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Ethiopia secures about 40,000 exit visas for its undocumented citizens in Saudi

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Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban

The Ethiopian government has secured exit visas for about 40,000 undocumented citizens living in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia.

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs has subsequently dispatched a team to Saudi to help in the safe return of the nationals who are taking advantage of an Amnesty program between the two governments.

Ethiopia’s Foreign Minister, Workneh Gebeyehu who visited Saudi also held talks with the national airline, Ethiopian Airlines, on how best to bring back the nationals.

Barely a week ago, Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn expressed worry over the refusal of nationals illegally resident in Saudi to return despite the amnesty program.

Desalegn said he feared that the Saudi government will resort to forcibly deport Ethiopians who have refused to voluntarily return home.

The Premier was quoted by the Ethiopia News Agency as saying, “the situation that made the Saudi Government forcibly deport our citizens is being created. Therefore, it is better if our citizens come back home before various problems arise seizing the opportunity they are given even in the remaining short period”.

The 90 day amnesty at the end of June and authorities said the numbers of people they expected to return under the program was all but underwhelming.

The period for illegal foreigners to leave the oil-producing giant started on March 29, 2017. Those who fail to leave will be subjected to fines or face legal measures, which include forced deportation.

Most rich Middle East countries hire thousands of domestic helpers from Africa and Asia. Most of these helpers often complain of abuse from their employers.

The post Ethiopia secures about 40,000 exit visas for its undocumented citizens in Saudi appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News | Breaking News: Your right to know!.


Ethiopia: A Harvest of Death and Destruction Since May 28, 1991

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By Prof. Alemayehu G. mariam

The T-TPLF Horsemen of the Apocalypse a quarter of a century later in Ethiopia

On May 28, 1991, a rag tag rebel army of the Tigrean People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) marched into Ethiopia’s capital. That day shall eternally live in infamy.

The TPLF is a terrorist organization listed in the Global Terrorism Database.

Ethiopia today is a thugtatorship.

Ethiopia today is a thugtatorship under a “state of emergency”.

The T-TPLF is in a state of emergency sitting atop a powder keg with a slow burning fuse steadily getting closer to the flash point.

In 1995, the late leader of the T-TPLF declared the litmus test for the success of his TPLF regime should be whether Ethiopians were able to eat three meals a day. (Watch video here.)

Two decades later in 2011, Meles pompously declared, “We have devised a plan which will enable us to produce surplus and be able to feed ourselves by 2015 without the need for food aid.”

Ethiopia today is facing famine of biblical proportions.

In May 2017, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations reports, “Food insecurity has surged since the beginning of the year. As of May, 7.8 million Ethiopians are in need of emergency food aid, a 39 percent increase since mid-January. Malnutrition rates are also increasing and extreme coping mechanisms are observed.”

The T-TPLF “candy store”, a/k/a USAID kept on insisting that there is only food shortages and no famines in Ethiopia. “This was the worst drought they had ever seen in their lives — worse in many cases than the conditions that their areas had seen in 1983, 1984,” declared Jeremy Konyndyk, Director, USAID’s Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance in April 2016.

USAID and the rest of the international poverty pimps turned a blind eye, deaf ears and muted lips as the T-TPLF used humanitarian aid to build its political base and outright buy votes.

Meles and the T-TPLF implemented a divide and conquer strategy called ethnic federalism creating the modern equivalent of apartheid white South Africa’s Bantustans.

The T-TPLF’s version of black apartheid is called Klilil-istan.

From the time the T-TPLF seized power, it embarked on a systematic program of  de-Ethiopianization  with the twin aims of 1) striping Ethiopians of any meaningful consciousness of their national identity and expurgate from their collective social experience any sense of commonly shared values, beliefs and customs, and 2) balkanize, merchandize and dismember the country employing a variety of tactics and schemes.

As part of the de-Ethiopianization program, Meles and the T-TPLF declared in the preamble to their  constitution that there is no Ethiopian nation, only “nations, nationalities and peoples.”

Meles declared Ethiopia’s flag is a “piece of rag” and “Ethiopian history a fairy tale.” (Watch video here.)

The real fairy tale tellers are Meles Zenawi and the T-TPLF.

In his “Voodoo Economics”, Meles claimed an expected growth of nearly 13 percent in 2011. The IMF called him out and politely told him, “Statistics collection of the country requires transformations, and we advised the government to do that.”

Meles and the T-TPLF commissioned the World Bank and the other international poverty pimps to carry on with the fairy tale telling.

The World Bank-ruptcy continued to propagate the bogus growth claims of “double-digit growth over the past decade”. For years, I challenged the T-TPLF, the World Bank, the IMF and others to put up their supporting data for critical scrutiny or shut the hell up. They have chosen to shut up. But the challenge stands.

Meles and the T-TPLF continued to tell fairy tales by claiming they won the 2010 election by 99.6 percent and the 2015 by 100 percent.

The T-TPLF uses state terrorism to cling to power and suppress all opposition.

Since 1992, the T-TPLF and its regional lackeys “have cultivated a climate of fear and repression by using state power to punish political dissent in often brutal fashion.”

In 2005, Meles Zenawi and the T-TPLF ordered the massacre of hundreds of people following the May 2005 election. The findings of an Inquiry Commission set up by Meles Zenawi put the entire blame for the massacres on Meles and his T-TPLF.

In 2016, T-TPLF “security forces shot into crowds, summarily killing people during mass roundups, and torturing detained protesters.”

The T-TPLF, in violation of international human rights law and conventions, continues to hold tens of thousands of political prisoners. A partial list of T-TPLF political prisoners and torture victims with long prison sentences is available HERE.

The T-TPLF practices torture widely in its official and secret prisons. The details of the torture practices are so horrific they shock the conscience. The scope of T-TPLF torture practices has been documented by Human Rights Watch.

The T-TPLF has completely destroyed press freedom in Ethiopia.  The T-TPLF continues to persecute journalists and criminalize  journalism, bloggers and opposition leaders and dissidents.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Ethiopia ranked fourth on is 2015 list of the 10 Most Censored Countries and is the fifth worst jailer of journalists worldwide.

In April 2015, dozens of Ethiopians in Libya were slaughtered by ISIS/ISIL. The T-TPLF refused to acknowledge the terrorist beheading victims were Ethiopians. T-TPLF spokesman Redwan Hussein demanded confirmation even though numerous international media sources had affirmed the victims were Ethiopians.

In 2013, when the Saudi Arabian regime unleashed a campaign of terror against Ethiopian domestic workers and refugees, with Saudi police, security officials, mobs and vigilantes taking to the streets literally hunting down Ethiopians, beating, torturing and in a number of cases killing them, the T-TPLF remained silent.

T-TPLF #3 man Tedros Adhanom told the press, the deportation and killings “is something that has been bugging me for some time now” and summoned  the Saudi Arabian ambassador to apologize: “Ethiopia would like to express its respect for the decision of the Saudi Authorities and the policy of deporting illegal migrants.”

In 2014, the T-TPLF massacred  at least 47 university students in the town of  Ambo, 80 miles west of the capital Addis Ababa, and environs. The T-TPLF regime dismissed that massacre and tried to sweep it under the rug claiming that a “few anti-peace forces incited and coordinated the violence”.

The T-TPLF is a corruptocracy  (a political system operated and controlled by a small clique of corrupt-to-the-core vampiric kleptocrats who cling to power to enrich themselves at public expense).

In 2012, the World Bank issued a 417-page study entitled, “Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia” covering eight sectors (health, education, rural water supply, justice, construction, land, telecommunications and mining). I offered extensive comments on that report in my weekly commentaries in 2013.

The T-TPLF has sold out the country’s most fertile land to fly-by-night investors for pennies and “forcibly relocating tens of thousands of people from their ancestral homes to make way for large scale commercial agriculture.” When one of the land grab deals went sour, the “investor” threatened to bring down the wrath of India on the T-TPLF.

The T-TPLF “Addis Ababa Master Plan” was overwhelmingly rejected, and T-TPLF “security forces shot dozens of protesters in Shewa and Wollega zones, west of Addis Ababa and other locations to crush the resistance.

The T-TPLF has ushered in ecological catastrophe: deforestation, desertification, soil erosion, overgrazing and population explosion.

The Ethiopian Agricultural Research Institute reports, Ethiopia loses up to 200,000 hectares of forest every year. Between 1990 and 2005, Ethiopia lost 14.0% of its forest cover (2,114,000 hectares) and 3.6% of its forest and woodland habitat. If the trend continues, it is expected that Ethiopia could lose all of its forest resources in 11 years, by the year 2020.

The T-TPLF destroyed the lives and livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of indigenous peoples in the Omo region of Ethiopia. Experts warned that Gibe III could destroy the fragile ecosystem for an additional 300,000 people downstream in Lake Turkana, a UNESCO World Heritage Site (a site of special cultural or physical significance to the world at large) which gets up to 90% of its water from the Omo River.

The T-TPLF has embarked on a number of white elephant projects which are presently teetering on the cliffs of bankruptcy or are doomed to bankruptcy.

In January 2017, it was disclosed that the T-TPLF’s light rail project was 1.8 billion birr in the hole.

The “Ethiopian Railway” project which supposedly connects the Ethiopian capital with Djibouti on the Red Sea coast in 2016 had debt of 102.5 billion and counting.

