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Gebru Mersha and Richard Pankhurst: legacy on politics and on history

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By Obo Arada Aba Shawl
February 23, 2017

Gebru Mersha and Richard Pankhurst

Gebru Mersha and Richard Pankhurst

Introduction

It is with deep sorrow that I learned the death of Dr. Gebru Mersha, a politician and of Dr. Pankhurst, an economic historian. Dr. Gebru died on Yekatit 4, 2017 and Dr. Pankhurst buried on February 16, 2017. Gebru was 76 years old whereas Pankhurst died having lived for 89 years – thirteen years difference between them.

Who were these scholars?


Gebru Mersha was one of the eleven political science students at the Haile Sellasie I University in 1963. While a student at the University he was not a Marxist as judged by his actions. He became a restorer of the status quo during the campaign for radical change of student body election. At the time of his action, college students at Law and Business colleges were considered very reactionary. It took a lot of hard work for the radical student body to infiltrate the law and business schools. It was unusual for Gebru as a student of politics to join these reactionary class of students.  However, Gebru associated himself with a Marxist Walleligne Makonnen by becoming a roommate. He later joined the Road Transport Administration where progressive students dominate in the Authority. Ato Shimeles Adugna, the Administrator of the Road Transport Authority was a very accommodative manager of a different kind.

It was in this administration that the radical and progressive graduates came together head on to conduct the operations of the Authority. I remember when I used to tease, chat and drink coffee in each of the offices voluntarily set up according to friendship, language and political positions.

For instance, Ibsa Gautama and Bekele Geleta (Oromiffa speakers); Gebru Mersha and Yirga Tessema (Guragna speakers); Wallelign Makonnen and Sine (Amharic speakers); Assegid W. Amanuel and Sereke Berhan (Amharic speakers from Harrarghe) and many other ethnic juniors were employed by Ato Shimeles Adugna. The organization was very efficient because of all the cooperation and understanding of the graduate students. It was a test for challenging the Bureaucratic nature of the ancient regime. It was the best of time and place to work or visit. Customers were happy because there was no hidden agendas. The Transport Road Administration was such a healthy place to appropriately using the phrase of ‘the last straw that broke the camel’s back’ of the Ethiopian Bureaucracy. Notice that the TPLF leaders use and abuse of “Amhara Bureaucracy”. Even after the Ethiopian Revolution, they continue to claim Amhara Bureaucracy as an enemy. The TPLF leaders did not know or did not care to know what these employees of ETA have contributed to the Ethiopian Revolution. They just misquote and abuse one of them, Wallelign Makonnen.

Having worked in the Highway Authority, building and maintaining road infrastructure was highly linked to the road transport operation. For this reason, oil shippers represented by the late Hailu Shawl, Mamo Katcha representing bus operations, and many others come together to discuss issues of transport but not of communication. Communication in Ethiopia at that time was insignificant sector. The only communication that was being carried around that office was among the graduate students. The place was a model for transformation. That kind of transformation was needed by the Melesse group not dam building transformation which is unnecessary. In today’s vocabulary, software and hardware should go together. It was unfortunate that Melese did not graduate to taste the fruits of management and leadership. It is also unfortunate that the TPLF leaders abuse the integration of languages based on ethnicity. The TPLF leaders misconstrued the idea of nation and nationalities as expounded by Wallelign Makonnen and practiced by the graduates of Road Transport Administration.

To go back to the story of Gebru Mersha, he was appointed by the Military Derg to become a local governor in Zuwai and Butajira Awraja. Having acclimatized with progressive bureaucracy, he went to another location known as Assimba where the Revolutionary Army of EPRP was operating. By nature (stars) Gebru did not like to be pushed and so he left EPRP with three others who are still alive claiming that there was no democracy in EPRP’s leadership. The irony of that incident was that all four individuals were members of the leadership group. True again, Dr. Gebru did not realized that democracy does not reside with the leadership alone but also with the members of the party. This is the part that many Ethiopians do not grasp. EPRP has taken the high road and it is going to take it to the end. I hope Dr. Gebru and his colleagues did taste the application of DEMOCRACIA, the mantle of EPRP. There is no as such a “revolutionary democracy” propagated by the TPLF leaders to hoodwink the members of EPRDF. It was and is a hoax. EPRP believes in political democracy. Dr. Gebru was still involved in “Revolutionary struggle” not in political struggle at the time of his death.

Gebru then enrolled at the Netherland University for his Ph.D. This time, he knew that making career in politics was the choice for him. He got his education in political science but the job was back in Ethiopia. At his time of his return, there was no politics but identity politics. He thought that Tamrat Layne, then prime minister would save him. He did not know this identity politics or maybe was misled. When he joined EPRP, it was assumed that he would realize the mission and vision of EPRP would be long and tortuous with no cash reward. EPRP was about bringing a political system backed by economic markets. Gebru has missed the opportunity of instituting political system in Ethiopia. He has also missed to see the great American Political System of Checks and Balances. Dr. Gebru missed his chance even to visit America when his children invited him to join them in their graduation ceremony. It is rumored that he refused to go to America as he was fighting against America during his life struggle. If this was true, he was a naïve Marxist. In other words, he was not born leader but in the category of priests. Maybe not. Nobody knows whether he belongs to the Arbatu Ins’sat category of leaders in Ethiopia.

It was an honor to know such people in college, in work place, in arena of struggle and in real normal life. As a life planner, the corner stone for the future of Eathiopia, I want to quote Mia Angelo’s book title “I know why the caged bird sings.” With that I salute Gebru Mersha whose life will teach a valuable lesson for all members of EPRP. It should be remembered that Gebru was a political science student among eleven members that included Berhane Meskel Redda, Mehari Yohannes, Mesfin Araya, Shaleka Getachew, Ibsa Gutama, Paulos Yohannes, Gebru G. Wold and others. This group were supposed to lead the political struggle and they did to an extent.

Historian Pankhurst

The concept of history in Ethiopia is one and the same. No division or category. That was the Orthodox way. Now the narrative has changed. 101 history is no history. But during the Pankhurst era of teaching, I was not a political science student but a student of economics. As such, Econ 101 taught by Richard Pankhurst was my favorite subject. His economic teachings were based on the Ethiopian students’ background information and knowledge. In other words, he was a primary researcher.

Dr. Pankhurst according to many Ethiopians was an expert on Ethiopian history. What kind of history? That is the big question. History nowadays, can be classified in 1001. I believe that is one of the deep source of trouble for a lot Eritreans or Ethiopians. We don’t know what we are talking about. We cannot agree on anything provided we speak of one history – the history of the political power.

Nevertheless, Dr. Pankhurst was teaching us economic history. The study of economic thought was of paramount value across the board of economics. Society and community life sustenance is based on these thoughts and values. We had many professors in economics. But the subject matter of economics of Dr. Pankhurst was based on the data of Ethiopia. It was true, at the time there was a paucity of data and information in Ethiopia. However, Dr. Pankhurst was using primary data and information of the country Ethiopia. That was why we loved him. It was not only what he taught but how he taught that mattered for a lot of us. His way of collecting data and information had authenticity.

Dr. Pankhurst was not only a professor but an admirer of all Eathiopians, past and future generations. Take for instance, he taught his son Alula Amharic language and his daughter Helen, Tigrigna language. As many people have witnessed it, Alula speaks perfect Amharic but I don’t know about his daughter to whom I provided a Tigrigna teacher. That was long time ago. I also know that Dr. Pankhurst used to contact the Borona Oromo students and professionals to understand the Oromo people.

Concluding Remarks

How do we treat the death of these outstanding professors, Dr. Gebru Mersha vs Dr. Richard Pankhurst? Personally, I prefer Dr. Gebru’s to that Dr. Richard. Mersha has spent all his life in searching justice through the prism of Revolution and Politics. He rejected the status quo of Haile Sellasie’s government, he rejected the military Derg’s revolution and he finally lost in the maze of the capitalist market of the TPLF. The history of many Ethiopians as well as Eritreans, is similar to the fate of Gebru Mersha. They all have lived in the ugly system of Feudalism, psydo-Socialism and now in fake/rogue Capitalism. All these in one generation. There is no comparison with these two professors, one has passed through suffering whereas the other passed away through convenient luxury and longevity.

According to my new discovery of Stars, not the seven earth like stars discovered by astronomers and astrophysics’, Dr. Mersha has joined the category of oxygenated ethicist whereas Dr. Pankhurst will join the energized knowledge categories.  Professor Mersha did not like to be pushed whereas Professor Pankhurst did not like resistance, a testimony to their stars. More on this later on.

It is to be noted that Dr. Pankhurst has dwelt with economics and culture of Ethiopia. He did not invent or create these socio-economic systems but he organized them in books and in micro-fishes. For this job, he is rewarded with state funeral. Individuals like Berhanu Nega, who is an economist was denied to conduct his profession instead he is condemned to death in abstention.  I bet he was forced to change his profession to be a fighter. I know star wise, Dr. Berhanu  is aligned with Richard Pankhurst.

The saddest part is that the TPLF has given state funeral to Dr. Pankhurst but not to Dr. Gebru. What an aberration!!! At this time, Ethiopians need politicians for reform not historians. When will the TPLF leaders respect their own people? Do they respect them when alive or when they are dead? That is a big question. This should resonate with all of us. Let us read the works of Dr. Pankhurst on Ethiopian society studies and culture. It is about time to deal with culture.

TRUTH WILL PREVAIL

For questions and concerns

oboaradashawl@gmail.com

 

 

 

 

 


Africa: The Next Einstein Forum launches search for 54 young African science and technology champions

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PRESS RELEASE

The Next Einstein Forum launches search for 54 young African science and technology champions

NEF Ambassadors attend the NEF’s signature event, the NEF Global Gathering, the second edition of which will be held in March 2018 in Kigali, Rwanda

KIGALI, Rwanda, February 24, 2017/ — The Next Einstein Forum (NEF) (http://NEF.org) today launches the search for fifty-four science and technology Ambassadors, one champion from each African country. The selected NEF Ambassadors will join the NEF Fellows Class as part of the NEF’s Community of Scientists.

NEF Ambassadors attend the NEF’s signature event, the NEF Global Gathering, the second edition of which will be held in March 2018 in Kigali, Rwanda. They will have the opportunity to network with emerging and world renowned scientists and technology leaders as well as industry and policy leaders at an innovative gathering that will focus on how science and technology can solve global challenges, boost sustainable growth and accelerate human development.

“The NEF Global Gathering 2016 held in Senegal was a resounding success, primarily because 60% of the participants were young emerging scientists and technologists. The NEF Ambassadors, part of the NEF Community of Scientists, bring a fresh, local perspective, in addition to their growing expertise in science and technology. NEF Ambassadors will represent their countries and the continent on a global stage, championing science-driven growth and development,” said Mr. Thierry Zomahoun, Chairperson of the NEF and President and CEO of the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences (AIMS).

NEF Ambassadors should be residents of an African country, under forty-two years of age, have completed advanced studies in science, technology or have significant entrepreneurial achievements. They should also have a track record of leadership in their community, be passionate about promoting science and technology, and have an active online profile and following.

“NEF Ambassadors drive the NEF’s local public engagement activities while growing their own careers through the NEF’s partnerships that offer opportunities for mentorship and collaborations with established researchers,” said Dr. Youssef Travaly, NEF Director of Programs and Content.

Applications are available at www.NEF.org/ambassadors and will be received until 26 May 2017. The final list of NEF Ambassadors will be published in September 2017. See the NEF Ambassadors video teaser here (http://APO.af/CiZbDv).

Distributed by APO on behalf of Next Einstein Forum (NEF).

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Media Contact:
Mimi Kalinda
Director of Communications, AIMS
E: MKalinda@NextEinstein.org

About the Next Einstein Forum:
Launched in 2013, the Next Einstein Forum (NEF) (http://NEF.org), an African Institute for Mathematical Science (AIMS) initiative in partnership with the Robert Bosch Stiftung, is Africa’s global platform for science and technology. The NEF unites outstanding thinkers and distinguished stakeholders from around the world together in Africa in biennial Global Gatherings with the first NEF Global Gathering held in March 2016 under the patronage of H.E. Macky Sall, President of the Republic of Senegal. The NEF Global Gathering 2016 had over 1000 participants, with 50% of participants under the age of 42, 40% of whom were women. Held every two years, NEF Global Gatherings will showcase Africa’s top young scientists and connect them with leaders from Africa and the rest of the world in high-profile, invitation-only forums that touch on the three pillars of science, society and policy. The NEF Institution runs a NEF Fellows program that identifies and awards Africa’s top scientists and technologists; an Ambassadors Program that selects 54 science and technology ambassadors across the continent, one per country; as well as running science benchmarking, policy and public engagement activities.
The NEF has been endorsed by the African Union Commission as well as the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the Governments of Rwanda, Senegal and South Africa, the African Academy of Sciences (AAS) and a growing number of private sector and civil society partners from across the world who are passionate about positioning Africa’s scientific community as an influential member in the global scientific community, which will ensure sustainable human development in Africa and other parts of the world.

SOURCE
Next Einstein Forum (NEF)

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Arena Tigray must convert itself into a national party – for its own good and for the good of the country

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By Shiferaw Abebe

Under the dark shadow of the current State of Terror in Ethiopia, Arena Tigray recently held its low-key fourth congress and elected Abraha Desta as its new Chairman. Before his release last July, the new Chairman, a philosophy lecturer at Mekele University, had spent two full years in TPLF prison on trumped up charges of having a connection with Ginbot 7.  Abraha has a well-deserved reputation as a courageous truth teller and a thorn on the side of the TPLF. He is arguably the best person to lead Arena Tigray at this point in time and I wish him success.

However, to succeed, Arena Tigray needs to take the next bold step and convert itself into a national (nation-wide) party and change its name too (e.g., Arena Ethiopia for Democracy and Sovereignty). The party’s recent congress was the perfect opportunity to do just that but it is not too late to do the most strategic thing that will transform the party into a formidable opposition both in Tigray and throughout Ethiopia.

