clash as reported on news Medias. These recent clashes and similar several ethnic conflicts had happened in the past all over Ethiopia as consequence of ethnic politics. The formation of ethnic federalism based on linguistic differences for regional border (which has never official demarcation) is the cause of conflicts.

The question becomes what is the role of the ordinary Ethiopians? Of course, the answer is not simple. Proponent of ethnic politics are not looking reality of the complex cluster of multi-culturalism that unified Ethiopia.

The dialogue on this event improved our understanding of the battle of Adwa. At the end of the discussion, the speaker, Dr. Bekerie gave answer to several questions raised by the attendees. The history of Adwa is striking example that all Ethiopians ethnic groups were united in defending our land and our Ethiopiawinet. Hopefully discussion such as this helps us in strengthening Ethiopiawinet.

Long Live Ethiopia!!

How a Minnesota Paper Became One of the World’s Leading Sources of Ethiopian News

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Henok Alemayehu Degfu, 34, founded ZeHabesha in 2008.


By Ibrahim Hirsi (MinnPost) |

Nearly a decade ago, when Henok Alemayehu Degfu spent his first two paychecks on a laptop, some of his relatives thought he was nuts.

Henok had been in the U.S. for only a couple of months at that point, and those close to him expected him to save the money he earned from his part-time job.

Henok, however, had a dream — one he had been determined to pursue since 2004, when the government in Ethiopia shut down the newspaper he ran there and accused him of defamation, charges that could have put him behind bars for decades.

His purchase of that Toshiba laptop was the first step toward establishing a news outlet in Minnesota — home to thousands of Ethiopian-Americans who arrived in the 2000s as political refugees — for and about his native country.

After securing a computer, all that Henok needed to do was to report, write and put together an entire newspaper. And in December of 2008, that’s exactly what he did, publishing the first issue of ZeHabesha, a 24-page monthly newspaper featuring articles that are important to the Ethiopian-American community.

“I started publishing 4,000 copies each month,” said Henok, 34, who serves as the newspaper’s editor-in-chief. “It was very hard to do it on my own, but I knew people were hungry for news that is told in their language; and as a journalist, I felt I have a responsibility to provide that.”
A brief history of Ethiopians in Minnesota

Ethiopians started coming to the United States in the 1960s, mostly as students pursuing higher education or professionals who were sent here for career development. After their arrivals, many of them obtained permanent residency and extended their stay in the U.S.

That small group was later joined by larger groups, many escaping civil war and ethnic tensions — complicated by drought and famine — during the 1970s and 1980s. When those tensions escalated once again after 2000, an even larger wave of Ethiopian immigrants came to the U.S., according to a report by the Migration Policy Institute.

Continue reading this story at MinnPost

To avert impending large scale ethnic conflict, TPLF needs to arrest its insecurity about Unity

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Editorial

By Borkena | October 7,2017

Ethiopia has experienced one of the worst civil wars in Africa; the shortest one lasted for seventeen years before it brought the current ruling party to power in 1991. Before the rise of Kassa Hailu of Quara as Emperor Tewodros II in the second half of the 19th century, Ethiopia was consumed by war between contending feudal lords. However, none of the wars were ethnic-based in nature. Yes, the dominant political force in the ruling coalition, TPLF, projected the seventeen years guerrilla war during the Derg era somehow as an ethnic war which was not the case as far as the then government is concerned.

Recently, Ethiopia is experiencing a civil war like ethnic conflict. In the past few weeks, an estimated 150,000 oromos are reportedly displaced from the Somali region of Ethiopia after the regional government in Somali deployed special police to cleanse Oromo speaking Ethiopians from the region. At last, fifty are killed. The origin of the conflict is said to be a dispute over land (the two regional governments and the Federal government itself rather employ the language “border conflict”). Yet, there are rumors that the Somali regional government is agitated by Tigray People’s Liberation Front government. In fact, in recent years, Somali regional government and Tigray regional government seem to be acting like allies more than any of the other regional governments. The rest of the regional governments are somehow challenging the privileged status of Tigray and the TPLF party in the ruling coaltion.

It is now apparent that the development in Somali region is causing political wranglings, to say the least, within the ruling party. Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO) is blaming the Federal government, implied in it is TPLF, for what happened in the Somali region. Speaker of the Federal Parliament, Aba Dula Gemeda who has been working with the men in power for more than twenty-six years now while serving within OPDO, reportedly submitted resignation letter in the last few weeks and the conflict in Somali region is cited as a factor in his decision to resign.

One thing that need NOT be forgotten is that the ethnic conflict in somali region, with its apparent ethnic cleansing motive, is not the first major ethnic-based conflict in Ethiopia in the last twenty-six years nor it seems that it is going to be the last one.