The T-TPLF has embarked on a fool’s errand known as the “Grand Renaissance Dam”, presumably the “largest dam in Africa”.  That dam ain’t nothing but a dam white elephant.

Ethiopia is at the top of the International Monetary Fund’s Highly Indebted Poor Countries. In 2012, the T-TPLF reported total debt of USD$13.2 billion. In 2015, the debt had risen to USD$22 billion. It is now estimated in the range of USD$30 billion.

In February 2015, I asked: 1) “Is Ethiopia’s “odious sovereign debt” to the odious World Bank legally enforceable? Are future generations of Ethiopians liable to the debts accumulated with the World Bank by the T-TPLF?”

My response emphatically was and remains that neither this nor future generations of Ethiopians have a legal obligation to pay for the “odious debt” incurred by the T-TPLF.

Moody’s bond rating service in December  2016 rated Ethiopia’s USD1 billion Euro bond issued in 2014 B1 (highly speculative,  subject to high credit risk”, bordering on noninvestment grade). In other words, that bond is pretty much “junk bond”.

In 2016, the T-TPLF was fined $USD$6.5 million for illegally selling unregistered bonds for the “Nile Dam” in the United States. It was the culmination of the T-TPLF’s 4-year shakedown of Diaspora Ethiopians in the U.S. by disguising a protection racket into a bond sale program.

On January 18, 2017, the T-TPLF signed a “Memorandum of Understanding” to pay a Washington, D.C. lobby firm nearly $2 million to influence the Trump Administration. Yet, as the T-TPLF spends million to cling to power, 5.6 million people are facing famine while the T-TPLF continues to panhandle for nearly a billion dollars in humanitarian aid.

In March 2017, over 200 people were buried when a “mountain of garbage” at a landfill commonly known as “Qoshe”, some 13 miles southwest of the capital, collapsed on an adjacent neighborhood in Addis Ababa.

Such has been the history of Ethiopia and the fate of the Ethiopian people since the occupation by aliens from Planet Thugistan on May 28, 1991.

 

The post Ethiopia: A Harvest of Death and Destruction Since May 28, 1991 appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News | Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia: Culture and National Identity – SBS Amharic

ETHIOPIANS GUDETA AND GEBRESILASE WIN OTTAWA 10K

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Taking the lead just past the three-kilometre mark, Ethiopia’s Netsanet Gudeta ran away from a strong women’s field at the Ottawa 10k, winning the IAAF Gold Label road race in 31:35 on Saturday (27).

Among the vanquished was heavily favoured Kenyan Paskalia Chepkorir who struggled home second in 32:08 with Monica Ngige, also of Kenya, taking third place in 32:46.

Given the warm conditions – it was 23C at the 6:30pm start – it was a bold display of front running by the 26-year-old Ethiopian but she had an additional incentive to run hard from the front as the race offers a $4000 bonus to the first runner, man or woman, to cross the finish line.

The elite women were given a head start of three minutes and 10 seconds over the men’s field. Gudeta’s compatriot Leul Gebresilase gave chase but fell a mere eight seconds short of catching her as he won the men’s race in 28:43. They hugged at the finish and were wrapped in an Ethiopian flag by supporters.

“I am extremely happy for winning the race,” said Gudeta. “I was confident from the beginning and I had the feeling that I was going to be ahead of the men.”

Several times over the final few kilometres she checked her wrist watch – she passed 5km in 15:50 – and turned around to see who was in pursuit. Clearly she had destroyed the Kenyan challenge early on but it wasn’t the women she was concerned about.

“It helped that I had to run very fast so I could compete with the men, to be ahead of them,” she said.

“I had to keep checking who was behind me, how I was doing. That was all I was doing. I was more concerned about the men. Once I left the (Kenyan) ladies, I didn’t have much concern about them. My concern was with the men.”

Victory in the women’s race earned her $8000 in addition to the gender bonus. Chepkorir, who has a best 10km time of 30:57, just two seconds slower than the Ottawa course record (30:55 by Gladys Cherono in 2015), collects $4000 for finishing in the runner-up position while Ngige will earn $3000.

“When I was starting the race I thought I would win,” said Chepkorir. “I got to around 5km and I had a problem in my throat, so I reduced the pace. I have allergies. When I came here I got the allergies. I was sneezing.

“I was not looking back I listened to the men coming from behind. And I heard Monica. I knew I would be number two. I am very happy.”

The men’s race had suffered with the last-minute withdrawals of 2012 winner Geoffrey Mutai due to injury and defending champion Mohammed Ziana because of passport problems. Last year’s runner-up, Yitayal Atnafu of Ethiopia, also cancelled with an injury.

But once the gun was fired, the remainder of the elite entrants got down to business and the absence of the pre-race favourites was largely forgotten.

It was Nicholas Bor, the 2015 Ottawa champion, who charged out to an early lead in the men’s race. For the past two years he has battled injuries and treated Ottawa as a comeback race. Within three kilometres, the pack had whittled down to three. The 24-year-old Gebresilase, who has a personal best of 28:12, followed closely alongside USA’s Marty Hehir of the Northern Arizona Elite Club. The trio passed half way in 14:29, but when the Ethiopian surged at 8 kilometres it was a decisive move.

“I was looking straight ahead to Netsanet; in the last kilometres she was very strong,” Gebresilase said. “But I am very happy that Ethiopians won both the competitions today. This race is very good, very well organised.”

Hehir was delighted with his performance, crossing the finish line second in 29:05. A graduate of Syracuse University, he has been training in Flagstaff, Arizona, since graduation two years ago and earlier this spring he recorded a 10,000m PB of 28:08.60. Bor, meanwhile, finished in 29:33, a victim of both the Ethiopian’s dramatic surge and the heat.

“I was definitely aiming for at least the top five so I know I was able to be up there,” said Hehir. “Training has been going well. This was essentially the race I was peaking for and I wanted to give it a shot and I did so.

“The reason Bor dropped is because the guy who won put in a huge surge so I was barely hanging on as well. I wasn’t thinking too much except for the pain of it all. But I was pretty happy when I saw that Bor broke hard.”

Although he had felt faint at one point in the race, around the time Gebresilase surged, Bor was pleased with his performance. He collects $3000 for third place.

Paul Gains for the IAAF

The post ETHIOPIANS GUDETA AND GEBRESILASE WIN OTTAWA 10K appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News | Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Dear Lencho Bati: Who are you uniting?

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By Girma Tefera
Lencho Bati

Lencho Bati

The big speech given by ODF leader Lencho Bati in the Seattle Ethiopian convention has already sparked controversy among Ethiopians worldwide. Some Ethiopians in the diaspora think he is a visionary Oromo leader with idealism and hope for unity in Ethiopia. That is fine and we should engage with his moderate views; compared to some left wing separatists. Anytime groups come around a table for dialogue should be applauded. But most us are still left scratching our heads on what exactly is Mr. Lencho planning to unite?

 

Most of us who attended the event or watched the video of his speech seem to be mesmerized by his charisma and his populist rhetoric. Lencho got many laughs from the crowd with his references to Prof. Mesfin’s age and his jokes that Oromos wanted to “take Wallelign” if Amharas don’t want him. But, behind all this comedy is the same old ethnic politics that we have come to hate about Woyane.

 

For example, Lencho depicted the political battle as being between ethnic unionist and ethnic separatists. But let us pause for a second. That is the same two narrow choices offered to us by TPLF!  In 1991, Meles basically told us “hey look at those separatist OLF and ogadens, they want to destroy Ethiopia but we TPLF will save you from them.” 26 years later, Are we going to fall for this same old trick? Are we going to repeat history again? Are we going to settle for backward Marxist politics that divide and define people based on temporary languages, by ignoring our complex and holistic identity as multiethnic Ethiopians?

 

When Lencho said “we are unionists,” the question on most Ethiopians must be who exactly are you uniting? Oromos and Amaras? What about around half of Ethiopians who are born with both or many ethnolinguistic ancestry? What about millions of mixed and non-mixed Ethiopians who simply do NOT want to identify with a certain narrow tribal label?

 

Mr. Lencho, the main problem with the last transitional process in 1990s was not the lack of alphabet soup tribal labels sitting around the table. The problem was millions of Ethiopians were ignored and insulted when TPLF decided to exclude Ethiopians who are simply Ethiopians! That is why these Ethiopians rallied around Kinijit/Andinet in 2005 and voted out TPLF. We are not worried about replacing TPLF with another LF or ODF or a coalition. We want to remove the whole system that divides our people based on tribe.

 

Mr. Lencho, just think of Wollo province for a second, which is around 8-10 million and almost 10% of Ethiopia. If you are Wolloye, you will know that let alone ethnicity, even religions are mixed. Anywhere, you will find a person with a Christian first name and a Muslim father name or vise Versa. When TPLF re-drew our map, it was so confused that it had to put an “Oromo zone” in the middle of Wollo because people everywhere are mixed. After 25 years, woyane’s social engineering still has failed and many people in Wollo are proud of their mixed identity. Now, if you go in the middle of Wollo and shout “I am a unionist,” do you know how ridiculous you will sound? How can you ethnically unite a person who already has great-grand-parents from different ethnicity? Nature has already done the job for you sir. These people have been mixed for generations, way before your bogeyman Menelik was even born, perhaps even before 17th century, when Oromo speaking rulers reigned. For people in Wollo, it would make better sense, if you promise them to end this nightmare of ethnic politics that threatens to destroy their identity and divide their families. It is better if you promise them individual rights based on democracy and merit, instead of group rights that only benefits tribal elites.