The Ethiopia of today is much different than the Ethiopia of two and a half year ago when Abraha was arrested.  Not only have the intervening years proved beyond any doubt that the TPLF regime has utterly failed to deliver democracy, equality, justice and economic growth for all, it is also during this time period that TPLF’s governing philosophy – ethnic politics – eventually pushed the country to the brink of an all out civil unrest and disintegration.

According to recent interviews Abraha gave (to VOA and Kaliti Press), his party has during its recent meeting taken stock of the changed political landscape in the country and the challenges ahead. Unfortunately, however, except for a change in leadership, the party’s strategic direction appears to have remained basically the same. As a regional party with a national agenda, as before, the party’s membership base and political activities will continue to be restricted to Tigray while the party hopes to advance its national agendas through Medrek.

Arena Tigray is also apparently committed to working through Medrek toward forming a unified party. If this route fails to deliver a national party, Abraha says his party is ready to convert itself into a national party, as a last resort.

First of all, it is at best a questionable strategy to work through Medrek to create a unified party.  Arena Tigray had tried that in the past publicly expressing its readiness to merge with any interested opposition party to form a national party. That call fell on deaf ears and the best evolution Medrek managed to achieve was becoming a front –  a significant achievement one might have thought given its composition (of ethnic and national parties) – but in failing to achieve unification, Medrek failed to capture the imagination, excitement and enthusiasm of Ethiopians. By the time the last general election came and went, Medrek was a weaker coalition with one of its strongest members – Andinet Party – decimated by internal strife.  Today, this coalition may exist on paper but is virtually defunct for all intents and purposes.

More importantly, it is illogical and a bad strategy to withhold its conversion into a national party until it finds a willing partner to form a unified national party. Arena will have a much better chance of merging with other other parties to form a bigger national party if it first converts itself into a national party.

 

Apart from that, there are even more imperative reasons why Arena Tigray must convert itself into a national party sooner rather than later. Arena Tigray will succeed as an opposition party if it is able to control and lead the conversation the people of Tigray need to have in their households, in their neighborhoods and in their communities, if it can veer those conversations to questions of national unity, peace and  lasting stability, shared history, common destiny, andEthiopiawinet. These are topics of existential importance in today’s Ethiopia that have the power of penetrating the stale propaganda of TPLF and resonate among the people of Tigray.

Over the past 26 years, TPLF has willfully created mistrust, isolation, resentment and animosity between the people of Tigray and other Ethiopians. That mistrust and resentment almost reached a tipping point in the recent uprisings in the Amhara region, which TPLF is now shamelessly fanning as a war against Tigreans.

What the people of Tigray need at this point in time is not another partisan, Tigrean party that claims to represent their exclusive interests. They have TPLF for that, and look what it got them. What they need is a home grown national party that has the credibility, the foresight and the fortitude to chart a renewed relationship, unity and cohesion with the rest of Ethiopia.

By converting itself into a national party, Arena Tigray will differentiate itself from TPLF philosophically and practically in the clearest, most visible and definitive way that will also send a resounding message to the rest of Ethiopia where it needs to succeed as a national party.

The people of Tigray are historically at the centre of Ethiopian history, its unity and integrity. But what TPLF brought on their behalf over the last 26 years has been division, national degradation, injustice, inequality, and instability. Arena Tigray has the opportunity to change that narrative and write a new history by joining the people of Tigray with the rest of Ethiopians on a national mission of unity, justice, equality,  and prosperity for all.

The time is perfect for the new leadership to take their party national. Time will tell if they will rise to the occasion.

The writer can be reached at shiferawabebe1@gmail.com

Ethiopia ready for greater cooperation with Trump government – PM

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Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban

The Ethiopian Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, has stated that his country was looking to work with the new United States government particularly in the area of trade and investment.

He was speaking during a visit by a US delegation led by Republican Senator, Jim Inhofe, to Addis Ababa on Wednesday, the state-owned Ethiopia News Agency reports.

The Premier said despite cordial relations between Washington and Addis, there was the need to boost trade and investment cooperation in general and the African Growth Opportunity Act (AGOA) in particular.

AGOA is a United States Trade Act, enacted seventeen years ago as Public Law 106 of the 200th Congress. The legislation significantly enhances market access to the US for qualifying Sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries. The pact has since been renewed to 2025.

The head of the delegation described Ethiopia as an ally of the US in the area of security in the Horn of Africa region. Addis Ababa enjoyed cordial relations with the immediate-past Obama administration and Senator Inhofe assures that relations will be further strengthened under Trump.

Inhofe who serves on the U.S. Senate Committee on Commerce Science, & Transportation and the U.S. Senate Committee on Small Business & Entrepreneurship said the US will continue to support peace and security efforts by Ethiopia particularly in Somalia and South Sudan.

Incidentally, the Premier returned from the swearing-in of the new Somali President Mohammed Abdullahi Mohammed Farmajo in Mogadishu to enter the meeting.

PM Desalegn gave assurance to President Farmajo and to Somalians that Ethiopia was going to continue to support them in the fight against Al Shabaab insurgents.

The US in recent past has expressed worry over human rights situation in Ethiopia, with the former US envoy to the United Nations (UN) being at the forefront of calls for respect of rights and release of political opponents.

Ethiopia is currently under a six-month state of emergency imposed in October last year to help quell spreading anti-government protests in two main regions of Amhara and Oromia. Rights groups have said hundreds have been killed in the heavy security clampdown on protesters.

Ethiopia: Oppositions Say Dialogue ‘Better Late Than Never’

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Putting their differences aside, the ruling and opposition parties have recently come to a round table to find ways of nurturing the political environment for the good of the people.

Using this as a ground, The Ethiopian Herald had approached opposition parties to seek their reflections on the political dialogue.

Unity for Justice and Democracy Party (UJDP) Chairman Tigistu Awolu had this to say: The ruling party seems to have decided to hold the dialogue on various accounts.

For him, the public’s rising concern about the political, economic and social issues has brought the incumbent to a round table with opposition parties.

Tigistu further said formerly, the ruling party did not have a right outlook towards oppositions. “There was a tendency to undermine the role of opposition parties considering them inefficient to hold political power.”

Despite late, the dialogue is crucial for political parties and the government. The track record of other countries tells everyone that parties would come to negotiation table after a series of bloodshed he said, adding that this one is happening without such events in the country.

“I can’t deny the death, imprisonment or migration of our people. But, unlike other countries, we have come to dialogue on our own, without third party involvement as well as further bloodshed.”

Ethiopia Democratic Party (EDP) Central Committee member Gizachew Anemaw for his part said the recent experience in the country has necessitated the dialogue.

EDP understands the importance of discussion, debate and dialogue. These are core principles for peaceful political transformation.

Such political dialogue is not happening in Ethiopian for the first time, Gizachew noted, recalling a ‘similar’ dialogue in 2009. “That dialogue did not bring the desired outcome.”

Gizachew said, change cannot be achieved through violence. In this regard, all facilities have to be in place to carry out peaceful discussions. Enabling environment has to be created. “This is part and parcel of the effort in ensuring human and democratic rights of citizens.”

According to him, the political dialogue is vital to peaceful political transformation and to ease all process towards future democratic elections.

Ethiopian RAEY Party President Teshale Sebro for his part said: “I can’t say the dialogue is timely. It is too late. But, there is still a room for creating better Ethiopia. Had this dialogue taken place some 10 or 15 years ago, we couldn’t have experienced the current bad political situation.”

COMMEMORATION OF THE ETHIOPIAN MARTYRS DAY IN ROME, ITALY

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Gallicano nel Lazio (Rome)   February 22, 2017

Today, February 19, is remembered by Ethiopians around the world as Martyrs’ Day in commemoration of one of the bloodiest days of the Italian occupation. On February 19 (Yekatit 12 in the Ethiopian calendar) 1937, following an attack on the life of Viceroy Rodolfo Graziani, the city of Addis Ababa was swept by a wave of indiscriminate violence at the hands of Fascist blackshirts and Italian civilians. Brutal reprisals continued in the following months as Graziani took advantage of the attack to suppress all opposition to his rule in the new colony.


On 18th of February, 2017, the Federation of the Assembly of RasTafari in Italy (F.A.R.I.) together with the Association of the Ethiopian Community in Italy in the presence of its President Wayzero Mulu Ayele held the commemorative celebration of the Ethiopian martyr’s day in Rome. We also organized a similar meeting in Belluno province, in the north of Italy. At the meeting in Rome, the conference was held in a place called “Casa della cultura (House of the culture)” in the presence of more than 54 persons. The first speaker of the event was Ato Carmelo GebreSellassie who dealt generally with the most important facts of the Italian aggression and occupation including some of the terrible crimes that the Italians committed against the Ethiopian soldiers, the innocent people, the clergy and the use of the poison gas and some other inhuman methods. Wayzaro Mulu dealt in her speech  with the recent visit of the Italian President of Republic, Sergio Mattarella, to Ethiopia, where he paid homage to Ethiopians Martyrs’ monument in Arat kilo but nothing was stated by him against the shameful monument established for the killer Graziani in Affile. The last speaker was Dr. Lorenzo Morricone (an elderly professor), president of the association: “Centro Studi Patrizia Leonardi”, who presented his  reflections on the reasons why after the second world war there was no Nuremberg type of trial against the Fascist war criminals for their atrocities in Ethiopia similar to what happened generally for Nazi crimes.

After the conference, we screened the documentary film produced by Valerio Ciriaci. At the end of the meeting, many of the participants, in particular some Italian youths, expressed their gratitude because they learned for the first time this part of the Italian dramatic history that they never knew in their schools, because in their scholastic books there is only half a page that deals with the subject.

Some of the people at the meeting asked to us to repeat the event in their schools or in their cities. Generally, we were very happy with the success of this commemoration.

Before the conference started, the participants visited the exhibition of 24 pictures that I sent to you by dropbox. We always bring it (the exhibition) with us on such occasions and entitle it “The Martyrdom and the struggle of the Ethiopian people”.

A similar meeting, as I stated above, was held in Alano di Piave (a little town near the city of Belluno). Also there our organization brought a photographic exhibition entitled: “Ethiopia 1935-1941: fascist crimes and Ethiopian resistance”. The sponsor of the meeting was our organization F.A.R.I. The speakers and hosts there were: Ato Marcus Fent (member of F.A.R.I.); Dott. Matteo Dominioni an Historian that did some research in the caves of Zeret, a place in Ethiopia where the Italians killed, with poison gas, many Ethiopian people from the adjacent villages that were hiding in that cave to avoid the  extermination by the Italian soldiers. In Italy, before these researches of  Prof. Matteo, nobody knew about this other crime.

Another speaker there was our dear friend Ato Belay Mesgena,a descendant of the “first general of Ethiopia” the martyr Dejazmatch Haylu Kebbede. Belay dealt about the story of the Dej. and of his terrible martyrdom. Also in this town the people showed us gratitude, solidarity and great interest in the historical events of the Ethiopian sufferings.

We are also preparing a brief documentary film about these meetings, and when we finish the task, I’ll send to you some other document regarding the Sama’tat Qen in Italy.

My best regards to you and to the brothers and sisters of the Ethiopian diaspora and their true friends of all nationalities throughout the world.

 

Carmelo GebreSellassie

 

(President of “F.A.R.I.” and of “EXODUS: Ethiopian Cultural Service”)

 

 

Genzebe Diba sets personal best in 1000m race in Madrid

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World 1500m champion Genzebe Dibaba of Ethiopia set an outright 1000m PB at the ‘Villa de Madrid’ international meeting, but fell a couple of seconds shy of her world record target today.

Home » Sport » Genzebe Diba sets personal best in 1000m race in Madrid
Genzebe Diba sets personal best in 1000m race in MadridPosted by Rahel Samuel on February 24, 2017 Genzebe Diba sets personal best in 1000m race in Madrid2017-02-24T19:01:08+00:00 under Sport No Comment
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Genzebe Dibaba (photo: JAVIER LIZÓN EFE)

Paced by Viktoria Kushnir of Belarus, Dibaba’s early splits proved to be too fast as the pacesetter went through the opening 200m in 28:80 to reach the 400m point in 58:47, more than a second inside the pace required to break Maria Mutola’s 2:30.94 world indoor record.

Shortly after the 500m mark, the 26-year-old Ethiopian overtook the pacemaker and passed 600m in 1:29:36, her 30.89 lap split confirming her rhythm had slightly fallen.

Even being roared on by the capacity crowd over the closing two laps, Dibaba reached 800m in 2:00.62 and it became clear by then that Mutola’s record would be safe. At the tape, the three-time world indoor champion clocked a national indoor record of 2:33.06 to finish head and shoulders clear of her fellow Ethiopian Gudaf Tsegay, runner-up in 2:38:05.

Already holder of six world indoor records or bests – 1500m, mile, 2000m, 3000m, two miles and 5000m – Dibaba, who could not stop coughing after the race maybe because of the Madrid altitude effect, commented: “I had serious hopes of breaking the record. Honestly, the first 400m was a bit quick; in addition, I had to run on my own from the 500m point but anyway I’m satisfied with my try. I’ll now return to Addis Ababa to build up for the outdoor season when I would like to make the 5000m/10,000m double at the World Championships in London.”

Read more at: IAAF.org

Photos: Feyisa Lilesa’s New Life in Arizona

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Feyisa Lilesa, who has not been back to Ethiopia since his protest at the marathon finish in the Rio Olympics last August, on a training run in Sedona, Ariz., not far from his new home in Flagstaff. (Photo: NYT)

The New York Times

Feyisa Lilesa, Marathoner in Exile, Finds Refuge in Arizona

FLAGSTAFF, Ariz. — The young boy was getting reacquainted with his father after an absence of six months and climbed on him as if he were a tree. The boy kissed his father and hugged him and clambered onto his shoulders. Then, when a protest video streamed on television, the boy grabbed a stick, and the lid of a pot to serve as a shield, and began to mimic a dance of dissent in the living room.