There has been cruel recurrent ethnic cleansing attempts in Oromia region itself for more than two decades now. Impoverished Amharic speaking Ethiopians with small subsistence farming have been evicted from their small land holdings with impunity. Many have been killed and thousands were displaced. Other language speaking groups were also targets of ethnic violence. But, at the time, the federal government not only opted inaction but also there were outright denials when thousands of displaced people trekked to the capital Addis Ababa. Similar ethnic-based attacks and evictions also happened in Benshangul region of Ethiopia.

In Northwest and Northcentral Ethiopia, expansionist agenda by Tigray government ( and it has a tacit support from the Federal government the key positions of which is dominated by ethnic Tigreans) has caused ethnic tension. In the summer months of July and August, there was ethnic like conflict out of which the Tigray government created a melodramatic political situation. Ethnic Tigray people were reportedly displaced from Gonder region of Ethiopia ( in fact this became suspicious as there was the indication that intelligence units in Tigray government were involved in the drama.) However, there it is clear that there is enmity towards minority ethnic Tigray as they are seen as the power base and loyal supporters of TPLF regardless of the widespread atrocities that TPLF is causing to Ethiopians.

With the existing ethnic sentiment, which at times tend to be a radical one, if a full-fledged civil war is to break out in Ethiopia in the near future, chances are it is going to be an ethnic-based civil war, than a religious conflict.

The reason for the rather pessimistic view that ethnic conflict could engulf Ethiopia is related to the very nature of the system. The minority regime manifested for a long time now insecurity about Ethiopian unity. It went to the extent of wrongly theorizing the clamor for unity as a chauvinist agenda, only to entrench minority ethnic Tigray chauvisim which caused unprecedented resistance that led the Ethiopia to the state of emergency in 2016.

Ethnic-based politics is given government resource and structure (remember the current form of Federalism is ethnic based) but no meaningful effort is made to promote the importance of Ethiopia as a country for all ethnic groups in Ethiopia. The Economist, which has been a subtle patron of the regime in Ethiopia, with all its inaccuracies and flaws about historical background, dared to ambivalently call a spade a spade when it wrote, this past week, that the government emphasized ethnic identity at the expense of the unity of the country.

For many years now, pundits were writing about Ethiopia being at the “crossroad” because of the policies of the administration in power. Some still tend to employ “Ethiopia at a crossroad” expression to denote the existing political problems and uncertainty about the future of Ethiopia. The truth is that Ethiopia is in a dangerous quagmire and sinking to ethnic conflict that is clearly detrimental to the stability of the entire region.

Fortunately, even the quagmire could be a springboard to a critical juncture that is capable weakening the monstrous ethnic ideology and to piece the country together again the way it should be. Some three years ago, there was already a discussion within in the ruling coalition, at the Bahir Dar congress, to form a single united party. Then again, the dominant force in the coalition, TPLF, did not push for it the way it pushes other agenda that are of economic or political benefit to TPLF.

Even with the rising ethnic conflict that is taking away civilian lives, TPLF is not pushing for restructuring the system in a way to serve the unity of Ethiopia. The reason is it still fails to arrest its insecurity about the Unity of Ethiopia. For TPLF, a strong and united Ethiopia is a threat to Tigray.

If Ethiopia is to be recused from the impending ceaseless ethnic conflict, restructuring the ethnic-based federal system in a way to weaken ethnic conflict and promote the Unity of Ethiopia is imperative. And also TPLF need to understand that the idea of building a supremacist and strong Tigray at the expense of a weak Ethiopia that could always be at the mercy of TPLF is totally impossible.

Ethiopia: Abadula Gemeda Resigns as Speaker of the Federal Parliament

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By Addis Standard

Two credible sources told AS that Abadula Gemeda, speaker of the Ethiopian House of Peoples’ Representatives has resigned from his post.

According to one source, Abadula has “submitted a resignation letter to the federal government in protest over recent political developments including the federal security handling of the ongoing violence in eastern Ethiopia”, which has displaced about 150, 000 Oromos from the country’s Somali regional state.

Our source further said that in recent weeks tensions have risen to a high level between Abadula and other senior members of the ruling coalition regarding the federal security forces’ intervention in Oromia regional state.

The joint session of the federal parliament and the house of federation is expected to open on Monday Oct. 09 at 2:00 PM after the summer recess.

A veteran politician, Abadula was once the President of the Oromia regional state and the minister of defense. Many see his role as a bridge between the federal government and the increasingly assertive leadership of the Oromia regional state. Our sources said that he will remain part of the central committee of the Oromo People Democratic Organization (OPDO), the largest member of the ruling EPRDF coalition.

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