 

I gave you only one example of Wollo, but you can go to every urban and other regions and you will find millions who are born mixed, some of them don’t even know it, thanks to being brainwashed by Woyane politics (and their OPDO and ANDM branches). These days even so-called “Amharas” have been brainwashed by woyane to think tribally. But you can tell how ridiculous these TPLF/ANDM Amaras are because they go to Welkait and wave the flag of Ethiopia and worship Menelik & Taytu. They are so amateur that they don’t realize their “Amhara hero” Taytu was Oromo and even Menelik’s mother was Oromo. This is how childish and confused the tribal politics has become.

 

Mr. Lencho, we need to end this ethnic politics nightmare and throw the whole woyane system in the garbage of history. We don’t need another ethnic unity formula. Yes, We realize some of your diaspora Oromo constituents are even more ridiculous and have dreams of independent Oromia nation. That is unfortunate that we have short-sighted and uneducated people. Let them try and die fighting for their mythical nation. Because we can not repeat history again and change the terms of our future. It is time we end our misery, bitterness and backwardness, and join the globalised modern world. The debate of Ethiopia’s future can NOT be between ethnic unionists vs ethnic separatist. The future debate is between ethnic unionists and non-tribal democratic forces, period.

 

The post Dear Lencho Bati: Who are you uniting? appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News | Breaking News: Your right to know!.

The Crisis of Leadership and Legitimacy within Ethiopia’s TPLF Minority Regime

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Netsanet Bulto

Ever since the death of the late TPLF chairman and Prime Minister, Meles Zenawi, the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) has lacked a similarly dominant personality able to maintain consensus, either thru charisma, intrigue, or both.  This condition has given rise within the TPLF to internal divisions and animosities. Abay Woldu, the current president of the regional state of Tigray, holds the chairmanship of the party. But he does not wield the power, nor command the respect, the late Meles held. This leadership vacuum has led to an intense, internal power struggle within the TPLF. Stories from multiple and credible sources abound to this effect.

The worst schism to emerge is between the domestic and military intelligence agencies. Fissures also have opened between the ruling party, security agencies, the military and the bureaucracy.  Open and confidential sources indicate that friction within and between state organs, involving the regime’s most important personalities, has created an unprecedented crisis.

Torn between party loyalty and popular anti-government sentiment, important partners within the ruling coalition, such as the Oromo People’s Democracy Organization (OPDO), the Oromo wing of the ruling EPRDF, have begun to assert their independence from the once-omnipotent TPLF faction. The result has been the purging of thousands of mid- and low-level OPDO officials in an attempt to maintain party cohesion in the face of popular anti-government protests engulfing the Oromo region. However, sources report that new recruits and appointees meant to replace those purged are also quietly resigning. Open defiance of the regime and the so-called “Command Post” administering martial law has become widespread throughout Oromia and is openly expressed in social gatherings and in public.

While OPDO has been under organizational stress since the recent resurgence of Oromo protests, Abadula Gemeda, the speaker of parliament and former president of the Oromo region, has stepped into the breach. Abadula is a close associates of Gen. Samora Yunus, the military chief of staff, who has been calling the shots since the implementation of martial law. Samora’s position as head of the notorious Command Post is reportedly a cause of resentment within the military’s upper echelons, including his longtime rival, Lt. General Saere Mekonnen, until recently Commander of the Northern Front and currently Head of Training Main Department of the Ministry of Defense.

A Samora loyalist,  Lt. General Abraha Wodlemariam, a.k.a Quarter, the notorious war criminal responsible for the massacre of thousands of civilians in the ongoing counter insurgency in the Ogadan region while in his capacity as a commander of the Eastern Front and in concert with another  butcher, the President of the Ogaden region, has been appointed to a new position of Chief of Operations of Defense. This is yet another clear indication that Lt. General Seare is, once again, sidelined, and Samora’s grip and consolidation of power over the military is becoming more than clear.  It has been reported that Security Chief Getachew Assefa, Abay Tesehay, Sibehat Nega, and others, including former Airforce Commander, Maj. General Aebebe Tekelehamina, aka Jobe, have been actively working behind the scenes to have Lt. Genera Seare Mekonnen replace Samora as Chief of staff of the Defense forces of the TPLF dominated military and state.

 

As well known, the former commander of the Airforce, Gen. Abebe, like his close friend Tasdakn Gebre Tesnay, former Chief of Staff, has made his deep frustrations public at the state of affairs in Ethiopia under the current regime. In a series of articles published by the Amharic weekly, the Reporter,  in  the past year, the retired General has called the current situation in Ethiopia one that is endangering the security and survival of Ethiopia , and therefore, as the most potent threat, not only to the regime, but also  to the  multiethnic national fabric. In his latest article, retired Maj. Gen. Abebe recounts pervasive corruption, including at the highest levels of government, absence of good governance, lack of a democratic space, human rights abuse, and the inability of the regime to respond to popular demands, lack of political will and proper mechanisms in place to make the necessary changes.

These salient features all the more discussed as factors that would somehow converge to destabilize Ethiopia and pose the most serious security threat to Ethiopia. The former General has indeed the courage to ring the alarm bells to the otherwise deaf ears of the regime and its leaders who are in disarray. Although, one may argue that the general is off the mark as regard to the correct prognosis, which cannot be other than a transitional process towards a genuine democratic order for the country that involves all stakeholders and political forces.

The other key leaders of OPDO are Lemma Megersa, Beker Shale (until recently) and Abiye Mohammed, the former minister of science and technology, who maintains a low public profile. While close to chief of staff Samora, this coterie of OPDO’s bosses are, like their patron, Abadula, at odds with Getachew Assefa, the chief of security. Getachew, in turn, is reported to have the backing of Abay Tsehay, and Sibehat Nega, both TPLF heavyweights still wielding perhaps the greatest influence within the TPLF in the wake of the Oromo protest that rocked the region in the past eighteen months. Lemma Megersa, a onetime security official, has a firm allegiance to Abadula, who was instrumental in his rise to power as president of the Oromo region.  Unlike the rocky relationships most OPDO leaders now have with those of the security services. Lemma is known to report regularly to Abdadula about communications he still maintains with security chief Getachew.

Haile Mariam Desgalegn has turned out to be a lame duck Prime Minister and a pawn in the never-ending power struggles of the TPLF power brokers. He is said to be close to General Samora’s group. One recent clue to this is his recent rebuff of a report released by Aba Tsehaye, a close supporter and ally of Getachew Assefa, concerning the incompetence permeating the executive branch’s cabinet and state ministers.

These ministers were appointed by Haile Mariam, the prime minster during the state of emergency as part of an “in-depth renewal” promising good governance, less corruption and responsiveness to popular demands for change. But neither this much-vaunted Tilk Tehadiso, nor the change of cabinet and state ministers, has delivered or appeased public anger in the wake of the Oromo and Amhara protests. The Ethiopian people have largely perceived the Tilk Tehadeso as yet another of the regime’s gimmicks to cover up and reverse the growing illegitimacy, crisis of confidence and near-total rejection by the Ethiopian people that have plagued it in the past eighteen months and were expressed by the massive protests in the Oromo and Amhara regions.

Leadership of the regime’s Amhara coalition partner, ANDM, has also been at odds with its TPLF partner to a point of approaching open confrontation.  Like the OPDO, ANDM’s ranks are rife with resentment and discontent over TPLF domination and the heavy repression that followed protests around Gondar and Gojam in the Amhara region.

The TPLF-controlled military is also suffering from low morale. Desertions and defections, especially by the Amhara and Oromo soldiers whose ethnic groups comprise most of the lower ranks, have sharply increased in the rebellious areas.  The defection of entire platoons and companies has occurred on several occasions. Anxiety and confusion over such developments now afflicts nearly all military forces at all levels, including the Agazi Division, a special unit used for repression that’s widely despised since its massacre of hundreds of unarmed protesters in the aftermath of the stolen 2005 election. This trend has worsened since the most recent Oromo and Amhara protests. Recruitment quotas are unmet, chronically so in the Amhara, Oromo and, to a lesser extent, other regions.  ESAT and other media outlets have recently covered the severity of this problem confronting the regime.

Another trouble that has been a chronic headache for the TPLF military and security top brass has been the emerging armed popular resistance in Norther part of Ethiopia. The military leadership had held several secret meetings on how to control the situation in Northern Ethiopia, including a discussion without reaching an agreement, about the possibility of invading Eritrea and thereby wiping out the armed resistance groups based there. This option has been objected by elements of the military and security who understand the extremely low state  morale in the army, the chronic defection and desertions plaguing it ,  as well as  with their bitter memory of the military’s  tragic loss at the battle of Tsoerna in June of 2016 which the TPLF commanders ill-advisedly  launched against Eritreans, resulting in  total carnage , hundreds of the Ethiopian armed forces  killed and several hundred others  lightly and heavy wounded, crowding Mekele Hospital and other medical facilities in Tigray.  One consideration related to this view on the part of those who oppose military measures against Eritrea has to do with the very fear harbored by TPLF leaders. They lack confidence because they very well know that the army is dominated by Tigrayan commanders from top to bottom, the army has a very low morale, and top it all they are very much aware that the army is fully about the malfeasance and massive corruption of its top brass, Thus they surmise the armed forces as it is constituted today   cannot be relied upon for a full scale war with the tough and hardened Eritrean defense forces. In addition, the tough and rough terrain that is known to give a high advantage to defending Eritrean forces in an event of an invasion by the TPLF led Ethiopian Armed forces.