There is much joy and relief, but also continued political complication, in the modest apartment of Feyisa Lilesa, the Ethiopian marathon runner who won a silver medal at the Rio Olympics and gained international attention when he crossed his arms above his head at the finish line in a defiant gesture against the East African nation’s repressive government.

Afraid to return home, fearing he would be jailed, killed or no longer allowed to travel, Lilesa, 27, remained in Brazil after the Summer Games, then came to the United States in early September. He has received a green card as a permanent resident in a category for individuals of extraordinary ability in the sciences, arts, education, business and sports.

On Valentine’s Day, his wife, Iftu Mulisa, 26; daughter, Soko, 5; and son, Sora, 3, were reunited with him, first in Miami and then in Flagstaff, where Lilesa is training at altitude for the London Marathon in April. Their immigrant visas are valid until July, but they also hope to receive green cards.

Read more at NYTimes.com »


Let us protect the legacy of those who came before. – by Eduardo Byrono

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One has to be ድንጋይ ራስ, in fact extremely ድንጋይ ራስ to keep on crying over this creative Anole fairytale or rotten joke. So now while we celebrate the timeless triumph which our fathers secured by their flesh and blood in Adwa, We must also denounce these baseless but serious accusations that have been imposed on their legacy.

We must not fear. We must stand by the side of the truth in better or bitter.

Our forefathers spilled their blood and paid their lives to protect our liberty, So we must take responsibility to protect their name and legacy before it gets destroyed by some evil individuals and their evil masters with an evil motive.

They lived according to their time, They obeyed their elders and abide by the culture of the era in which they lived. They did what they supposed to do in their given time. And they passed. Now instead of learning from the past and wise up, you are sitting somewhere in diaspora and destroying their legacy.

Some childish you are!

ESAT Special program With Prof Berhanu Nega Feb 24 2017

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ESAT Special program With Prof Berhanu Nega Feb 24 2017

State Funeral for Dr. Richard Pankhurst – Officer of the British Empire

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State Funeral for Dr. Richard Pankhurst – Officer of the British Empire

Voice of Amhara Daily Ethiopian News February 26, 2017

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Voice of Amhara Daily Ethiopian News February 26, 2017

Indian athletes can dominate Kenyans, Ethiopians in future: Haile Gebrselassie

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New Delhi, Feb 24 (IANS): Two-time Olympic gold medallist long distance runner Haile Gebrselassie on Friday predicted that Indian atheltes will outshine their Kenyan, Ethiopian and other African counterparts on the track in the coming days.

Gebrselassie reckoned that it is just a matter of time when India produces that first athelete who wins a medal at a major international event like the Olympics or a World Championship and a number of youngsters will begin to follow his/her footsteps.

“Believe me, the Indians have the talent, perfect body structure for long distance but the only thing is they should be motivated and they show knowhow to train. If they can do that, I am afraid in the future Indians can dominate the Kenyans and Ethiopians in athletics,” said the 43-year-old, who will flag-off the IDBI Federal Life Insurance New Delhi marathon on Sunday alongside cricket icon Sachin Tendulkar.

“Its very difficult to find a first athlete, who won the first medal but once he/she gets that, it will be very easy. Specially in a country like India… the problem is to find that first athlete who can inspire others,” he added.

Gebrselassie, who also is a brand ambassador of sports apparel brand adidas — the marathon’s official running partner, urged the Athletics Federation of India (AFI) to motivate the potential medal winners who, he felt, will be found in remote parts rather than in bigger cities like Delhi and Mumbai.

“AFI needs to try to motivate the athletes. Here in India, cricket is a big sport. At the same time cricketers get sponsors… likewise, if you sponsor the athletes, they can really do good,” he said.

“But at the same time, it’s difficult to find such athletes in big cities like Delhi and Mumbai, it’s mostly from the countyside where you can find those talents, who can be groomed to be potential medal-winners in major international events.”

“India is a much better country than Ethiopia or Kenya in terms of economy. I have never seen a rich family in Ethiopia producing an athlete, 95 percent of them come from a poor family,” he added.

A winner of four World Championship titles, Gebrselassie also had a piece of advice for ordinary citizens who find it difficult to focus on their fitness in their daily life.

“Running is part of my life. Even after retiring, I spend almost 30 minutes running everyday, sometimes I hit the gym. I got myself injured during hard training two months ago.”

“One does not need to go outside to keep oneself fit. You can take a bicycle, a small machine in your house, you can train without going outside and sweat inside,” he said.

Source- www.daijiworld.com

Museveni like Mugabe supports Trump’s nationalism agenda but …

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by Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban

Ugandan President, Yoweri Kaguta Museveni, has back the nationalism agenda of US President Donald Trump.

Museveni, however, offers a word of advice to Trump, that he should still keep America open to the unique opportunities that Africa presents.

Then candidate Trump campaign on putting America first if elected, a promise he has vigorously championed since taking office in January this year.

I have heard H.E. Trump talk about “America first”. It is okay but he shouldn’t close America off the unique opportunities Africa presents.

The Ugandan leader tweeted his views after a meeting with a group of American Senators. He underlined areas of cooperation with the US – regional security, education, trade and refugees. ‘‘We hope to continue our bond on these matters,’‘ he stressed.

The delegation was led by Senator James Inhofe, who had earlier met with the Ethiopian Prime Minister in Addis Ababa on Wednesday.

I have heard H.E. Trump talk about “America first”. It is okay but he shouldn’t close America off the unique opportunities Africa presents.

Museveni is the second African leader to openly endorse Trump’s nationalism agenda. Earlier this week, Zimbabwean leader Robert Mugabe also stated in an interview that Trump’s position was laudable. Mugabe also asked that Trump be given time to prove himself as leader of the US.

“When it comes to Donald Trump, on the one hand talking of American nationalism, well America for America, America for Americans – on that we agree. Zimbabwe for Zimbabweans. ‘‘I do not know him. Give him time,’‘ Mugabe told the state-owned Herald newspaper.

Since coming to power, Trump’s only African engagements have been telephone calls to Nigerian and South African presidents. He is yet to publicly comment about Africa and an African leader is yet to meet him at the White House.

His executive over banning nationals of seven countries from entering the US has had reactions in Africa due to the fact that three of the seven affected countries are in Africa – Libya, Somalia and Sudan.

The First 100 Lies: The Trump Team’s Flurry Of Falsehoods

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The president and his aides succeeded in reaching the mark in just 36 days.

By Igor Bobic

LLUSTRATION: HUFFPOST PHOTOS: GETTY

To say that President Donald Trump has a casual relationship with the truth would be a gross understatement. He has repeatedly cited debunked conspiracy theories, pushed voter fraud myths, and embellished his record and accomplishments. The barrage of falsehoods has been so furious that journalists have taken to issuing instant fact-checks during press conferences and calling out false statements during cable news broadcasts.

All presidents lie, but lying so brazenly and so frequently about even silly factoids like his golf game has put Trump in his own category. His disregard for the truth is reflected in his top aides, who have inflated easily disproved figures like the attendance at his inauguration and even cited terror attacks that never happened.

The Huffington Post tracked the public remarks of Trump and his aides to compile a list of 100 incidents of egregious falsehoods. Still, it is likely the administration has made dozens of other misleading and exaggerated claims.

  1. White House press secretary Sean Spicer falsely claimed the crowd on the National Mall was “largest audience to ever witness an inauguration.” (Jan. 21)
  2. Trump falsely claimed that the crowd for his swearing-in stretched down the National Mall to the Washington Monument and totaled more than 1 million people. (Jan. 21)
  3. As Trump fondly recalled his Inauguration Day, he said it stopped raining “immediately” when he began his speech. A light rain continued to fall throughout the address. (Jan. 21)
  4. During his speech at CIA headquarters, Trump claimed the media made up his feud with the agency. In fact, he started it by comparing the intelligence community to “Nazi Germany.” (Jan. 21)
  5. During his speech at CIA headquarters, Trump repeated the claim that he “didn’t want to go into Iraq.” He told Howard Stern in 2002 that he supported the Iraq War. (Jan. 21)
  6. During his speech at CIA headquarters, Trump said he had the “all-time record in the history of Time Magazine. … I’ve been on it for 15 times this year.” Trump had been featured on the magazine a total of 11 times. (Jan. 21)
  7. Trump claimed that his inauguration drew 11 million more viewers than Barack Obama’s in 2013. It didn’t, and viewership for Obama’s first inauguration, in 2009, was even higher. (Jan. 22)
  8. Spicer said during his first press briefing that there has been a “dramatic expansion of the federal workforce in recent years.” This is false. (Jan. 23)
  9. While pushing back against the notion of a rift between the CIA and Trump, Spicer claimed the president had received a “five-minute standing ovation” at the agency’s headquarters. He did not. The attendees were also never asked to sit down. (Jan. 23)
  10. Spicer claimed that “tens of millions of people” watched the inauguration online. In fact, about 4.6 million did. (Jan. 23)
  11. Trump told CBN News that 84 percent Cuban-Americans voted for him. It’s not clear where Trump got that number. According to the Pew Research Center, 54 percent of Cuban-Americans in Florida voted for him. (Jan. 23)
  12. While meeting with congressional leaders, Trump repeated a debunked claim that he only lost the national popular vote because of widespread voter fraud. (Jan. 24)
  13. In remarks with business leaders at the White House, Trump said, “I’m a very big person when it comes to the environment. I have received awards on the environment.” There is no evidence that Trump has received such awards. (Jan. 24)
  14. In signing an executive memo ordering the construction of the Keystone pipeline, Trump said the project would create 28,000 construction jobs. According to The Washington Post Fact Checker, the pipeline would create an estimated 16,000 jobs, most of which are not construction jobs. (Jan. 25)
  15. Spicer said in a press briefing that Trump received more electoral votes than any Republican since Ronald Reagan. George H.W. Bush won 426 electoral votes in 1988, more than Trump’s 304. (Jan. 24)
  16. In remarks he gave at the Homeland Security Department, Trump said Immigration and Customs Enforcement and border patrol agents “unanimously endorsed me for president.” That’s not true. (Jan. 25)
  17. Spicer said during a press briefing that a draft executive order on CIA prisons was not a “White House document.” Citing three administration officials, The New York Times reported that the White House had circulated the draft order among national security staff members. (Jan. 25)
  18. In an interview with ABC, Trump again claimed he “had the biggest audience in the history of inaugural speeches.” False. (Jan. 25)
  19. Trump claimed during an interview with ABC that the applause he received at CIA headquarters “was the biggest standing ovation since Peyton Manning had won the Super Bowl.” It wasn’t even a standing ovation. (Jan. 25)
  20. In an interview with ABC, Trump attacked the Affordable Care Act and said there are “millions of people that now aren’t insured anymore.” Twenty million people have gained health coverage because of the law so far. The estimated 2 million people who did not qualify under the law received waivers that kept the plans going until the end of 2017. (Jan. 25)
  21. At the GOP retreat in Philadelphia, Trump claimed he and the president of Mexico “agreed” to cancel their scheduled meeting. Enrique Peña Nieto said he had decided to cancel it. (Jan. 26)
  22. At the GOP retreat in Philadelphia, Trump said the national homicide rate was “horribly increasing.” It is down significantly. (Jan. 26)
  23. On Twitter, Trump repeated his false claim that 3 million votes were illegal during the election. (Jan. 27)
  24. In an interview on “Good Morning America,” Trump counselor Kellyanne Conway said Tiffany Trump, the president’s daughter, had told her she was “not registered to vote in two states.” A local election official confirmed to NBC News twice that the younger Trump indeed was. (Jan. 27)
  25. Trump said he predicted the so-called “Brexit” when he was in Scotland the day before the vote. He was actually there the day after the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union. (Jan. 27)
  26. Trump claimed The New York Times lost subscribers “because their readers even like me.” The Times experienced a sharp uptick in subscribers after Election Day. (Jan. 27)
  27. Trump claimed two people were fatally shot in Chicago during Obama’s last speech as president. That didn’t happen. (Jan. 27)
  28. Trump claimed that under previous administrations, “if you were a Muslim you could come in, but if you were a Christian, it was almost impossible.” In fact, almost as many Christian refugees were admitted to the U.S. as Muslim refugees in fiscal year 2016. (Jan. 27)
  29. Trump defended the swiftness of his immigration order on the grounds that terrorists would have rushed into the country if he had given the world a week’s notice. Even if terrorists wanted to infiltrate the refugee program or the visa program, they would have had to wait months or even years while being vetted to get into the country. (Jan. 30)
  30. The White House maintained that Trump’s immigration order did not apply to green card holders and that was “the guidance from the beginning.” Initially, the White House said the order did include green card holders. (Jan. 30)
  31. Trump said his immigration order was “similar to what President Obama did in 2011 when he banned visas for refugees from Iraq for six months.” Obama’s policy slowed resettlement of refugees from Iraq, but did not keep them from entering the country. Moreover, it flagged the seven countries included in Trump’s order as places the U.S. considered dangerous to visit. (Jan. 30)
  32. Spicer said that “by and large,” Trump has been “praised” for his statement commemorating the Holocaust. Every major Jewish organization, including the Republican Jewish Coalition, criticized it for omitting any specific references to the Jewish people or anti-Semitism. (Jan. 30)
  33. A Trump administration official called the implementation of Trump’s travel ban a “massive success story.” Not true ― young children, elderly people and U.S. green card holders were detained for hours. Some were deported upon landing in the U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) even criticized the rollout as “confusing.” (Jan. 30)
  34. Spicer equated White House adviser Steve Bannon’s appointment to the National Security Council Principals Committee with Obama adviser David Axelrod attending meetings pertaining to foreign policy. Axelrod, however, never sat on the Principals Committee. (Jan. 30)
  35. Spicer said people would have “flooded” into the country with advance notice of Trump’s immigration order. Not true. (Jan. 30)
  36. Spicer insisted that only 109 travelers were detained because of Trump’s immigration order. More than 1,000 legal permanent residents had to get waivers before entering the U.S. An estimated 90,000 people in total were affected by the ban. (Jan. 30)
  37. Trump tweeted the false claim that “only 109 people out of 325,000 were detained and held for questioning.” (Jan. 30)
  38. Trump took credit for cutting $600 million from the F-35 program. But Lockheed Martin already had planned for the cost reductions for the next generation fighter plane. (Jan. 31)
  39. Trump accused China of manipulating its currency by playing “the money market. They play the devaluation market, and we sit there like a bunch of dummies.” According to The Washington Post, the United States is no longer being hurt by China’s currency manipulation, and China is no longer devaluing its currency. (Jan. 31)
  40. In defending the GOP’s blockade of Merrick Garland, Obama’s nominee to the Supreme Court, Spicer said no president had ever nominated a justice “so late” in his term. It previously happened three times. (Jan. 31)
  41. Spicer repeatedly insisted during a press conference that Trump’s executive order on immigration was “not a ban.” During a Q&A event the night before, however, Spicer himself referred to the order as a “ban.” So did the president. (Jan. 31)
  42. White House officials denied reports that Trump told Peña Nieto that U.S. forces would handle the “bad hombres down there” if the Mexican authorities don’t. It confirmed the conversation the next day, maintaining the remark was meant to be “lighthearted.” (Jan. 31)
  43. Trump claimed that Delta, protesters and the tears of Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) were to blame for the problems over his travel ban. In fact, his administration was widely considered to blame for problems associated with its rollout. (Jan. 31)
  44. Trump said the Obama administration “agreed to take thousands of illegal immigrants from Australia.” The deal actually involved 1,250 refugees. (Feb. 1)
  45. Trump said the U.S. “has the most generous immigration system in the world.” Not really. (Feb. 2)
  46. Trump said the U.S. was giving Iran $150 billion for “nothing” under the Iranian nuclear deal. The money was already Iran’s to begin with, and the deal blocks Iran from building a nuclear bomb. (Feb. 2)
  47. Spicer called a U.S. raid in Yemen “very, very well thought out and executed effort” and described it as a “successful operation by all standards.” U.S. military officials told Reuters the operation was approved “without sufficient intelligence, ground support, or adequate backup preparations.” (Feb. 2)
  48. Spicer said that Iran had attacked a U.S. naval vessel, as part of his argument defending the administration’s bellicose announcement that Iran is “on notice.” In fact, a suspected Houthi rebel ship attacked a Saudi vessel. (Feb. 2)
  49. In his meeting with union leaders at the White House, Trump claimed he won union households. He actually only won white union households. (Feb. 2)
  50. Conway cited the “Bowling Green massacre” to defend Trump’s travel ban. It never happened. (Feb. 3)
  51. Conway said citing the nonexistent “Bowling Green massacre” to defend Trump’s immigration order was an accidental “slip.” But she had mentioned it twice prior to that interview. (Feb. 3)
  52. Trump approvingly shared a story on his official Facebook page which claimed that Kuwait issued a visa ban for five Muslim-majority countries. Kuwait issued a statement categorically denying it. (Feb. 3)
  53. Trump claimed people are “pouring in” after his immigration order was temporarily suspended. Travelers and refugees cannot simply rush into the U.S. without extensive and lengthy vetting. (Feb. 5)
  54. After a judge halted his immigration ban, Trump claimed that “anyone, even with bad intentions, can now come into the U.S.” Not true. (Feb. 5)
  55. Spicer said nationwide protests of Trump are not like protests the tea party held, and called them “a very paid AstroTurf-type movement.” Although Democrats have capitalized on the backlash against Trump by organizing, the massive rallies across dozens of cities across the country ―  which in some cases have been spontaneous ― suggests they are part of an organic phenomenon. (Feb. 6)
  56. During an interview with Fox News before the Super Bowl, Trump repeated his debunked claim of widespread voter fraud during the presidential election. There is no evidence of widespread voter fraud. Republican and Democratic state officials have said so, as have Trump’s own campaign attorneys. (Feb. 6)
  57. During an interview with Fox News before the Super Bowl, Trump repeated his false claim that he has “been against the war in Iraq from the beginning.” (Feb. 6)
  58. Conway said she would not appear on CNN’s “State of the Union” because of “family” reasons. CNN, however, said the White House offered Conway as an alternative to Vice President Mike Pence and that the network had “passed” because of concerns about her “credibility.” (Feb. 6)
  59. Spicer claimed CNN “retracted” its explanation of why it declined to take Conway for a Sunday show appearance. CNN said it never did so. (Feb. 6)
  60. Trump cited attacks in Boston, Paris, Orlando, Florida, and Nice, France, as examples of terrorism the media has not covered adequately. “In many cases, the very, very dishonest press doesn’t want to report it,” he said at CENTCOM. Those attacks garnered wall-to-wall television coverage, as well as thousands of news articles in print and online. (Feb. 6)
  61. The White House released a more expansive list of terrorist attacks it believed “did not receive adequate attention from Western media sources.” Again, the list includes attacks that were widely covered by the media. (Feb. 6)
  62. Trump said sanctuary cities “breed crime.” FBI data indicates that crime in sanctuary cities is generally lower than in nonsanctuary cities. (Feb. 6)
  63. Trump claimed The New York Times was “forced to apologize to its subscribers for the poor reporting it did on my election win.” The paper has not issued such an apology. (Feb. 6)
  64. Trump claimed the murder rate is the highest it’s been in 47 years. The murder rate rose 10.8 percent across the United States in 2015, but it’s far lower than it was 30 to 40 years ago. (Feb. 7)
  65. Spicer explained that the delay in repealing Obamacare was a result of the White House wanting to work with Congress. Unlike during the Obama administration, he asserted, the legislature ― not the White House ― was taking the lead on health care. Various congressional committees worked on drafting multiple versions of the bill that would become the Affordable Care Act ― a lengthy process that took over a year. (Feb. 7)
  66. Trump accused Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) of misrepresenting “what Judge Neil Gorsuch told him” in response to the president’s attacks against the judiciary. Gorsuch called Trump’s tweets attacking federal judges “demoralizing.” A spokesman for Gorsuch confirmed the judge’s remarks. (Feb. 9)
  67. Trump has repeatedly said he doesn’t watch CNN. But he had to in order to see and offer and opinion on the network’s interview with Blumenthal. (Feb. 9)
  68. Former national security adviser Michael Flynn has said that phone calls he made to Russia prior to Trump’s inauguration were not related to sanctions. According to a Washington Post report, however, Flynn held private discussions with Sergey Kislyak, the Russian ambassador, before Trump took office, suggesting that sanctions against Moscow would be eased by the incoming administration. (Feb. 9)
  69. Trump took credit for Ford’s decision not to open an auto factory in Mexico and instead expand its Michigan plant. The company said Trump was not responsible for its decision. (Feb. 9)

  70. Trump told a room full of politicians that “thousands” of “illegal” voters had been driven into New Hampshire to cast ballots. There is no evidence of such a claim. (Feb. 11)
  71. During an interview with ABC’s “This Week,” White House senior policy aide Stephen Miller falsely said the “issue of busing voters into New Hampshire is widely known by anyone who’s worked in New Hampshire politics.” Again, not true. (Feb. 11)
  72. Miller cited the “astonishing” statistic that 14 percent of noncitizens are registered to vote. The study the stat is based on has been highly contested. (Feb. 11)
  73. Trump said Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) was “cut off” on CNN for “using the term fake news the describe the network.” The senator was joking and he was not cut off. (Feb. 12)
  74. Trump accused the media of refusing to report on “big crowds of enthusiastic supporters lining the road” in Florida. There were a few supporters, but they were vastly outnumbered by hundreds of protesters. (Feb. 12)
  75. White House officials told reporters that Flynn decided on his own to resign. However, Spicer said during a press briefing that the president asked Flynn to resign. (Feb. 13)
  76. Trump denied in a January interview that he or anyone on his campaign had any contact with Russia prior to the election. However, The New York Times and CNN both reported that Trump campaign officials and associates “had repeated contacts with senior Russian intelligence officials” before Nov. 8. (Feb. 15)
  77. Spicer denied in a daily briefing that anyone on the Trump campaign had had any contact with Russian officials. (Feb. 15)
  78. Trump complained he “inherited a mess” upon being elected to office. The stock market is experiencing record highs, the economy is stable and growing, and unemployment is low. (Feb. 16)
  79. Trump disputed the notion that his administration is experiencing turmoil, telling reporters it is working like a “fine-tuned machine.” His poorly executed travel ban has been suspended by the courts, a Cabinet nominee was forced to withdraw his nomination, and Trump’s national security adviser resigned after less than four weeks on the job. (Feb. 16)
  80. Trump said his 306 Electoral College votes was the biggest electoral votes victory since Ronald Reagan. Obama got 332 votes in 2012. (Feb. 16)
  81. Trump said his first weeks in office “represented an unprecedented month of action.” Obama accomplished much more during his first weeks in office. (Feb. 16)
  82. Defending himself from charges of hypocrisy on the matter of leaks ― which he frequently celebrated when they pertained to his campaign opposition but now denounces ― Trump said that WikiLeaks does not publicize “classified information.” It does, often anonymously. (Feb. 16)
  83. Trump repeated his claim that Hillary Clinton gave 20 percent of American uranium to the Russians in a deal during her tenure as secretary of state. Not true. (Feb. 16)
  84. Trump said drugs are “becoming cheaper than a candy bar.” They are not. (Feb. 16)
  85. Trump said his administration had a “very smooth rollout of the travel ban.” His immigration caused chaos at the nation’s airports and has been suspended by the courts. (Feb. 16)
  86. Trump said the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals is in “chaos” and “turmoil.” It is not. (Feb. 16)
  87. Flynn lied to FBI investigators in a Jan. 24 interview about whether he discussed sanctions with Russian officials prior to Trump’s inauguration, according to The Washington Post. (Feb. 16)
  88. Trump falsely suggested at a Florida rally that Sweden had suffered a terror attack the night before his speech. It had not, and Trump was likely referring to a Fox News segment on crime in Sweden. (Feb. 18)
  89. During his Florida rally, Trump repeated his false claim that the United States has already let in thousands of people who “there was no way to vet.” Refugees undergo the most rigorous vetting process of any immigrants admitted to the United States, often waiting upwards of two years to be cleared for entry. (Feb. 18)
  90. White House chief of staff Reince Priebus said in a “Fox News Sunday” interview that Trump “has accomplished more in the first 30 days than people can remember.” Obama accomplished much more during his first weeks in office. (Feb. 19)
  91. Trump said during his campaign that he would only play golf with heads of state and business leaders, not friends and celebrities like Obama did. Trump has golfed with world leaders like Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe. Most recently, however, he hit the links with golf pro Rory McIlroy, International Sports Management’s Nick Mullen and his friend Rich Levine. (Feb. 19)
  92. A White House spokesperson told reporters that Trump only played a “couple” of holes at his golf resort in Florida. A day later, as reports came out saying the president had played 18 holes with Mcllroy, the White House admitted he played “longer.” (Feb. 19)
  93. Trump said the media is “trying to say large scale immigration in Sweden is working out just beautifully. NOT!” Sweden’s crime rate has fallen in recent years, and experts there do not think its immigration policies are linked to crime. (Feb. 20)
  94. Spicer said Ohio Gov. John Kasich (R) asked for a meeting with Trump at the White House. John Weaver, a former campaign aide of the governor, said the president asked for the meeting. (Feb. 21)
  95. Vice President Mike Pence called Obamacare a “job killer.” Overall, job growth has been steady since it was signed into law. And the number of unwilling part-time jobs has also gone down, contrary to GOP claims. (Feb. 22)
  96. Trump claimed that he negotiated $1 billion in savings to develop two new Boeing Co. jets to serve as the next Air Force One. The Air Force can’t account for that number. (Feb. 22)
  97. During a meeting with the nation’s CEOs at the White House, Trump claimed his new economic adviser Gary Cohn “paid $200 million in tax” to take a job at the White House. Cohn didn’t have to pay taxes, he had to sell more than $200 million of Goldman Sachs stock. (Feb. 23)
  98. Trump claimed there were “six blocks” worth of people waiting to get into the Conservative Political Action Conference to see him. People filled only  three overflow rooms. (Feb. 24)
  99. At CPAC, Trump said that Obamacare covers “very few people.” Nearly 20 million people have gotten health insurance under the law. (Feb. 24)
  100. At CPAC, Trump said companies like Intel were making business investments in the United States because of his election. The company planned their new investments before the election. (Feb. 24)

U.S. Wary of Its New Neighbor in Djibouti: A Chinese Naval Base

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26-2-2017
By ANDREW JACOBS and JANE PERLEZ

The United States established Camp Lemonnier in Djibouti after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.CreditJason Straziuso/Associated Press

DJIBOUTI — The two countries keep dozens of intercontinental nuclear missiles pointed at each other’s cities. Their frigates and fighter jets occasionally face off in the contested waters of the South China Sea.

With no shared border, China and the United States mostly circle each other from afar, relying on satellites and cybersnooping to peek inside the workings of each other’s war machines.

But the two strategic rivals are about to become neighbors in this sun-scorched patch of East African desert. China is constructing its first overseas military base here — just a few miles from Camp Lemonnier, one of the Pentagon’s largest and most important foreign installations.

With increasing tensions over China’s island-building efforts in the South China Sea, American strategists worry that a naval port so close to Camp Lemonnier could provide a front-row seat to the staging ground for American counterterror operations in the Arabian Peninsula and North Africa.

“It’s like having a rival football team using an adjacent practice field,” said Gabriel Collins, an expert on the Chinese military and a founder of the analysis portal China SignPost. “They can scope out some of your plays. On the other hand, the scouting opportunity goes both ways.”