Getachew’s National Intelligence and Security Service, known as NISS, is struggling to maintain its status and expand its turf. NISS is increasingly engaged in staving off challenges to its influence from the military intelligence service led by Maj. Gen. Gebre Dilla, a close ally of General Samora Yunus. Defense’s Military intelligence Department is said to be competing for power by overextending its tentacles and fielding agents of its own down to the kebele, or neighborhood, level and into all kinds of organizations, including religious ones, generating apprehension and visible hostility on the part of Getachew and NISS.

Recent leaks about infighting and power struggles within the ruling political elite are due in part to this development. They describe Samora and his own military intelligence chief, Gebre Dilla, using the state of emergency and the command post apparatus as a cover to widen their jurisdiction and infringe on the civilian intelligence services’ authority. This contest has added to the animosities, factionalism, and internal divisions affecting the minority regime.

Underneath these visible manifestations of discord, the demoralization infecting the military has spread to NISS as well. Intelligence sources attribute this to the repeated failure to control emerging political conditions throughout the county—viewed by many observers as a decaying political system cracking at the seams–and inability to understand the new fissures. Adding to this institutional state of anxiety is the budding armed resistance of Patriotic Ginbot 7 forces, now gaining momentum and intensity in their attacks on military, security, and regime administrative targets in several parts of the country, especially in the northern and southern Gondar areas of the Amhara region.

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FEBRUARY 19, 1937, AFTER THE ASSASSINATION GRAZIANI IN THE MASSACRE OF DEBRE LIBANOS

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Kidane Alemayehu

An unpublished photos documenting the massacre carried out by Italian soldiers in the Ethiopian Orthodox monastery of Debre Libanos in 1937. The TG2000, the news of Tv2000, shows exclusively a historic snap with the monks are waiting to be loaded onto trucks that would eventually lead them the scene of the shootings. A massacre took place forgotten the fascists 80 years ago. No one knew of the massacre of the monastery of Debre Libanos someone had snapped photos. In May ’37, in Ethiopia, some Italian soldiers were shot in retaliation 2000 people defenseless monks and Orthodox pilgrims (449 seconds the official report). The order was given the viceroy Rodolfo Graziani. It was General Pietro Maletti to execute the command. Tv2000 devoted a documentary film in the massacre, with documents and unpublished testimony by the journalist Antonello Carvigiani, for photography by Andrea Tramontano. Now, for the first time, the TG2000 also shows the image of the massacre, thanks to Luigi Panella, history lover of Italian colonialism in Africa.

“There was a boy – told Panella to TG2000 – who had not yet turned 27, in that plain where the monks were shot. His name was Virgilio Cozzani, was a lieutenant of complement in the 45th Battalion colonial Muslim who Maletti gave the job to do the shootings in Shunkurti. This is the place that is mentioned in the COZZANI photographs. COZZANI went around with a camera, taking photographs like all Italian boys in Ethiopia at that time. On May 20 he made some photographs just the day before the massacre and later on May 21 to Shunkurtì “.

“In the back of the photo – it revealed Panella – there is also a record made by COZZANI, in his own hand: Debre Libanos, Casci prisoners, the helmets were Coptic priests, 20 May 1937. And then another record. On May 21, 37, ‘hello neh …’. The ‘hello neh …’ this Italian guy, who goes in the other pictures on horseback, smiles but then becomes the protagonist of a terrible massacre, almost mocking. The impression is that the banality of evil, of a young man laughing and joking before making a killing. ”

The attack on Rodolfo Graziani – took place February 19, 1937, exactly eighty years ago – is a testimony to the Italian conquest of Ethiopia – proclaimed by Mussolini’s speech on 9 May of the previous year, it is by no means complete. The Ethiopian resistance controls large areas of the country and manages to pull off an attack on the Viceroy even in the heart of the Italian power: the Addis Ababa government building.

That ‘s where Graziani organizes a ceremony to celebrate the birth of the Prince of Napoli Vittorio Emanuele of Savoy, came to light on 12 February. Appointment invites all local notables but also the city’s poor to distribute alms.
Taking advantage of this occasion, two young Eritreans, Abraham Deboch and Mogus Asghedom, hurl bombs against Graziani. There are seven dead. The Viceroy is wounded.

Ian Campbell,  historian of British descent residing in Addis Ababa and maximum knowledge of these events, tells Antonello Carvigiani for Docufilm of Tv2000 Debre Libanos (2016 – directed by Andrea Tramontano , edited by Dolores Gangi ): ” What happened was in February 1937 She occurred an attempt on the life of Graziani while he was presiding over a public event they were participating in several thousand Ethiopians. The were launched against several hand grenades, despite the security system that was designed to protect. These were the grenades thrown at her at close range, and he was seriously injured. All his life he had to suffer the consequences of this attack, bringing in their own bodies of those hundreds of shrapnel. “

IAN CAMPBELL

Italians unleashed a ferocious revenge . For three days Addis Ababa is put on fire. It ‘a massacre. Ethiopian sources speak of 30,000 victims. Italian historians say 3000. Leading the crackdown are the black shirts of the Federal Guido Cortese.

The president of the Association of the Ethiopian patriots, Daniel Jote Mesfin, explains Antonello Carvigiani:  In Addis Ababa after the attack unleashed a bloody repression led by the Blackshirts. The city is burned, destroyed. They killed hundreds of people, including children and old women. The city was a river of blood. It was a black day in our history. “

Three days of massacres and looting. A recount, there is also an Italian witness, the envoy of Corriere della Sera Ciro Poggiali, who in a memoir published in 1971 writes:

“All civilians who are in Addis Ababa, in the absence of a police or military organization, have taken on the task of lightning revenge conducted with the most authentic fascist squads systems. They go armed with truncheons and iron bars, accoppando many natives are still in the street. Additional property made mass arrests; Negroes herds are driven to terrible shots curbascio like sheep. In short, the streets around the tukul are strewn with dead. I see a driver who knocked down after an old black man with a shot of mace pierces his head from side to side with a bayonet. Needless to say, the destruction strikes against unsuspecting and innocent people. “

FEBRUARY 19, 1937 GRAZIANI WITH ABUNA KIRILLOS IN GHEBBI SHORTLY BEFORE THE ATTACK

The violence did not spare the Orthodox Cathedral of St. George . He describes, again, Ciro Poggiali:  “I’ve been to visit the interior of the Church of San Giorgio, ravaged by fire hanged out time with oil drums, for order and the presence of the Federal Cortese. All the paintings were lost. The sanctum has been opened and the ciborium containing the tablets of the law has been burned. Fifty deacons who were gathered in the bell house were tied with the intention to let them burn inside the church as it burned, but the intervention of a colonel of the grenadiers prevented the destruction. “

These three days of massacres are not enough to appease Graziani, who is convinced that behind the attack there is the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and, in particular, the monastery of Debre Libanos.

Ethiopia is, in fact, a Christian country, evangelized, according to tradition, by San Frumentius, in the fourth century. Church and Empire are the two pillars that support the state. Religious authorities and politics are intertwined and mutually supportive. The monastery of Debre Libanos is the center of this historic alliance. Graziani want to break it. He believes that to consolidate the Italian military conquest is necessary to crush the Orthodox Church.
Corroborates the news – never confirmed – according to which the two assailants have fled the monastery of Debre Libanos and planning its annihilation.

On 18 May 1937 , the General Maletti surrounds the monastery. It is no coincidence that they are chosen from those days is the feast of the Archangel Mikael and St. Tekle Haymanot. A great religious solemnity. Many pilgrims reach the monastery. The Italian troops to enter but do not go out. It’s a trap.

On 21 May, priests, monks and pilgrims are loaded onto military trucks and taken away from the monastery, to be shot on the plateau of Laga Welde.

Still tells Ian Campbell: “Each truck was filled with a variable number of prisoners between thirty and fifty, he started a truck every thirty minutes, and these prisoners were taken to a site on the far edge of a very deep gorge. About 500 meters deep. They shot the prisoners in groups, and the bodies were thrown in the deep waters “.

The young deacons come instead executed in another place: Ingecha, near Debre Berhan. According to the official report of the victims of the massacre Graziani totaled 449: 320 monks and 129 deacons.
IAN CAMPBELL, however, believes that the figures are different:  “The numbers reported by Graziani are very low. We know that the number of members of the clergy – including monks – was no less than a thousand. The total number of people murdered in the monastery area is about 1,200 and the number of people killed in Debre-Berhan is about 800, including deacons. The total number of victims, however, is still uncertain, because while the names of the monks were known, the same is not true for the pilgrims who had gone there for that occasion. ”

Altogether, they are killed by Italian troops between 1800 and 2200 people. Priests, monks, deacons, pilgrims come to the monastery of Debre Libanos to pray.

This is the largest massacre of Christians ever in Africa.

EXTRA CONTENT

The town of Castiglione decided to rename the street named after the general Pietro Maletti, a native of the country, war hero, but also responsible for the massacre of the monastery of Debre Libanos, Ethiopia in 1937.

The basis of the decision also documents collected in the documentary film of Tv2000. Marco Bergamaschi Service

 

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Ethiopia at tipping point as Congress mulls human rights bill

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BY AL MARIAM, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR –

 

Ethiopia has been under a state of emergency decree since October 2016. That decree imposes “draconian restrictions on freedom of expression, association, and assembly that go far beyond what is permissible under international law.” There has been a significant deterioration in human rights violations in Ethiopia over the past decade.

For over a decade, Representatives Christopher Smith (R-N.J.) and the late Donald Payne (D-N.J.) toiled tirelessly to pass a bill promoting democracy and human rights accountability in Ethiopia. In 2007, HR 2003, co-sponsored by 85 members, passed the House.

That bill sought to promote human rights, democracy, judicial independence, press freedom and counterterrorism cooperation; and it strongly urged release of all political prisoners. The bill died in the Senate, supposedly due to a hold placed by Sen. James Inhofe(R-Okla.).

 

In February, Representative Smith introduced H.Res. 128  to “support respect for human rights and encourage inclusive governance” in Ethiopia. Last Week, Senators Ben Cardin (D-Md.) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) introduced S.Res. 168, co-sponsored by 14 senators, which mirrors the House version.

In a statement, Cardin cautioned “partnering with the Ethiopian government on counterterrorism does not mean that we will stay silent when it abuses its own people.” Rubio underscored the “critical” need for the U.S. to remain “vocal in condemning Ethiopia’s human rights abuses against its own people.”

During the March 9 hearing on the H.Res. 128, Smith stated  that there are “at least 10,000 political prisoners” in the country. He condemned the arbitrary imprisonment of opposition party leaders, criminalization of journalism under an “antiterrorism law” and the absence of the rule of law and “lack of due process in Ethiopian courts”.

Ranking member Karen Bass (D-Calif.) also underscored the “steady assault on the human and civil rights of citizens” and the deprivation of the “right of peaceful assembly and freedom of expression” in Ethiopia.

In its 2017 report on Ethiopia, Human Rights Watch (HRW) documented the large-scale “crack-down” by “Ethiopian security forces” against “largely peaceful demonstrations, killing more than 500 people.”  HRW also documented that, “Security forces arrested tens of thousands of students, teachers, opposition politicians, health workers, and those who sheltered or assisted fleeing protesters.” HRW’s findings are corroborated by the U.S. State Department and Freedom House.

According to the Committee to Protect Journalists, Ethiopia ranked fourth on is 2015 list of the 10 Most Censored Countries and is the fifth-worst jailer of journalists worldwide. In May 2010, the ruling regime in Ethiopia claimed to have won 99.6 percent of the parliamentary seats. In 2015, it claimed 100 percent of the seats.

The ruling regime in Ethiopia has refused all requests for an independent human rights inquiry by U.N. special rapporteurs. Similar calls by the European parliament, the African Commission and the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights have fallen on deaf ears.

Despite a history of massive human rights violations, the Obama administration has provided unwavering political and financial support to the ruling regime in Ethiopia. When Obama visited Ethiopia in July 2015, he anointed that regime, which claimed to have won all parliamentary seats, “democratically elected.” Between 2010-16, the U.S. has provided well over $5 billion to Ethiopia, making it the second-largest recipient of U.S. aid in Africa.

Earlier this month, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson in a speech to State Department employees announced  that, “Guiding all of our foreign policy actions are our fundamental values: our values around freedom, human dignity, the way people are treated.”

In a speech of 6,511 words, Tillerson devoted a stunning 1,057 words to talk about American values and their role in guiding the future of American foreign policy. Tillerson declared the way “we represent our values” is “by conditioning our policy engagements on people adopting certain actions as to how they treat people”.

Human rights represent the rock-solid foundation of the American Republic as eloquently proclaimed in the Declaration of Independence and implemented in the Bill of Rights. Without Eleanor Roosevelt, there would have been no Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

President Jimmy Carter rightly affirmed  in his farewell address that, “America did not invent human rights. In a very real sense, it is the other way round. Human rights invented America.” In a 2012 N.Y. Times op-ed, Carter wondered if the U.S. had abdicated its moral leadership in the arena of international human rights.

The pending human rights bill is judiciously crafted to help advance human rights protections, promote democratic shared governance and institutionalize accountability and transparency in Ethiopia by improving oversight and monitoring of U.S. assistance. Congress should pass it.

There a quiet riot, if not a creeping civil war, taking place in Ethiopia today. The massive uprisings and resistance in the Oromiya and Amhara regions of the country over the past year and the militarized response backed by an emergency decree is merely one indication of the downward spiral into a vortex of civil strife compounded by muted ethnic hatred and hankering for revenge.

There are deep grievances against the ruling regime than cannot be papered over by an emergency decree. With claims of 100 percent election victory, the regime suffers from a serious legitimacy deficit, which creates conditions for violent and nonviolent resistance. Ethiopia today is at a tipping point.

Passage of a human rights and inclusive governance bill will go a long way in staving off widespread internecine conflict in Ethiopia. By insisting on structural reforms, the bill creates the necessary conditions for peaceful political dialogue among contending groups and helps open political spaces for peaceful change.

For instance, the provisions in the bill demanding repeal of the draconian “anti-terrorism” and “civil society” laws could help open the political space for dialogue and negotiations. The alternative to passage of the human rights bill is for the U.S. to watch idly as the slow burning fuse inches closer to the Ethiopian powder keg.

 

Alemayehu (Al) Mariam is a professor of political science at California State University, San Bernardino, with research interests in African law and human rights. He is a constitutional lawyer and senior editor of theInternational Journal of Ethiopian Studies.


The views expressed by contributors are their own and not the views of The Hill. 

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Dr. Demeke Gessese speaks about TPLF crimes on Amhara people – Minnesota

A LARGE GENOCIDE IS HAPPENING IN ETHIOPIA

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OPERATION CONSCIENCE·TUESDAY, MAY 30, 2017
Ethiopia’s current government has committed genocide against several ethnic groups, but the Amhara, whose traditional lands the regime’s senior leadership has annexed to their Tigrayan tribal homeland, have been the hardest hit.
The Amhara, according to Wikipedia, “an ethnic group traditionally inhabiting the northern and central highlands of Ethiopia, particularly the Amhara Region. [Although Ethiopian government statistics are notoriously unreliable,] according to the 2007 national census, they numbered 19,867,817 individuals, comprising 27.12% of the country’s population. They are also found within the Ethiopian expatriate community, particularly in North America. The Amharas claim to originate from Solomon and primarily adhere to the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church”
The Amhara population in the above-cited Ethiopian government’s own 2007 census was 2.5 million less than what was projected based on the 1997 census and the population growth rate for the rest of Ethiopia: the rate of growth for the Amhara population was 1.7%, while the average rate for the rest of the country was 2.6% annually.
This is believed by experts to be due to systematic denial by the government of critical medicine and aid, as well as the coercive sterilization of Amhara women.
Beside this larger “silent genocide”, a book published in Amharic, titled Yetifat Zemen (Age of Distraction), details the violent mass killing of the Amhara from 1991 to 2015. It covers about 8 zones in Oromia, one Zone in Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region (SNNP), a village in Afar, the whole Benishangul Gumz, Dire Dewa City, Harari and Amhara Regions geographically. The author, journalist and human rights activist Muluken Tesfaw, has shared the following comments below:
“I employed snow ball sampling technique to get the participants everywhere. I have interviewed in depth with Genocide survivals, victim families and eye witnesses. I have collected some names and photographs of massacred Amharas and visited mass grave yards, cliffs where the Amhara people thrown alive, and so forth. I have used secondary and primary sources like support us letters and complaints written by the Amharas by the time, local identify cards, HRCO reports … and so on with the help of trained data collectors.
Former Ethiopian Human Rights Council (the current HRCo) has reported a number of times about the mass killings and evictions of ethnically Amhara people.
The number of massacred Amharas is very shocking. The highest number of people are killed in West Hararghe Zone of Oromia region and Metekel zone of Benishangul Gumz Region. Not less than 40,000 people have been massacred in these two areas alone. I have some pictures of cliffs and mass grave yard areas as well as videos and audios of witnesses. In the rest of the areas from 10 to 2000 people have been killed.
The Genocide active years were 1990-93, 1999/2000, 2005/6 and 2013-15.
Apart from massacre of Amharas, these people are being evicted everywhere. Just to mention some:
  • 9 woreda inhabitants (woreda is the second administrative unit [district] next to kebele [neighborhood]) in East Arsi in 1991/2. Their houses were burnt and evicted
  • 60,000 Amharas in West Arsi and East Shoa by the same year
  • 14,000 in Wolega in 2000
  • 22,000 in SNNP in 2013
  • 10,000 in Benishangul Gumz in 2013.
I have partial lists of the names and families of evicted Amharas in SNNP and Benishangul Gumz with order letters of eviction from authorities.
There are thousands of genocide survivors and witnesses. The places which should be investigated are identified on maps. There are a lot of secondary sources (documents) open for proofing.
There are mass graves for investigation. Anyone can easily find human skeleton or bones at least in the deep wells, natural cliffs and jungles till this day. Any local inhabitant can easily identify the names of massacred people in their villages.
I would be pleased to provide all the documents I have. By the way, there is still active genocide in Ethiopia. I hope you may have heard about the Wolkait Amhara Identity Struggle, where historically Amhara lands are forcefully annexed with Tigrai. The regime is killing, jailing and enforcing ethnic cleansing to force Amhara out and settle Tigreans in the area. About half of the indigenous people have left the area and more than half a million Tigreans are settled in replacement. The indigenous women are being sexually enslaved and forced to bear Tigrean children. The crimes committed against these people meet and even surpass the criteria for genocide set by the UN.”
It’s important to note that many of these crimes against humanity occurred while the new World Health Organization Director-General, Dr. Tedros Adhanom, held senior positions as Minister of Health and, then, Foreign Minister with this government.
Additional documentation will be posted soon.
Please help share this information as widely as possible.
Thank you.
Source- https://www.facebook.com/notes/operation-conscience/a-large-genocide-is-happening-in-ethiopia/1770226759934660/