Established after the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Camp Lemonnier is home to 4,000 personnel. Some are involved in highly secretive missions, including targeted drone killings in the Middle East and the Horn of Africa, and the raid last month in Yemen that left a member of the Navy SEALs dead. The base, which is run by the Navy and abuts Djibouti’s international airport, is the only permanent American military installation in Africa.

Beyond surveillance concerns, United States officials, citing the billions of dollars in Chinese loans to Djibouti’s heavily indebted government, wonder about the long-term durability of an alliance that has served Washington well in its global fight against Islamic extremism.

Just as important, experts say, the base’s construction is a milestone marking Beijing’s expanding global ambitions — with potential implications for America’s longstanding military dominance.

“It’s a huge strategic development,” said Peter Dutton, professor of strategic studies at the Naval War College in Rhode Island, who has studied satellite imagery of the construction.

“It’s naval power expansion for protecting commerce and China’s regional interests in the Horn of Africa,” Professor Dutton said. “This is what expansionary powers do. China has learned lessons from Britain of 200 years ago.”

Chinese officials play down the significance of the base, saying it will largely support antipiracy operations that have helped quell the threat to international shipping once posed by marauding Somalis.

“The support facility will be mainly used to provide rest and rehabilitation for the Chinese troops taking part in escort missions in the Gulf of Aden and waters off Somalia, U.N. peacekeeping and humanitarian rescue,” the Defense Ministry in Beijing said in a written reply to questions.

In addition to having 2,400 peacekeepers in Africa, China has used its vessels to escort more than 6,000 boats from many countries through the Gulf of Aden, the ministry said. China’s military has also evacuated its citizens caught in the world’s trouble spots. In 2011, the military plucked 35,000 from Libya, and 600 from Yemen in 2015.

As China’s navy has assumed these new roles far from home, its commanders have struggled to maintain vessels and resupply them with food and fuel.

Capt. Liu Jianzhong, a former political commissar of a Chinese destroyer plying the Gulf of Aden, said the lack of a dedicated port in the region took a toll on personnel forced to spend long stretches at sea.

Photo

Chinese workers in 2015 at the construction site of a railway linking Djibouti with Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. China has financed this and other critical infrastructure projects in Djibouti.CreditCarl De Souza/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

“For six months, we didn’t reach the shore, and a lot of sailors had physical and psychological problems,” he told the state-run China Military Online. To that end, the new base will include a gym, the ministry said.

Professor Dutton said Beijing would most likely try to “acclimatize” the world by using the facility for commercial purposes when it begins operating this year and then gradually increase the number and variety of warships that dock there.

“It will be relatively incremental in the forward deployment of naval power. You are not going to see a Yokosuka,” he said, referring to the base for the United States Seventh Fleet in Japan.

In its written answers, the ministry said that China was not budging from its “defensive” military policy and that the base did not indicate an “arms race or military expansion.”

In recent years, China has moved aggressively to increase its power projection capabilities through the rapid modernization of its navy. Military spending has soared, with Beijing’s defense budget expected to reach $233 billion by 2020, more than all Western European countries combined, and double the figure from 2010, according to Jane’s Defense Weekly. In 2016, the United States spent more than $622 billion on the military, Jane’s said.

These days, Chinese naval vessels, including nuclear submarines, roam much of the globe, from contested waters of the Yellow Sea to Sri Lanka and San Diego.

China’s decision to establish an overseas military installation comes as little surprise to those who have watched Beijing steadily jettison a decades-old principle of noninterference in the affairs of other countries.

The shift is an outgrowth of China’s evolution from an impoverished slumbering introvert to deep-pocketed mercantilist with economic interests across the globe.

Half of China’s oil imports sail through the Mandeb Strait, the choke point off Djibouti that connects the Mediterranean Sea and the Indian Ocean. Across Africa, state-owned companies are investing tens of billions of dollars in railways, factories and mines.

“The facility in Djibouti is a very interesting lens through which to view China’s growing capabilities and ambitions,” said Andrew S. Erickson, an expert at China’s maritime transformation at the Naval War College and the editor of the book “Chinese Naval Shipbuilding.”

“Not only will it give them a huge shot in the arm in terms of naval logistics, but it will also strengthen China’s image at home and abroad.”

A low-rise encampment built adjacent to a new Chinese-owned commercial port, the 90-acre base is designed to house up to several thousand troops and will include storage structures for weapons, repair facilities for ships and helicopters, and five berths for commercial ships and one for military vessels.

At the base’s front gate recently, Chinese workers in construction helmets waved away a reporter who tried to ask questions. China’s Defense Ministry declined a request to tour the site.

American officials say they were blindsided by Djibouti’s decision, announced last year, to give China a 10-year lease for the land. Just two years earlier, Susan Rice, the national security adviser under President Barack Obama, had flown here to head off a similar arrangement with Russia.

Shortly afterward, the White House announced a 20-year lease renewal that doubled its annual payments for Camp Lemonnier, to $63 million, and a plan to invest more than $1 billion to upgrade the installation.

If the Pentagon’s current base restrictions are any guide, American and Chinese troops are unlikely to be sharing beers any time soon. American officials, citing possible security threats, keep most personnel confined to the 570-acre rectangle of scrubland, which is a 10-minute drive from the center of Djibouti city. It is a policy that stirs some discontent among those who often spend yearlong stints at Camp Lemonnier without venturing outside.

By contrast, French military personnel can often be seen jogging through the city and socializing with locals. Americans who work for the United States Embassy also live in the community and say they feel little threat to their safety.

Life on base can be monotonous, broken up by visits to the fitness center or meals at the camp’s Subway sandwich outlet. Capt. James Black, the camp’s commanding officer, said one of his primary challenges was to provide salubrious distractions for those stationed here. The distractions include free Wi-Fi, a movie theater, Texas Hold ’em tournaments and the occasional soccer match with Italian and German troops.

“We’re like a landlocked aircraft carrier,” Captain Black said during a recent tour of the installation, which is blasted in summer by broiling heat. “Part of my job is to create opportunities to give people a break and attend to their mental health needs.”

Local residents also crave more face time with the Americans. Some say Camp Lemonnier personnel could play a more active role in helping to alleviate Djibouti’s crushing poverty by building schools, painting hospitals or simply taking part in language exchanges.

Others, like Mohamed Ali Basha, the owner of a Yemeni-style restaurant that serves grilled fish and massive discs of baked flatbread, said he would welcome business from military personnel.

“I don’t understand why the Americans are so obsessed with security here, but I would be happy to close the restaurant for them if they would come,” Mr. Basha, 26, said. “Just call in advance.”

In interviews, Djiboutian officials expressed little concern that two strategic adversaries would be sharing space in a country the size of New Jersey. It helps that the Chinese are paying $20 million a year in rent on top of the billions they are spending to finance critical infrastructure, including ports and airports, a new rail line and a pipeline that will bring desperately needed drinking water from neighboring Ethiopia.

Critics say the surge of loans, which amount to 60 percent of the country’s gross domestic product, raises concerns about China’s leverage over the Djibouti government should it fall behind on debt payments.

“Such generous credit is itself a form of control,” said Mohamed Daoud Chehem, a prominent government critic. “We don’t know what China’s intentions really are.”

But on the city’s dusty, potholed streets, most people are pleased to see China joining the club of a half-dozen foreign militaries that have a presence here, among them Japan, Italy and Britain. Also here is a large contingent of French soldiers who stayed on after 1977, when the colony formerly known as French Somaliland gained independence.

Abdirahman M. Ahmed, who runs Green Djibouti International, an environmental social enterprise, said many people viewed foreign militaries as a stabilizing force, given their country’s diminutive size, its lack of resources and the potential threats from neighbors like Ethiopia, Somalia and Eritrea, where expansionist sentiments continue to burble.

“We don’t see any problem having the Chinese here,” he said. “They provide revenue and help play a deterrence to those who would love to annex Djibouti.”

The plethora of foreign troops, some say, also served as a bulwark against the jihadist violence that has destabilized other countries in the region. Djibouti, whose population of 900,000 embraces a moderate form of Sunni Islam, has not been entirely spared: In 2014, a double suicide bombing at a downtown restaurant popular with foreigners killed a Turkish national and wounded 11 people. The Shabab, the Somali-based militant group, later claimed responsibility, saying the attack was motivated by the presence of so many Western troops in Djibouti.

For American military strategists, the security implications of the Chinese base are unclear, though practically speaking, many experts say the military threat is minimal.

“A port like this isn’t very defensible against attack,” said Philip C. Saunders, director of the Center for the Study of Chinese Military Affairs at the National Defense University. “It wouldn’t last very long in a war.”

Turkey restoring tomb of Ethiopian King Najashi, who sheltered Muslim emigrants

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DAILY SABAH
ISTANBUL

The Turkish Cooperation and Coordination Agency (TIKA) is finishing up a restoration project on the tomb of King Najashi, the former leader of modern day Ethiopia’s Kingdom of Aksum.

TIKA coordinator in Ethiopia’s capital Addis Ababa, Fazıl Akın Erdoğan, told reporters that the restoration project on a mosque and tomb located 800 kilometers from the capital would wrap up this year.

In addition to the restorations, Erdoğan explained that additional buildings were being constructed in the area, “We made a full-fledged food court to serve the needs of the guests and visitors. Besides the kitchen, we built a multi-purpose hall that can fit 500 people,” he said.

The restoration team also met the water needs of the tomb area by building 160 ton water depots in two different places.

Noting that the project had been ongoing for three years, Erdoğan said that Ottoman architectural examples were evident in the marble, door, and window details of the mosque and tomb.

Erdoğan emphasized that Turkey had made various negotiations with Ethiopia’s Religious Services Consultancy and that they would like King Najashi’s tomb to be added to the route of pilgrimage and umrah organizations in Turkey. If this happens, he said, the tomb would be a huge contribution to the tourism industry in Ethiopia.

Imam Mohammad Ibrahim of the Najashi Mosque explained that, before the renovation works, the mosque was not in a good condition, but that everything had changed with the restoration effort.

The imam also stated that he always prayed for Turkey and Turkish people saying, “Turkey is not only helping us, it is helping all Muslims.”

Getachew Berhe, an Ethiopian engineer who has worked on the project and speaks Turkish fluently, explained that after studying civil engineering in Turkey, he returned to his country and began working on the restoration efforts.

Bearing in mind that the project is very significant for both Muslims and Ethiopians, Berhe said, “I am very pleased to have contributed to this work.”

King Najashi, also known as Armah, was the ruler of the Kingdom of Aksum from 614-631. The Empire was a trading nation situated in modern-day Eritrea and Ethopia, existing from approximately 100-940 AD.

King Najashi gave shelter to early Muslims from Mecca who were seeking refuge from Quraysh persecution by traveling to Aksum, which was at time a Christian Kingdom. In Islamic history, the journey is known as the first hijra.

Join Me in My Letter to President Trump – Al Mariam’s Commentaries

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Author’s Note: Below is a copy of the letter I sent to President Donald Trump by email and U.S. mail.

I am asking particularly all pro-democracy Ethiopian Americans and other Americans who believe in freedom, the rule of law, democracy and human rights to join me in sending letters and emails to President Trump and their representatives in Congress to register their alarm and outrage over the massive lobbying effort currently underway by the regime in Ethiopia to undermine and infiltrate American political institutions.

At the end of this letter, I provide further information to those interested in urging President Trump and their members of Congress to take appropriate action.

I have written this letter because I am affronted and outraged by the sheer audacity and arrogance of a foreign regime to use millions of dollars in a lobbying effort to manipulate, subvert, exploit and corrupt American political institutions. Any foreign government which feels that it can buy, sell and exchange American policy makers by spending millions of dollars on lobbying revolts me to the core.

The dangers of foreign powers using partisan politics to subvert American institutions is something George Washington warned about in his farewell address: “It [factionalism] opens the door to foreign influence and corruption, which find a facilitated access to the government itself through the channels of party passions. Thus the policy and the will of one country are subjected to the policy and will of another.”

Such is the effort of the regime in Ethiopia in its $2 million lobbying effort. They want to peddle influence and subject the policy of the United States to their will. Such an outrageous effort must be resisted, confronted and defeated.

As American citizens and taxpayers, we must use our bedrock constitutional right to petition our government and demand that those foreign regimes trying to hijack our political institutions by spending millions of dollars to peddle influence for the purpose of imposing their will on the United States of America must be stopped at all costs.

====================================

February 26, 2017

President Donald Trump
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

By Email and U.S. Mail

Re: Why is the “Government” of Ethiopia Spending  $2 Million to Lobby Your Administration?

Dear President Trump:

I am writing this letter for four reasons.

First and foremost, I wish to alert you of a massive lobbying assault planned on your Administration by the “government” of Ethiopia. Evidence obtained from the U.S. Justice Department shows that on or about January 2017, the ambassador of the regime in Ethiopia  signed an agreement with SGR Government Relations, Lobbying (Washington, D.C) at a cost of $150,000 per month (for a total contract price of $1.8 million by January 2018) for the sole purpose of influence peddling in your Administration.[1] Ethiopia is the single largest recipient of U.S. aid in sub-Saharan Africa. I request an inquiry into whether any U.S. aid money has been converted by the regime in Ethiopia for lobbying purposes.

In this regard, I wish to call your attention to your own publicly declared distaste for lobbyists peddling influence in your Administration: “If we win on November 8th, we are going to Washington, D.C.—when we win, OK—and we are going to drain the swamp.” I understood your statement to mean, among other things, elimination of the outsized influence of lobbyists who peddle influence on behalf of foreign governments seeking to subvert American political institutions. I am outraged that the regime in Ethiopia is spending nearly $2 million to shore up the very swamp you are struggling to drain!

Second, I wish to offer clear-cut answers to a set of important questions your transition team recently posed to the State Department concerning U.S. policy in Africa:

1)  “With so much corruption in Africa, how much of our funding is stolen?”