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A Determined, Spirited and Convinced “fighter” is the only one to win the current weak TPLF! (by Muluken Gebeyew)

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TPLF (Tigray People’s Liberation Front) celebrated its 26 years on power on 28th  May 2017. Unlike the outward perception, the brutal regime led by TPLF is slightly and gently cracking. In its field days and early years following control of power in 1991, its members were hard core fighters with religious type of conviction to their purpose than other life desirable events (material wealth, money, cars, relationship, houses, etc). After few  years of brutal rule, majority of them converted to the latter. Its members and affiliates’ would like TPLF to rule longer  to maintain their economic, political and military power  so that they would continue to loot further and accumulate wealth to enrich themselves  and pay handouts for their servants or  paid mercenaries.

TPLF is  a minority  parasitic regime  currently bleeding, wounding, imprisoning, selling, killing and terrorizing Ethiopians for the last 26 years. It is a private company  which controls Ethiopia under the pretext of political party owned by an  elite  ultra-Tigrayans and pro-Eritrean secession family members. It owns the Ethiopian economy, military, foreign affair, security and all the important  sector of the society.

Unlike old days, they will not fight as soldgers if any bitter oppositions confront them, rather they send others to fight  for them. They have the economic, military and security means to enable this. Whatever money and resources they spend; this will not be like a determined, spirited and convinced “fighter” they used to be.

The last few years, they are accustomed of “city” life; driving the latest car, owning and building luxury houses, sending their kids to best school and abroad, dating the trendy modern ladies of the town, saving millions of birr or foreign currency in local or foreign banks, etc. They tested the “sweetness” of rulers life. They wouldn’t dare to go back to the field  and fight if a determined and spirited opposition fighting force comes.

TPLF also run out most of the tactic it has used to rule the country. People are aware of the impact of divide and rule policy, anti-democratic ethnic policy and their false propaganda. They  lost a very significant chairman who was charismatic, shroud, street smart and make-believe con leader whom they couldn’t replace any persona like him. The civil uprising of Ethiopians in Central, Southern and Northern Ethiopia in 2015/16 shaken the regime until it rescued by Emergency State decree.

TPLF is no longer strong as it was but it is very rich. It owns several billions of dollars  and has long reach hand. It is able to use the money it looted from Ethiopians  to pay for its domestic and foreign mercenaries who work day and night for TPLF regime to continue. Unlike the former regimes, TPLF pays millions of $ to  foreign lobbies to influence the international world which have been successful. The question is how long this will continue?

Just observe the media outlets and social media in Diaspora. The outspoken one which praise TPLF are led by non-Tigre (mainly ‘Amhara’). TPLF no longer needs its ‘native’ members to do such, but paid mercenaries of other ethnic members who own the radio, TV, Pal talk rooms, chat show etc.  These paid  mercenaries present themselves as die hard supporters more than the “natives”.  Some of them tasked with appearance of opposition but essence of TPLF. Some are dormant chat show persons with mission to character assassination  of patriotic  Ethiopians under the pretext of  Critic. Although many people feel sadness due to these mercenaries’ action (some of them used to be leading opposition in the past), it is not unusual for some Ethiopians to sell their soul for money and wealth despite living in “free world” where they can earn their bread by their own means. We remember that during Italian Invasion, there were many Ethiopian who were ‘Banda /Shumbashes’.

Their spies, gate keepers, affiliate members who make life miserable to majority of Ethiopian in Ethiopia are non-Tigre Ethiopians who sold their morality, humanity and soul for  bread. These will not be dependable force if the wind blow the other direction. If any more offer comes, they would abandon the regime.

Unlike TPLF’s 25 years of comfortable rule, for the first time the Northern Ethiopia farmers raised arm. These will make TPLF sleepless. TPLF knows well the impact of  Rural people/farmers raising arm. They used farmers to be successful in their struggle for power which they achieved in 1991.

TPLF’s top brass are also ageing, and their dream of  passing the power button to  its new generation hasn’t been easy. There are many power mongers among themselves. These have created lots of rift among themselves. Although these days TPLF appears elephant on appearance, the truth is it is a squirrel.

The Ethiopians people anti-TPLF struggle (though currently fragmented) have to continue. Solidarity  and Unity among these forces is a must to win the war. A determined, spirited and convinced “fighter” is the only to win the current weak TPLF.

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Ethiopia turns off internet nationwide as students sit exams

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The country has closed its digital borders to prevent leaks during tests after papers were posted online by activists last year

The government appears to have taken the move to shut down internet access as a preventative measure. Photograph: Alamy

Ethiopia has shut off internet access to its citizens, according to reports from inside the country, apparently due leaked exam papers for the nation’s grade 10 examinations.

Outbound traffic from Ethiopia was shutdown around 4pm UK time on Tuesday, according to Google’s transparency report, which registered Ethiopian visits to the company’s sites plummeting over the evening. By Wednesday afternoon, access still had not been restored.

Last year, activists leaked the papers for the country’s 12th grade national exams, calling for the postponement of the papers due to a school shutdown in the regional state of Oromia. Now, the government appears to have taken the move to shut down internet access as a preventative measure.

Ethiopia reportedly cutoff internet -for z 3rd time in 12 months -fearing activists will leak a scheduled national exam as they did last yr. https://twitter.com/zelalemkibret/status/869645556397862914 

It’s the third time in a year that Ethiopia’s digital borders have been slammed shut. In July 2016, the government blocked a significant amount of traffic after university entrance exams were posted online; another block followed in August of that year.

The move is a common one across many developing nations: Algeria also blocked access to social media, in June last year, in an attempt to fight cheating in school exams.

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A mono/multi-ethnic state in the context of language and its implications

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By Jemal Y. Adem

Note: I wrote this commentary to share what I believe in about mono/ multi-ethnic state in the context of language and its implications. (Jemal Y. Adem)

The views of people about wealth, nations, race, religions and many more complex issues determine the social order of a given country. Given these complex nature of humans, people of any homogenous or multi-ethnic nation quite often have differences on the political system they are governed by. The divergent views of the people, thus, lead to the birth of a variety of political forces. If the opposing forces which are competing for political power stand on irreconcilable positions, it would be pretty difficult to sustain the nationhood, let alone prosperous. For example, the power struggle between the two opposing forces; Unionist Vs Separatist, Religious Vs Secularist, Capitalist Vs Socialist is a very common phenomenon in the world. Unfortunately, these opposing forces could not live under the same roof for a long time. As we witnessed in our life, the winner (by arms or people´s voice) take the driving seat and try to (re) shape the country. Being on the seat, however, does not mean that you have a total control of the situation.

As there are so many polarized views in the multi-ethnic state, the political forces, therefore, should come half-way (middle ground), rather than think and apply ALL or NONE approaches. Because “my way or no way mentality” facilitates people´s fall to the deepest and misery hole. It is very understandable that, there could be tensions among ethnic groups within a country; however, there are also ways to avoid the tensions from becoming a deadly confrontation. So, engagement among polarized forces is the very best approaches people can do to resolve their setbacks without bloodshed. Believe me, there are so much uncomfortable things to listen / discuss, but it would be even more uncomfortable & deadly, if we failed not to listen to each other with a hope of consensus.

There are about 6,500 spoken languages in the world. If the country has to be built by the people who speak the same language, we should have 6,500 countries by now. But there are only 195 countries to this date. Thus, if we are really genuine, and determined for the benefits of all citizens in heterogeneous states, definitely, there are ways to have a vibrant and stable multi-ethnic state. What I meant is diversity could not be sources of the mother of all problems. If having a single language was a pre-requisite to establish a nation, Somalia would not have been a failed state. The biggest cause of the problem is, I think, we are not ready to open up ourselves to the reality of the present. We are evolving all the time, yet we are tightly closed not to accommodate the social changes. Now, let us take a look at some experiences across the world.

The USA is the most powerful country today. If we look at the timeline of this country, it went through horrible experiences. Even these days, the Americans have problems here and there and are not immune to conflicts.

The case of USA in terms of nation-building is a bit different. The majority of Americans emigrate from Europe. Thus, there was a possibility that the Europeans could have created a multi-ethnic state of USA. They, however, form new identity called “Americanism”. To be precise, they left their different languages behind and used English as an official language. Nevertheless, there was fierce resistance from Germans. It is important to note that this assimilation process happened in 18th. And the same kind of assimilation approaches had been tried across the world. Few were successful and others were failed. OK, it is fine to think that the emigrated Europeans were successful to create “Americanism”. Could American like assimilation be working these days in multi-ethnic state? Honestly, I do not think so, rather it back-fires very dangerously. Possibly, in American case, assimilation was not a daunting task for elites, partly because people (European) were emigrating in mass from their homeland to America, and found themselves in a pre-existing system led by the colonizer, Britain. Perhaps, people may opted to assimilate themselves in order to be an active player and to have a sense of belongingness in their new land what they called HOME.

Unlike America, with the highest degree of certainty, forced assimilation cannot be applicable in Africa. However, I would like to stress very very highly that ethnic nationalism should not be inflated too much in a way that threatens the survival of a bigger organ called country. I am not making ethnic groups less worthy, because they are the building block of a greater nation. To make my point clear – their (ethnic groups) sum is bigger and stronger than an individual ethnic group and more importantly the ethnic groups of a country should be driven by the highest level of engine – which is ideas and ideals as opposed to their ethnic lines.

Switzerland is one of the most stable multi-ethnic states. It consists of Germans, French, Italians and Romansh. Each language has an official status even though there are a stark difference in the number of speakers – Germans (63%), French (22%), Italian (8%), and Romansh (0.5%). As each language is officials, they can be used both in Federal government and parliament. For the sake of administration, the people opted to have canton (territorial district). Though, most cantons have mono-ethinic affiliation, still the citzens of Swiss get the service they are in need of in any part of the canton. Moreover, each Canton is functioning to the fullest within their constitutional mandate. So, what could we learn from Swiss Federal system then? 1) The success of Swiss is beyond establishing Canton, 2) In order to keep and flourish ethnic identity, people should not

necessarily possess a certain region, which is named after their language, and 3) The less number of ethnic groups, the more efficient federal system it would be.

Middle East: I brought this issue here to look at a different perspective – in the context of language. There are dozens of “independent” Arab countries in the Middle East. If the language, Arabic, were the unifying power, We would have seen a “State of Arabs” rather than a country called Saudi, Qatar, Yemen, Egypt…… the reality is quite the opposite. It is obvious that, today´s borders among Arab, African, and other countries are made during occupation or colonization. If the language was the only biggest unifying factor, the Arabs could have made ONE great nation after the occupation. Clearly, this shows that there are a lot of issues we have to deal with when it comes to nation building. It should not be considered as simple as eating a piece of cake. After all, the smaller the nation you are, the easy prey you would be.

Wait for a second…. if you think that achieving your own “independent” small village will make you the greatest, I guess you are making one of the biggest mistakes. After all, the question has to be the opposite! Big dream – Big output. Not separation, rather taking the wheel that drives you to the greatest height of power. For example; Eritreans fought for 3 decades and became “independent”. I´m not exaggerating, if I say Eritrea is a bed room of a single guy. Moreover, its citizens are running away from the land they fought for. In this inter connected world, being small makes you a soft target and you can be bullied or pushed away anytime soon, if that is the will of the big elephants.

Is not it funny to think that you are all the time “protected” from aggressors simply because you are an “independent nation”? The principal reason why union of an “independent” nations formed is to avoid conflicts through economic & political integration. In addition, they are more powerful to deter the aggressors with a least cost and time. In addition, their influence is very far reaching. It extends to the other parts of the world. So, this is the way I understand it – stronger together. Therefore, in multi-ethnic state, I think, the better way to go forward and further is based on the strength of the bond/ attachment among ethinic groups. With this regard, we should go for the strongest bond – United regions rather than to the weaker bond- Union of regions. But this can only be achieved, if we address at least the base-line principles of Unity.

The lists of examples could go on and on but I would like to make my remarks here: regardless of the composition of the people- homogenous or heterogeneous, there still will be differences in politics, economy, and society across their territory (states). Thus, it is just insane to think that homogenous nation are /will be free of tensions. But the tensions could be stronger in heterogeneous nation. Nevertheless, the tensions would

not be out of hands & minds, if we stand behind ideas and ideals. Keep in mind that people have full right to exercise their cultural heritages including their languages but it should not be to the extent that shake their own and others survival. We should not run for dominance/ knockout game rather we should appreciate our uniqueness for the benefits of everyone in the game. Nation building is not a 90 minutes game – it is a generations which costs life and resources. Hold on here folks, let me say one thing from a basic biology, for instance; an organ liver and heart are made of hepatocytes and cardiomyocytes, respectively. These organs along with others, they made the higher level of component named a System. We could not appericiate the system without acknowledging both the organs and their building blocks (cells). Above all, if the cells in question are in very bad shape, so does the organ and eventually the system will collapse. Fascinatingly, if we cure the problem at cellular level, we are in the right track to let the system function as it should be. So that, there is nothing wrong, if people are exercising ethnic identity. Are you still asking why? Because they are the building blocks of a nation. But I will repeat it again, it should not be on the expenses of others. Let us make the building block in a good shape, the system will take care of itself.

Finally we are here: What kind of agreement can be reached between pro-ethnic federalists vs pro-unitary forces?

At least, these forces believe in building a greater country in terms of land mass, economy, and all other influential establishments. But their major difference is How to make that happen. To begin with, the failed experiments should be singled out. No need to cover up. Let us deal with it. This is a point of discussion right? So, let both groups bring their menu in, and debate on ideas with active participation of the general public. No rooms for hatred, fabricated lies, and unrealistic hopes. Then, let the people (the ultimate deciders on the issue) heard their voices through votes for collective benefits over individual interests.

If few people are benefiting while the majority is struggling, it would be a zero sum game, if not collapsing. If the majority of the people are leading a reasonable life, we will emerge as a formidable force with stronger stability, thereby the people choose to prioritize cooperation over brutal competition, unity over separation, and hope over fear.

Of course as a citizen, I could say my own thoughts on the issue and when it comes to the final decision, I only have one vote, not more – not less and I´m abiding with the rule of the game and so do you. PEACE!

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Re: Ethiopian Ambassador invitation to Ethiopians residing in NY and NJ to join him in celebrating Ginbot 20

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To: Ethiopians in New York and New Jersey

Subject: Occasion at the Church of Holy Family at 315 East 47 St on June 3, 2017

Date: 01 June 2016

 

Dear Sir/Madame

We respectfully ask you NOT to celebrate Ginbot 20. Unless you are protesting, your presence at the Church of Holy Family on June 3, will mean you are celebrating ethnocentrism, the torture and killings of innocent Ethiopians. Instead we ask you to spend your precious time praying for thousands of Ethiopians who have been killed and tortured, millions that are starving and millions that are denied their basic human rights of speaking the truth.

For the past twenty-four years the TPLF regime in Ethiopia has been perpetrating crimes against humanity on Ethiopians including, mass killings, tortures, assassinations, imprisonments of opposition leaders, journalists, bloggers and peaceful demonstrators.  In the past year alone the same government has been shooting directly on peaceful demonstrators resulting in killings of more than 800 Ethiopians. The same government has declared a state of emergency since early October 2016.  Since the state of emergency, the military has been killing innocent civilians, imprisoning close to 40,000 youth, torturing, raping, confiscating cellphones, entering houses and breaking TVs, dismantling dishes installed on houses for access to international/national news and burning houses, farms and businesses to punish those who demanded democratic rights.

The following are a few examples of how Ethiopians are treated by the TPLF regime you are celebrating.

These Ethiopians are just like you except for the fact that they live under the most corrupt, ethnocentric and brutal regime. Just like you, they have kids, brothers, sisters, parents and grandparents.  They are being mistreated because they want to have equal rights.

If you celebrate Ginbot 20, you will be celebrating a killer regime that is torturing, killing and mass arresting its people, and a regime that is encouraging ethnic cleansing for selfish reasons.

Sincerely

Ethiopian Task Force of NY/NJ

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ESATDC Daily News Thur 01 June 2017


Call for applications for Opportunity Program Fund – U.S. Embassy Ethiopia

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OPPORTUNITY FUND 2017 Student Application    

By U.S. Embassy Ethiopia | 2 June, 2017 |
Program Overview,    Calendar,    Eligibility    Requirements    

The EducationUSA Opportunity Fund (OPF) program assists competitively selected students prepare to apply to U.S. universities. OPF is looking for 10 highly qualified, economically disadvantaged students who excel in math and science and are interested in studying in one of those fields. The program will select students who are likely to be awarded full financial aid from U.S. colleges and universities but lack the financial resources to cover the up­‐front costs of obtaining admission. The U.S. Embassy Addis Ababa is offering a six­‐week summer program for selected students to provide test preparation and English support for the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), the ACT and/or the SAT, exams required for attending university in the United States. The program will also include academic counseling and essay writing. The Opportunity Fund provides financial support for the six-week program as well as for testing and college applications. The program will meet five days per week from July–August, 2017 at the U.S. Embassy with the goal of students applying to U.S. universities to begin study in August 2018.

In order to apply, you must meet the following eligibility requirements:

  • Must be living and attending school in
  • Must be an Ethiopian student from an economically disadvantaged background
  • Must have taken your 10thgrade national exam scoring an “A” in math and English as well as an “A” in at least two of the three: biology, chemistry, and physics
  • Must be able to attend the entire six-week program without missing significant portions
  • Must be interested in studying in the math or science fields at university

If you meet these eligibility requirements, please fill out the following application, gather the necessary paper work, scan the documents and email to addisedusa@state.gov with the subject “Opportunity Fund Application.” If you would prefer to submit a paper application, you may bring the application and required documents to the U.S. Embassy and leave them for Wondimalem Geneti. If you do not meet the eligibility requirements, you will not be considered for the program.