2)  “We’ve been fighting al-Shabaab for a decade, why haven’t we won?”

3)  “How does U.S. business compete with other nations in Africa? Are we losing out to the Chinese?”

4) “Why should the U.S. continue the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act [AGOA]  which provides massive support to corrupt African regimes?”

Third, I wish to offer you a simple solution to the problem of illegal immigration to the U.S.:  If the U.S. drains the financial swamp that sustains the corrupt and brutal dictators and thugtators in Africa, the Middle East, Central America and other places, there will be far fewer people from these regions seeking to illegally enter the U.S. People from these regions by and large come to America for the same reasons the Pilgrims and others after them came to America. They seek refuge from religious and political persecution in America.

Fourth, I wish to urge you to help Ethiopia and the rest of Africa by letting them help themselves. The best and most effective way of helping Africa is to let Africa help itself. I ask you and members of your Administration: How long must Ethiopia remain a beggar nation? How long must Africa remain a beggar continent?

Why did the Ethiopian regime hire a high-powered lobbying firm to  infiltrate your Administration? 

During the 8 years of the Obama Administration, the regime in Ethiopia did not spend a single red cent for lobbying. That is because President Obama left the candy store open to them for free pickings.

During the Bush Administration, the regime spent a mere $50 thousand a month for lobbying.[2] Today, that regime is spending nearly $2 million to lobby your Administration.

On January 18, 2017, the ruling regime in Ethiopia signed a “Memorandum of Understanding”[3] (MOU) and agreed to pay SGR Government Relations, Lobbying (Washington, D.C) $150,000 per month for lobbying services for a total of $1.8 million.

Why is the regime in Ethiopia spending so much money to lobby your Administration?

I believe there are at least four reasons why the regime in Ethiopia regime is spending millions to peddle influence in your Administration:

1) The leaders of the Ethiopian regime are deeply concerned, indeed they are in a state of panic, that you will drop the hammer on them given your strong statements on corruption, fraud, waste and abuse of U.S. tax dollars by foreign aid recipient governments and international organizations. The regime has concluded that your Administration is unlikely to buy their counter-terrorism game of deception which they played successfully with the Obama administration garnering billions of dollars in American tax dollars. Indeed, the regime had made such a patsy of Barack Obama that they had him publicly declare that their regime is democratic despite the fact that the regime claimed to have won 100 percent of the seats in their “parliament” and operate a virtual police state.  No doubt, they are desperately trying to find out the chink in your armor so they can make a chump out of you as they did Barack Obama.

The fact that your administration is asking why the U.S. has not won the war against al Shabaab in Somalia is a clear indication to the regime in Ethiopia that your Administration will not buy their claim of needing endless support to fight terrorism in the Horn of Africa.   Their massive lobbying assault is intended to ensure that your Administration continues to walk in the footsteps of the Obama Administration and provide unquestioned support for their regime.

2) The Ethiopian regime over the past several months has sought to infiltrate your transition team, including your inner circle, with the aim of establishing a cozy relationship with your Administration. For instance, it has been reported in the media that Senator James Inhofe of Oklahoma has assured the regime that he will open back door channels to your Administration for them.[4] However, it appears so far they have met little success in their efforts to infiltrate and worm themselves into your Administration through the back door or through the intercession of “establishment” Republicans. That is why they have decided to make a last-ditch effort by deploying  high-powered lobbyists to crack open your Administration to peddle influence.

3) The leaders of the regime in Ethiopia believe that they can hoodwink and bamboozle your administration just as they always have previous administrations over the past 25 years. They take special pleasure and pride in pulling the wool over the eyes of well-intentioned American policy makers and browbeat and blackmail them into submission by making threats of non-cooperation in the war on terrorism. Will you allow your Administration be a victim of blackmail by the regime in Ethiopia?

4) The Ethiopian regime cannot survive a single day without massive infusion of U.S. aid. In other words, the American taxpayer is literally the life support system for a corrupt and brutal regime that operates by a declaration of emergency. Why must the American taxpayer bankroll a corrupt regime in Ethiopia?

It makes no sense to me for a regime whose population, some 20 million of them, is facing famine to spend nearly $2 million on lobbying. How many famine-stricken children can you feed with $2 million?  Ethiopia today is 123 out of 125 worst fed countries in the world.[5]

As you may know, Ethiopia with the second largest population (100 million) in Sub-Sahara Africa, has been ranked for the past several years as the “second poorest country” in the world in the Oxford Poverty and Human Development Initiative (OPHDI) Multidimensional Poverty Index.

Ethiopia is also Africa’s largest recipient of U.S. foreign aid.[6]  Over the past two decades, the U.S. has provided the ruling regime in Ethiopia tens of billions of dollars in development and humanitarian aid.

Just in the past year, the U.S. provided over $700 million in humanitarian aid[7] and $375 million in foreign assistance[8] to the Ethiopian regime. In 2017, that regime is slated to receive a whopping $513 million in foreign assistance.[9]

Over the past decade, U.S. aid to the regime in Ethiopia has been used to:

finance “corruption, kickbacks and bribery” resulting in the loss of nearly $12 billion over a decade.[10] The regime in Ethiopia has a long and well-documented history of misuse, abuse and corruption in using U.S. and other foreign aid.[11]

“suppress political dissent by conditioning access to essential services on support for the ruling party.”[12]

“systematically discriminate from one end of the country to another against people who were members of the opposition party or people who disagreed with the regime.”[13]

“deny whole communities basic food, seed and fertilizer for failing to support the ruling regime.”[14]

implement “forced eviction, relocations and displacement of populations accompanied by serious human rights violations” and create “forced labor for government projects.”[15]

The fact of the matter is that the regime in Ethiopia has been stealing, embezzling and putting to corrupt purpose U.S. aid since 1984 as I have extensively documented in my previous analysis.[16]

The question remains: Why should the U.S. Government give a single red cent of American tax dollars to a regime that spends $2 million to lobby American officials?

Truth be told, in 2015, the regime in Ethiopia spent a mere $33 million out of its coffers to feed 4.5 million famine victims in the country, while panhandling the U.S. for hundreds of millions of dollars.[17] In 2017, the same regime is spending nearly $2 million to feed high-powered K Street lobbyists.

Words cannot express my outrage over the fact that the regime in Ethiopia is spending the millions of U.S. dollars it has siphoned off from U.S. aid to lobby your Administration.

There is no greater example of fraud, waste and abuse in U.S. aid than to see in black and white a lobbying agreement filed with the U.S. Justice Department documenting an agreement to spend nearly $2 million of American aid money for lobbying.

Using U.S. aid money to lobby the U.S. government for more aid money is simply wrong, immoral and certainly illegal.

How can we be sure today that American tax dollars given to the regime in Ethiopia will feed the famine-stricken people and not fatten the offshore accounts of regime leaders and the swarm of consultants and lobbyist they hire to lobby more aid for them?

“How does U.S. business compete with other nations in Africa? Are we losing out to the Chinese?”

The short answer to the question of U.S. business competitiveness in Africa is simply this: The Dragon is and has been eating the Eagle’s lunch in Africa every single day for  over a decade.

Secretary Hillary Clinton in 2011 observed, “China is in there [Africa] every day in every way, trying to figure out how it’s going to come in behind us, come under us. We don’t want to see a new colonialism in Africa.”[18]

Secretary Clinton talked a good game, but China continued to expand its neocolonialism in Africa.

I know it is politically incorrect to talk about China’s “scramble for Africa”, but the fact is that African countries are falling like dominoes under Chinese neocolonial control.

There is perhaps no symbolic act more telling of China’s unrivaled dominance in Africa than “China’s Gift to Africa”, the $200-million African Union Headquarters in Addis Ababa. In 2012, China delivered that building to African leaders which it built using largely its own labor force. How ironic that African governments have millions of dollars for lobbying but have no money to spend on the most iconic structure of the continent. They had to beg China to build it for them. It is so sad Africa remains the beggar continent!

The head of the African Union in gratitude for the building proclaimed that China brings to Africa a “message of optimism, a message that is out of the decades of hopelessness and imprisonment a new era of hope is dawning, and that Africa is being unshackled and freed…”

African leaders fell head over feet praising the “generosity of the Chinese government”, and described the donated building as marking “a qualitative leap in the relations between China and Africa”. They proclaimed that the building is “a reflection of the new Africa, and the future we want for Africa”.[19]

The U.S. has given tens of billions of dollars to Africa in aid and what it gets in return is condemnation as an “imperialist” or some such denigrating term.  When has an African leader ever thanked the U.S. Government or the American people for the billions they have given in same glowing terms as the Chinese Government?[20]

The fact of the matter is that American businesses and companies investing in Africa are at a distinct disadvantage.  Ethiopia is a classic example. For instance, a January 2017 U.S. Department of Commerce’s International Trade Administration concluded that foreign direct investment in Ethiopia is hampered because “State-owned enterprises (SOEs) and ruling political party-owned entities dominate the economic landscape, reducing room for the private sector to flourish.”[21] Chinese businesses have been able to achieve phenomenal success in Africa because of their cozy relationships with the ruling regimes. Unlike American companies, Chinese companies are unaffected by ethical obligations or the legal requirements of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in their close working relationship with the “ruling political party-owned entities” in Ethiopia or elsewhere in Africa.

There are those who say China is economically transforming Africa and making things better for Africans.[22] But is China “transforming Africa” to make it easier for its businesses and investors to rip off Africans?[23]

You have made remarks during the campaign about China’s impact on the United States. You said China is “using our country as a piggy bank to rebuild China” and criticized China for stealing jobs from Americans, devaluing its currency to help its export sector and for engaging in state-sponsored cyber-hacking. You even made the strong statement that, “We can’t continue to allow China to rape our country, and that’s what they’re doing.”

Talking about stealing jobs, I would like to tell you that Chinese cabin crews are now taking over jobs and displacing young Ethiopian flight attendants at the country’s flagship Ethiopian Airlines. It is so sad to see young Ethiopian women denied opportunities in their own country.[24] Of course, it is an open secret that Chinese companies refuse to hire Africans and bring in their own workers from China to complete their projects.[25]

If China could have the impact you asserted it has on the U.S. economy, it is easy to imagine China’s rapacious impact on the African economy by orders of magnitude.

The facts clearly show that neither Africans alone nor Africans and American investors  together have a ghost of a chance facing the Chinese neocolonial economic juggernaut.

In 2015, China’s trade with African states approached nearly $300 billion, a tenfold increase over the last decade.[26] China imports crude oil, minerals and agricultural commodities from Africa. China is Africa’s main export market and also its largest source of imports.  Between 2000 and 2014, the Chinese government, banks and contractors extended USD$86.3 billion worth of loans to African governments and state-owned enterprises.[27] The Chinese built a USD$4 billion dollar ghost city in Angola called Kilamba using Angola’s credit line.[28]  China continues to ensnare Africa in its neocolonial trap by providing billions of dollars in new loans.

China even uses “debt relief to obtain exclusive rights to a nation’s natural resources and build military bases”.[29]

The Obama Administration has been watching from the sidelines offering only criticism to China’s neocolonial expansion in Africa. U.S. exports of goods to Africa in 2013 were nearly $24 billion, an increase of only $8.8 billion since 2009.

“With so much corruption in Africa, how much of our funding is stolen?  Why  should we spend these funds on Africa when we are suffering here in the U.S.?”  

“Most of AGOA [Africa Growth and Opportunity Act which allows 39 eligible sub-Saharan Africa countries to export certain goods to the US  market duty-free] imports are petroleum products, with the benefits going to national oil companies, why do we support that massive benefit to corrupt regimes?” 

There is another companion question that should be asked along with the foregoing question of corruption and stolen American tax dollars in Africa: Who is minding the store for the American taxpayer in Africa?

Corruption is the hemoglobin that runs in the blood of the African body politics.

Corruption is the principal cause of poor governance and state failure in Africa. According to the African Union, an “estimated 25 per cent of the continent’s GDP (nearly 150 billion dollars) is lost due to corruption.”[30]

For instance, the regime in Ethiopia is so corrupt that the World Bank issued a one-of-a-kind 417-page study on the cancer of corruption entitled, “Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia”. [31]

In 2013, Global Financial Integrity reported between $1.2 trillion and $1.3 trillion has left Africa in illicit financial flows between 1980 and 2009”,  roughly equal to Africa’s gross domestic product for 2014.[32]

As of March of 2014, the top 20 most indebted countries in Africa carried foreign debt of nearly $390 billion.[33]

A 2016 UNECA report indicated that one of the major factors in the increasing levels of corruption in Africa has to do with the “the blind eye often turned to corruptors by western countries.”  The report argued that the “international dimension of corruption in Africa” is “an intrinsic part of the policy landscape in many African countries since it comes through conditionality frameworks, which is often tied to official development assistance (ODA) packages.”[34]

It is politically incorrect to say it, but AGOA [Africa Growth and Opportunity Act] is an entitlement program for African dictators. It is a special guaranteed U.S. Government program designed to sustain and maintain African dictators.

AGOA supposedly allows 39 eligible sub-Saharan Africa countries to export certain goods to the US markets duty-free benefits, but the bulk of the benefits go to the national oil companies of African countries which provide the financial support for repressive and corrupt African regimes. Non-oil and gas exports to the US under AGOA are negligible ($4.1 billion in 2015) representing barely 2 per cent of the United States’ total global trade.

The current leader of the regime in Ethiopia has urged your Administration to keep the AGOA provisions for the next 10 years”.[35]  In a recent public relations report of the Ethiopian regime, it was reported that “U.S. investments in Ethiopia climbed to $4 billion last year helped by several companies taking advantage of the renewed Africa Growth and Opportunity Act.”[36]  This is a patent, unadulterated and bold-faced lie. The regime in Ethiopia is trying to generate fake news about American investments in Ethiopia in the hope of laying the groundwork to snooker your Administration into supporting them. You must not fall for their “investment” gimmick.

Your transition team’s question is exactly on point: Why should the U.S. continue a trade agreement that principally benefits corrupt African dictators?

There is no reason why the American taxpayer must give African dictators billions of dollars in aid and then allow billions of dollars of petroleum products to enter the United States tax-free.

That is just not fair to the American taxpayer!

Who is minding the “US Aid Candy Store” in Africa?

USAID is supposed to oversee and administer U.S. aid in Africa. But are they?

In 2016, the Inspector General of USAID reported “significant deficiencies” in financial accounting including issues related to “complying with Federal accounting standards for reimbursable agreements, maintaining adequate records of property, plant, and equipment, and promptly investigating and resolving potential funds control violations.”[37]

A 2013 Wall Street Journal investigation revealed that  a significant amount of the nearly $10 billion spent by the U.S. in Africa between 2002 and 2012  on various health projects, including malaria and HIV control, “has been partly hijacked by organized networks that steal large quantities of donated malaria drugs and ship them from East to West Africa, where they end up for sale at street markets.”[38]

A 2010 report by the USAID Inspector General concluded that “because of weaknesses in the mission’s performance management and reporting system,” auditors “could not determine whether the results reported in USAID/Ethiopia’s performance plan and report were valid.”  The Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction in 2013 found that USAID’s  lack of effective oversight and monitoring placed hundreds of millions of U.S. tax dollars “at risk of waste, fraud and abuse.”[39]

USAID’s accountability problems are deep-rooted and endemic. In 1991, CNN broadcasted a report documenting “gross mismanagement of money” by aid recipients and exposing USAID officials “accused of receiving kickbacks from programs.” At the time, the USAID deputy inspector general was quoted as saying, “Our crime rate is essentially higher than virtually any other agency of the government and higher than most major cities in the United States.”[40]

It is becoming increasingly clear that USAID has become a rogue agency unaccountable to anyone. But it is not just USAID that is the corruption-enabler in Africa. The World Bank, the IMF and the U.N. and others are equally culpable.

Draining the swamp at USAID should go a long way in preventing fraud, waste and abuse of American tax dollars in Africa.

“We’ve been fighting al-Shabaab for a decade, why haven’t we won?”

The reason “we’ve been fighting al-Shabaab in Somalia for a decade and have not won” is because al-Shabaab to the regime in Ethiopia is a gift that keeps on giving. How can they kill the goose that lays the golden eggs?

In 2006, the leader of the regime in Ethiopia figured out that he can assure his regime’s meal ticket on the American tax payer’s dime indefinitely if he can scare American policy makers by continuing to cry wolf about the terrorist threat of al-Shabaab. That leader proclaimed himself as the African warrior against global terrorism, Islamic fundamentalism and regional instability and successfully picked the pockets of American taxpayers. For over ten years, the regime in Ethiopia has used the specter of al-Shabaab masterfully to wrap the Bush and Obama administrations around their fingers and keep on milking the American taxpayer cash cow for billions of dollars.

Today, the current leader of the regime in Ethiopia brags that he has been assured by Senator James Inhofe that his regime’s relations will be “further strengthened under Trump”. For all intents and purposes, his regime will snooker your Administration just like it did to the previous administrations, not by trying to sell the old counter-terrorism cooperation line but by peddling a new scam about  American business investments in Ethiopia.[41]   Because you were a businessman before taking office, the regime leaders think they can make you a deal you can’t refuse, Don Corleone-style, of course.

            A simple solution to America’s “illegal immigration” problem

I wish to offer you a simple solution to the problem of illegal immigration to the U.S.:

If the U.S. drains the aid swamp that is the life blood of the corrupt and brutal dictators and thugtators in Africa, the Middle East, Central America and other places, there will be far fewer people from these regions seeking to illegally enter the U.S.

People from these regions by and large come to America for many of the same reasons the Pilgrims and others after them came to America. They seek refuge from religious and political persecution in America and an opportunity to make a living without fear of abuse and mistreatment by government`. The history of immigration to America dating back to colonial times supports the view that the vast majority of immigrants followed the same pattern escaping oppression, persecution, abuse and dehumanization.

            A plea on behalf of Africans and the American taxpayer

In this letter, I express not only my personal view but also reflect and echo the views and convictions of millions of people in America and Africa.

During your campaign you spoke of your determination to deal with the “so many horrible, horrible problems — the violence, the death, the lack of education, no jobs” in our country. That is what we ask you to do for Africa and deal with the so many horrible, horrible problems of government sponsored violence and death, corruption and abuse of power.

What I and millions of others in Africa are asking is the chance to be left alone so we can stand on our own feet? American tax dollars in Africa serve to support the interests and lifestyles of corrupt regimes and their cronies and the armies of experts, consultants, lobbyists who cooperate with these regimes to enrich themselves at the cost of Africa’s poor.

No handouts, only a hand up.

I ask you one simple question on behalf of Ethiopians and other Africans:

How long must Ethiopia remain a beggar nation panhandling for aid?

How long must Africa remain a beggar continent, the object of charity for the rest of the world?

How long must the US aid gravy train continue to transfer billions of American tax dollars to African dictators to maintain their empires of corruption?

There must come a time when Ethiopia and the rest of Africa must be forced to kick their addiction to aid and charity.

There must come a time when the U.S. must simply say to African dictators: “No more begging! No more panhandling! No more alms. No more entitlement programs for African dictators. No more sponging off the American taxpayer. Enough is enough!”

Ethiopians and Africans are tired of being portrayed as beggars, panhandlers, freeloaders and moochers.

The time to stop the aid addiction is now. You are the man that can make it happen.

We don’t have to agree on everything to work together. We can work together on things we can agree on. Cutting off support to African dictators is one area we can work together to protect the American taxpayer!

The only question I have for you is this: Do you have the political will and the courage to “Just say, No! No more U.S. Aid to African dictators!”

President Trump: Cut U.S. aid to African dictators and make instant friends with the 1.2 billion people in Africa!

Sincerely,

Al Mariam, Ph.D., J.D. (Esq.)

c.c. Rex W. Tillerson, U.S. Secretary of State.

Representative Christopher Smith, Chairman Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations.

Representative Karen Bass, Ranking Member, Chairman Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations.

Jeff Blake, Chairman, Subcommittee of Africa and Global Health Policy

Cory Booker, Ranking Member, Subcommittee of Africa and Global Health Policy.

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Here are some suggestions to those interested in joining me in urgining President Trump and Congress to take appropriate action.

Interested citizens may register their concerns by calling the White House or accessing other online services at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/write-or-call

Alternatively, they may register their concerns using the official White House address.

I urge those who seek to register their concerns to also fax their letters to their members of Congress. While emails could be easily overlooked, faxed letters to members of Congress have a much better chance of being noticed.

A template for a message to President Trump and members of Congress is available HERE.

Members of the Senate Subcommittee on African Affairs are listed at HERE.

Members of the House Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights, and International Organizations are listed HERE.

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[1] http://ecadforum.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/tplf-Lobbying-Agreement.pdf?x71823

[2] https://www.fara.gov/docs/3712-Exhibit-AB-20060504-1.pdf

[3] http://ecadforum.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/tplf-Lobbying-Agreement.pdf?x71823

[4] http://www.africanews.com/2017/02/23/ethiopia-ready-for-greater-cooperation-with-trump-government-pm/

[5] https://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressreleases/2014-01-15/dutch-beat-french-and-swiss-top-oxfams-new-global-food-table

[6] http://www.nybooks.com/daily/2010/11/15/why-are-we-supporting-repression-ethiopia/

[7] https://www.usaid.gov/crisis/ethiopia/fy16/fs15

[8] http://us-foreign-aid.insidegov.com/l/59/Ethiopia

[9] http://beta.foreignassistance.gov/explore/country/Ethiopia

[10] http://www.gfintegrity.org/press-release/illicit-financial-outflows-ethiopia-nearly-doubled-2009-us3-26-bln-says-new-gfi-report/

[11] http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alemayehu-g-mariam/ethiopia-licensed-to-stea_b_489516.html

[12] https://www.hrw.org/news/2010/12/17/ethiopia-donors-should-investigate-misuse-aid-money

[13] http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-11573514

[14] https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/?p=10509

[15] https://www.hrw.org/report/2012/01/16/waiting-here-death/forced-displacement-and-villagization-ethiopias-gambella-region

[16] http://almariam.com/2017/01/22/traiding-in-misery-the-t-tplf-its-partners-and-famine-in-ethiopia/

[17] http://reliefweb.int/report/ethiopia/ethiopia-government-and-humanitarian-partners-launched-humanitarian-requirements

[18] http://www.reuters.com/article/us-clinton-africa-idUSTRE75A0RI20110611

[19] http://www.bet.com/news/global/2012/01/30/african-union-opens-new-200-million-headquarters-in-ethiopia.html

[20] http://almariam.com/2016/05/15/the-intellectual-poverty-and-moral-bankruptcy-of-ethiopia-famine-deniers/

[21] https://www.export.gov/article?id=Ethiopia-Market-Challenges

[22] https://www.theatlantic.com/china/archive/2013/03/is-china-transforming-africa/274401/

[23] http://static1.squarespace.com/static/5652847de4b033f56d2bdc29/t/571a2daf20c64744b887cf7c/1461333522495/China+Africa+Loans+Briefing+Paper_SAIS+CARi.pdf

[24] http://africa.cgtn.com/2015/10/09/ethiopian-airlines-hires-chinese-cabin-crew/

[25] http://www.sais-cari.org/data-chinese-workers-in-africa/

[26] http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/business/2015-11/10/content_22417707.htm

[27] http://static1.squarespace.com/static/5652847de4b033f56d2bdc29/t/5768ae3b6a4963a2b8cac955/1466478245951/CARI_PolicyBrief_11_2016.pdfl

[28] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8HyDGCNxpo

[29] http://www.valuewalk.com/2015/12/china-africa-debt/

[30] https://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/press/releases/2015/November/eliminating-corruption-is-crucial-to-sustainable-development.html

[31] http://www.ethiomedia.com/addis/diagnosing_corruption.pdf

[32] http://databank.worldbank.org/data/download/GDP.pdfhttp://www.gfintegrity.org/storage/gfip/documents/reports/AfricaNetResources/gfi_afdb_iffs_and_the_problem_of_net_resource_transfers_from_africa_1980-2009-web.pdf

[33] http://www.africaranking.com/top-20-most-indebted-african-countries/

[34] http://www.uneca.org/sites/default/files/PublicationFiles/agr4_eng_fin_web_11april.pdf

[35] http://www.ethiopiaobserver.com/2017/02/hailemariam-cautions-donald-trump-against-abandoning-agoa/

[36] https://agoa.info/news/article/6037-agoa-us-investments-in-ethiopia-climb-to-4-billion-in-2015.html

[37] https://oig.usaid.gov/sites/default/files/audit-reports/0-000-17-001-c.pdf

[38] http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/sigar/sigar-report-2013-10.pdf

[39] https://oig.usaid.gov/sites/default/files/other-reports/sarc0310.pdf

[40] http://faculty.maxwell.syr.edu/jrshiffman/symposium%20files/Best%20Papers%20(pdf)/Entangled%20Accountability-Black.pdf

[41] http://www.africanews.com/2017/02/23/ethiop

 

Alemayehu G. Mariam Professor of political science, CSU San Bernardino

Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino. His teaching areas include American constitutional law, civil rights law, judicial process, American and California state governments, and African politics. He has published two volumes on American constitutional law, including American Constitutional Law: Structures and Process (1994) and American Constitutional Law: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights (1998). He is the Senior Editor of the International Journal of Ethiopian Studies, a leading scholarly journal on Ethiopia. For the last several years, Prof. Mariam has written a weekly web commentary on Ethiopian human rights and African issues that is widely read online. He played a central advocacy role in the passage of H.R. 2003 (Ethiopia Democracy and Accountability Act of 2007) in the House of Representatives in 2007. Prof. Mariam practices in the areas of criminal defense and civil litigation. In 1998, he argued a major case in the California Supreme Court involving the right against self-incrimination in People v. Peevy, 17 Cal. 4th 1184, which helped clarify longstanding Miranda rights issues in criminal procedure in California. For several years, Prof. Mariam had a weekly public channel public affairs television show in Southern California called “In the Public Interest”. Prof. Mariam received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota in 1984, and his J.D. from the University of Maryland in 1988.

The Battle of Adwa: Campaign Plan and Combat Actions – by Tsegaye Tegenu

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By Tsegaye Tegenu
February 27, 2017

In spite of communication and transport problems, in a matter of two months after the call for total mobilization on September 17, 1895, more than 100,000 soldiers were assembled in the specified areas (Addis Ababa, Were Illu, Ashenge, and Mekele). Of these troops, about two-third were raised by the Gebar Madäriya system. The emperor himself mobilized around 35000 troops commanded by his court officials. The queen also mobilized her own troops numbering to about 6000. The imperial army also consisted the troops raised by governor generals (such as Ras Mäkonen who commanded on the average 12000 soldiers, Däjazmach Tesema, about 5000, Ras Welde Giorgis about 5000, Ras Bitweded Mengesha Atakim, about 6000, and others). The size of the imperial troops was well within the resource capacity of the system. Troops of the regional princes were on the average 35,000. Of these, Ras Menegesha of Tigray commanded an average about 8000, Ras Mikael of Wello about 8000, King Tekle Haimanot of Gojjam about 6000, Ras Welle of Begemder about 6000, Wagshum Guangul of Wag about 5000 soldiers.

The campaign plan, adopted by the emperor and the Rases, was not actually an operational plan. Control of troop movement and actual conducting of engagements in war was left to the initiation of the Rases. They did so following the course of action determined by the emperor and the council of the Rases. The Ethiopian campaign plan deals on measures taken in mobilization and moving of troops far deep into the enemy territory by passing small detachment force posted as defence and deterrence. The military action of the Ethiopian armed forces was basically a type of strategic offensive accomplished through the opening of two strategic fronts to defeat the main groupings of enemy troops deep into its territory.

The Ethiopian force which was dispatched at the beginning led under the command of governor-generals met on its way, at Alage, a fortified Italian force. The governor generals held a council meeting and decided to bypass the Italian fortification and proceed forward. According to the strategic objective war and the conducting of the campaign plan, the Ethiopian high command was given the instruction to avoid battle for each position of the enemy force (unit). According to the concept of the campaign, engagement was envisaged with the main enemy force far deep in the territory controlled by it. One of the commander, Fitawurari Gebeyehu, was however, unable to leave without fighting the Italians. Outside of the original plan, he led his force and attacked the Italian fortification. He was joined by the force of Qägnazmach Tafese. The Italian force was routed and another 5000 Italian forces sent in aid of the fortification were also chased and disbursed. Though the Ethiopian forces scored victory in its first engagement, the two commanders were detained since they fought on their own initiative without order from the high military leadership. They were released later when the emperor arrived and saw their case.

Until the incident of Alage, the march was conducted first without an immediate threat of encountering the enemy. After the news of the first engagement, the march was made in anticipation of meeting the enemy. At Wefla, two days after the first engagement, the emperor held military review, guns were saluted and fired. All military commanders lined up with their soldiers wearing their traditional uniform and decoration, which “glittered like the sun” the whole day. This was in the tradition of the Ethiopian army practised to assess readiness of the troops and affirm imminence of a battle.

The emperor held military review to see the level of the combat readiness of the army and to give them signal to prepare to carry out assigned missions. The emperor saw the level of personnel, arms and military equipment, availability of necessary reserves, the high level of combat moral, the mutual support of the forces of the Rases in the event of combat, the discipline and organization of the army. Since the military review at Wefla, troops were marching in complete combat readiness to perform the combat mission. The military review brought the troops into full combat readiness, in possible areas of military operation.

The advancing force of the Rases met another strong fortification of the Italians in Mekele, the capital town of Tigray. In this town, the Italians were building strong fortification for the last four months. This time the forces of the Rases encircled the fortification and waited for the coming of the emperor and an order to attack. The emperor artillery commanders shelled the fortification for two weeks until the enemy surrendered completely. Had the forces of the Rases attacked and captured the water source the enemy earlier, the attack would not have lasted two weeks.

According to the chronicler, Menelik saw taking measure against surrendered Italian forces as a disrespect to the Ethiopian state, and allowed the Italians to pack and leave in order that they join their main base at Adigrat. He bought 500 camels and mules and gave them to load their ammunition including artillery. He ordered Ras Mekonnen, to accompany them and guard their security. Though, this had disappointed some of the Ethiopian soldiers, it was suspected that the idea was to send Ras Mekonen as a cover for the further advance of the Ethiopian troops far into the interior of the enemy zone, without being surprised by the main force stationed at Adigrat. Menelik and his commanders left Mekele and marched cautiously by passing Adigrat, the strong base of the Italian forces. They encamped at Agula, Genfel; on the fifth day they encamped at Hawzen, and after two days at Harhar, then at WereA and to Tsadiya. After two days the emperor encamped at Zata, and then he left for Gendebeta. Seeing that the Italians were not coming out from their fortification and engage him in battle, the emperor decided to move to Hamasen and left for Aba Gerima Gult. After two days of marching, they camped at Adwa.

As the main forces of the two armies were getting close the troop movement was done in anticipation of a surprise attack from the enemy. The characteristic of the march had also changed: the length of the route and duration it took from the initial place to the far point of an assembly area became shorter. The problem of promising became also acute. The emperor held council meetings to discuss the developments. It was decided to attack the Italian position in the next morning, but Ras Mengesha argued against this idea stating the danger of attacking fortified position. He told the king about the death of his father, Emperor Yohannes, when he tried to attack the strong fortified position of the Mahdist of Sudan in 1889. For two days they discussed again on operational strategy, and finally, they dropped the idea of attacking the fortified Italian position and agreed to advance forward to Hamassen, the seat of the colonial government.

At that moment the Italian troops had provision left only good enough to feed for one week, and Baratieri decided to attack the Ethiopian force, which was supposed to march to Hammasen in the next morning. At night the Italian troops left their position at Adigrat and attacked the Ethiopian forces in the morning at 5 a.m. local time. The Ethiopian forces were not ready. About one-third of the forces were left either to look for provision, or some went to Aksum to visit religious center, the Saint Merry church. The rest were not ready for any engagement according to the tradition of Ethiopian battle.

The battle of Adwa can be called a meeting engagement, which is a variety of offensive type of combat action. It was a clash of troops of the two sides advancing toward each other. From the outset, both sides attempted to carry out the assigned missions by means of a strategic offensive. The Italians defeated and chased out the forces of Ras Mengesha and took important areas of terrain in the region of Tigray to defend their stronghold in Eritrea. The Ethiopian forces conducted a long march north to penetrate deep into the enemy zone and engage its main force. At Adwa there was a rapid closing of the two sides, and they entered into combat. Italy took the initiative, made a surprise attack (timely decision), through rapid commitment of the main forces, and carrying out attacks against the main center, and flanks of the Ethiopian army, to give it a sudden blow. But Italy could not retain the initiative.

The Italians had an operational plan that had a detailed precise on combat action. It was drawn up in detail on a map by Baratieri, the Italian commander and jointly with senior commanders. The operational plan elaborated the performance each unit, their mission, their position, direction of their main attack, times of accomplishment, and their mutual support. This operational plan failed to conceptualize the alignment, (i.e., grouping) of the Ethiopian forces and their possible operation. In the Ethiopian strategic culture, conducting of engagement was left to the freedom of the commander and individual initiative of the soldiers.

Even if the Ethiopian troops were not in a combat form, the laying out of campaign and the position of the troops was in such a structure that made combat formation of troops very rapid. The Ethiopian way of military camping had an in-built defence mechanism and flexibility for the manoeuvre of troops to counter attack. Traditionally, at camping,  force were organised at least eight-order (dänb) taking position with specific task: front camp, endärase, balämual, guard camp, left camp, right camp, rare-back camp, and agafari. Each camp had at least two or three captain units and was commanded by a saläqa, who hold titles that had strategic combat functions. For instance, the front camp and the left camp were commanded by Dägazmach who covers the center and the rear part in time of combat. The endärase and the guard camps were commanded by titles holders of Grazmach who units were assigned to attack the right flank of the enemy. The balämual, the rare and left camps were commanded by saläqa who had title of Qägnazmach and during combat their force was assigned to hit the left flanks of the enemy. The camp of the agafari was led by a saläqa who had title of Fitawurari, responsible for frontal advance attack. In combat action, camp commanders were expected to manoeuvre the troops in positions of left, right, center and rare as indicated by the strategic functions of the title. The manoeuvre is often accomplished by a close envelopment of an enemy flanks.

Though the Ethiopian army was surprised it was not difficult to search for a favourable position with respect to the enemy and to advance and make regrouping if the need arise. The very structural formation of troops was flexible enough for rapid manoeuvre of troops in a moon like shape, the essence of which consisted attacking of the outer flanks of the enemy while concentrating superiority of force in the middle for a subsequent annihilation. It seemed that the plan of Baratieri focused not in response to the structural formation and combat initiative of the Ethiopian troops, mainly it emphasised on the method of employing weapons (effective use of his firepower) following the European style of warfare.

In the Italian style of warfare there was a basic reliance on firepower. Improvements in firearms (lighter and rapid firing guns, for instance) and changing battle tactics (line formation, and shoulder-to-shoulder drill for volley technique) were aimed to increase and ensure effective and maximum firepower. Weapons were only effective when employed in a strictly disciplined way and steadiness became thus a crucial factor in tactics dominated by firearms.

In the Ethiopian context, there was no tradition of reliance on fire power. Until the second half of the nineteenth century firearms plaid limited role in battles. Their numbers were limited and their qualities were relatively poor as most of them belonged to earlier periods. Therefore, there was no dependence on effective use of firearms, thus no linear battle formation and no need for drill. The Ethiopian style stressed more on mobility and manoeuvre than on linear formation and on rank co-ordination. It was designed for short and decisive battle than for siege warfare. There was reliance on mass manoeuvre and a fast-moving confrontation involving cavalry and infantry forces. Battlefield tactics depended much on the nature of the mass manoeuvre and identification of the weakest links of the enemy. Actions were not characterised by battle formations, rather they were dominated by individual initiatives, mobility and energy. Leadership and morale were ingredients important for success.

 

 

Extracted from

Tsegaye Tegenu, (1998), “The Logistic Base and Military Strategy of the Ethiopian Army: the Campaign and Battle of Adwa, September 1895-February 1896”, in Abdussamad Ahmer and Richard Pankhrust (eds.), Adwa Victory Century Conference. Institute of Ethiopian Studies. Addis Ababa University.

Ethiopian journalist’s wife urges UK and US to call for his release

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Bezawit Hailegiorgis says western powers could help free Anania Sorri, one of tens of thousands held in Ethiopia since last year

Jason Burke in Addis Ababa
theguardian

The wife of a blogger and journalist detained in Ethiopia has called on the international community to pressure local authorities to release her husband, who is among tens of thousands held since a state of emergency was declared in the emerging east African power last year.

Anania Sorri, a 34-year-old writer and intellectual, was arrested in November on his way to a meeting at the US embassy in Addis Ababa. He is being held in a high security prison in the Ethiopian capital and has not yet been formally charged with any offence.

Bezawit Hailegiorgis, 29, his wife, said his sole crime had been “to express his thoughts honestly”.

“His crime is his determination to speak out. He is a brilliant political journalist. He was critical but always constructive … but being imprisoned is part of the job description of being a journalist here. It’s a zero-sum game, where someone has to lose, and at the moment they are not losing,” she told the Guardian.

Human rights groups have criticised the failure of western powers to condemn Ethiopia’s recent crackdown, which followed a new wave of protests against the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition.

The US and UK see Ethiopia as a key stabilising actor in east Africa and rarely criticise authorities there. Addis Ababa has long been viewed by both as an important partner in the fight against Islamic militancy in the volatile region. The EU increasingly sees Ethiopia as an important part of the European effort to reduce the flow of migrants from east Africa.

Hailegiorgis said international pressure on the government would prove effective in her husband’s case. “I love my country … and I do understand that this is a sovereign country, but we all live in one system and the UK, the US and others do have leverage. Of course pressure would work,” she said.

Hundreds of people are thought to have been killed and tens of thousands detained in Ethiopia over the last year, though exact figures are unavailable. Opposition groups, mostly based abroad, say the figure is much higher. The government recently said it had released 11,000 detainees.

Scores of senior opposition politicians have been arrested and jailed, as well as bloggers and commentators such as Sorri.

The unrest has been most intense in areas dominated by the Oromo ethnic group, which comprises around 40% of the population. There have also been demonstrations and clashes in parts of Ethiopia dominated by the Amhara ethnicity, which analysts say indicate a deep-rooted discontent with decades of rule by the EPRDF.

The overall situation appears to have calmed since an upsurge in protest and associated violence in November, though some areas remain tense.

Ethiopia ranks 142nd out of 180 countries for press freedom, according to the Reporters Without Borders campaign group.

Diplomats in Addis Ababa described a “gulf between the outside perception of Ethiopia and what is happening inside the country”, branding the repressive atmosphere a “climate of fear”.

Although restrictions on the internet and social media have been eased, there has been little significant let up in the repressive security measures.

Hailegiorgis said she recognised she was taking a risk by talking to international media, as others have been detained for doing so.

She said her husband had been arrested without warning under special powers introduced with a state of emergency in October and was unsure of exactly what offence he was suspected of committing. He has not been allowed legal representation, has been denied books or newspapers, and is being held in a cell with around 40 others. Hailegiorgis is allowed to visit him when she wants, with their three-year-old daughter, and to provide her husband with food and medication.

“Anywhere else he would win prizes and acclaim. He was not a criminal, not involved in politics, and not violent. Here, he goes to jail,” Hailegorgis said.

The EPRDF, which has been in power for 25 years, has been praised for bringing millions of Ethiopians out of poverty and ensuring growth rates that have averaged around 10% for more than a decade.

However, corruption and unequal distribution of the new wealth, coupled with a young and increasingly educated population, have meant growing discontent.

The unrest has been described by some analysts as “a political crisis” for a state that has increasingly followed an “authoritarian Chinese-style development model”. Ethiopia has built commercial and other ties with Beijing in recent years.

The prime minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, who took over following the death of the veteran leader Meles Zenawi in 2012, has promised political reforms and reshuffled his cabinet in November in an apparent effort to be more inclusive. He has also launched a huge programme of spending aimed at improving the lot of young people. The median age in Ethiopia is 18 and a vast expansion of further education has led to enormous demand for graduate jobs, which the country is struggling to meet.

Many among the Oromo minority frame social and economic problems in ethnic terms. They say the government is dominated by Tigrayans, who comprise only 6% of Ethiopia’s 100 million inhabitants.

“The unrest and protests are rooted in decades of marginalisation and exploitation … if there is no democratic way of protesting, then there will be violence. That is inevitable,” said a 42-year-old Oromo activist in Addis Ababa who did not want to be named.

In an interview with the Guardian, Negeri Lencho, the communications minister, said journalists who had been jailed had either not “respected the ethics of the profession” or were not actually journalists at all.

“Ethiopia is facing challenges – political, economic, social – and journalists should understand the problems we face today and should provide the right sort of information our people need,” Lencho said.

“All members of the cabinet and the prime minister … all want to see a vibrant media … but a journalist has a purpose, if he is a real journalist, to reach out with the right information, not just his own opinion, be it hate or love.”

Hailegiorgis said pressure from the west could help obtain freedom for her husband.

“The international community is not doing anything at all. It’s a bizarre thing. It’s just lip service, just words. They say they are ‘highly concerned’ or ‘concerned’ but then … nothing,” said Hailegiorgis.


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