Applications must be received by Friday, June 16, 2017.  Any applications received after this date will not be considered for the program.

Application Instructions

Remember, this is a competitive application. We want to get to know you as well as possible. Please complete this application form providing us as much information as you can about yourself, your dreams and ambitions, your family background, and your academic and community service record. Please make sure to write clearly so we can read your information. Read all directions carefully and put your name at the top of every page. It is essential that you attach the documents listed below to your application. Please send all parts of the application together at the same time to ensure that your application is complete and has as much contact information or you as possible. You can add extra pages to this application if you need more space to write. Please do not send originals of certificates or reports, as we cannot guarantee the return of any documents. Photocopies of this form are acceptable.

Attach the following documents to your application:

  1. 1. A photocopy of your 10thgrade national exam results
  2. 2. A photo copy of your secondary school transcripts, all grades you have completed (9, 10, 11, 12)
  3. 3. One letter of recommendation explaining your character, talent and skills from a teacher, headmaster, pastor or NGO or community leader who knows you well, including their contact information. (See page 6 for more information)

For questions or additional information, please contact us aaddisedusa@state.gov

Click here to download the application form. (PDF 452 KB)

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Deputy Black Stars captain Andre Ayew targets Ethiopia scalp

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The four-time Africa champions commenced their preparations for the upcoming qualifier on Wednesday at the Accra Sports Stadium with 16 players under the watchful eye of coach Kwesi Appiah.Deputy skipper of the Black Stars Andre Dede Ayew has set his sights on starting the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations qualifier against Ethiopia with a victory.

And speaking to reporters after the training session, Ayew declared, “It will be very important to start the 2019 Africa Cup of Nations campaign on a note. We have a goal which is qualifying for the 2019 AFCON and we must start by getting good results here and we know the bad results we had against Uganda made our World Cup campaign a difficult one even though is not yet over.”

“But we have sidelined the World Cup agenda and now thinking about the game against Ethiopia where we want all three points and we’re going to work towards that,” Ayew noted.

The Black Stars will continue their training at the Accra Sports Stadium till Sunday as they are scheduled to depart to Kumasi on Monday.

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‘I’m sorry’ – former EBC-TV Journalist Biruk Endale – SBS Amharic

One of the World’s Oldest Art Workshops Is a Cave in Ethiopia

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View of Porc-Epic Cave (photo by A. Herrero; all images © 2017 Rosso et al., used under CC BY 4.0 license)

According to a new study, the Porc-Epic Cave served as a site for the continuous production of ochre powder for at least 4,500 years.

Caves may not get great natural light, but a low-ceilinged one in Ethiopia represents one of the earliest known and longest-running art workshops. According to a new study by a group of European archaeologists, published in the journal PLOS ONE, the 40,000-year-old Porc-Epic Cave in eastern Ethiopia served as a site for the continuous production of ochre powder — which prehistoric people often used for paint — for at least 4,500 years. Over that time, cave dwellers built up a nearly 90-pound cache of the reddish, iron-rich rocks, the largest known East African ochre assemblage from the Middle Stone Age.

Location of Porc-Epic Cave and a photographic view of the cliff where the site is located

“Considering the large amount of ochre processed at the site, this continuity can be interpreted as the expression of a cohesive cultural adaptation, largely shared by all community members and consistently transmitted through time,” the researchers write. In other words, the site functioned similarly to a modern-day paint workshop, as a center where ochre was imported in large slabs or small pieces, then hand-ground into fine powder. Researchers even found particular rock pieces that may indicate the work of apprentices who were training to properly flake and grind the raw material. The findings resemble those from another cave in South Africa, a 100,000-year-old site where humans processed ochre and stored it in abalone shells.

In the case of the younger Porc-Epic, archaeologists examined about 4,000 pieces of ochre — now all housed at the National Museum of Ethiopia — as well as a number of ochre-processing tools and ochre-stained artifacts, to understand how humans transformed the naturally occurring substance into a valuable tool for their community. The researchers also ground up some ochre themselves, experimenting with different stones and analyzing the results. What they found was that myriad shades and powders of varying coarseness could be produced from the material, from yellow and oranges to reds and grays.

Ochre pieces from Porc-Epic Cave

The pigment was used for a variety of purposes, but samples were likely made mostly for “symbolic activities,” the researchers write, such as cave or body painting; some ochre pieces even appear to be ground to a point at one end, as if they were once used like crayons. Another notable find: a round pebble half-covered with ochre that suggests use as a stamp to apply pigments to or even form patterns on soft material.

It is possible that some powders served more functional purposes. People may have used them to tan animal hides or applied them to their skin as an early form of sunblock or insect repellent, the study explains. What’s certain, though, is that Porc-Epic remained a busy site of ochre processing for over four millennia, evidently catering to communities that relied on the expertise of generations of artisans.

The post One of the World’s Oldest Art Workshops Is a Cave in Ethiopia appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News | Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Many into one Africa, one into many Africans

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Mammo Muchie, Professor

Director: Research programme on Civil Society and African Integration
University of Kwa Zulu Natal(UKZN), Durban South Africa.

Contributing Editor: African Renaissance

“I know no national boundary where the African is concerned. The whole

world is my province until Africa is free.”

– Marcus. M. Garvey.

Professor Mamo Muchie

Professor Mamo Muchie

The expression of many identities is seen as the celebration of diversity and a legitimate vehicle for claims to political and other forms of rights. The resolution of diverse identities into compound /combined identities and unities is often suspect bearing the implication that rights and diversity might be sacrificed in the process of bringing about a new combination or synthesis to distinct and plural identities.

 

Also combined and hybrid identities are seen to command less loyalty than identities derived from origin, biology, cultural and other distinctive behavioural characteristics. It is argued that combined identities continue to bear schizophrenic, bifurcated and even fractured loyalties leading to breakdown in harder times than when the political and economic circumstances is going well.

The combination may not remove residual loyalties to the pre-existing

entities. Worse, unless there is a new ontological base to back the

combinatory initiative, and a consciousness to overcome the possible

self-assertion from the constituting entities, there will be a tendency for a

phenomenon of loyalty bifurcation and even fractured expressions of

identities within the combination to prevail, thereby rendering

identity-hybridist endlessly unstable. The danger of combination can

therefore be more unwelcome than the status of remaining with

fragmented identities. That has been the argument that some of the leaders

of the first post-colonial generation made against the combinatory

ambitions to express an African identity and will. This more ambitious

direction was the road that Africa was not to travel despite the universal

and shared expression and appeals to political unity by nearly all the

leaders of post-colonial states during the period of decolonization in the

1960s. Those appeals gave birth to the Organization of African Unity, but

not to African unity. States retained their sovereignty in alliance mainly

with the system that subjugated Africa under colonialism without any

reform. State-identity building to make Africans citizens of largely

disunited post-colonial states continued. This has not prevented the

post-colonial state from being challenged by subversion, threats to

disintegration and re-making by ethnic or clan identity self-assertions,

outbursts and affiliations from within, often aided by external interests.

What makes the search for an African identity current and compelling is

the fact that hordes of disaffected identity groups mount precisely

opposition by taking advantage of the structural weakness of the

post-colonial state, its continued conceptual arbitrariness, and its inability

to become independent and rely and be accountable to the population

within its jurisdiction.

 

If it has been said that combined identity may not command loyalty as

local and less remote and familiar identities, it is even more true to say that

putting together groups that share little in common with each other in one

state, and splitting those that share more with each other into different

states, has given cause for identity groups to mobilize ethnicities into

national movements for political power.

 

The Meaning of Identity

 

In general identity expression is neither good nor bad. Identity posits two

interdependent and distinct entities. The first is the ego, self, inside person

or the in- group, and the other is the out-group, outside person, the other,

or even the other of the other. Historically and anthropologically a more

potent expression of identity has been ethnic identity. The latter defines a

group by distinguishing the persons entitled to belong to it through their

physical, behavioural, and social character and their myth of origin. Often

the ethnic identity has been used as a demarcation criterion of inclusion

and exclusion to determine who is inside and who is outside the group.

Selection of persons for inclusion and exclusion in the group is often based

on: a) physical characteristics such as skin colour and hair type, b) social

characteristics such as language, religion and belief, c) behavioural

characteristics such as style, ritual or traditional customs, and d) myth

based on imagined or real common origin, history and social-political

experience.

 

Some see identity as a naturally fixed, static and a historically given

concept inured with the binaries of exclusion and inclusion, particularity

and generality, and the inside and the outside. In the naturalist conception

of identity, historical interaction is defined by the assertions of identities.

Though history may dilute identity, in the final analysis, it does not

overcome it. The proponents of fixed and essentialist identity stress the

unchanging cultural and psychological attributes of a group’s survival and

roots in the enclosure of identity, heredity and blood. Such fixed identities

that brook no dilution by any social and historical experience can

degenerate into racialism. For instance I once met an Englishman who was

originally from Liverpool in a social event in Durban who told me he

would be migrating to Edmonton, Canada. I asked him why he wanted to

leave South Africa. His reply astonishingly was racist: “The blacks will

never change.” He was convinced that that South Africa under black

leader would implode sooner or later. This is a clear case of a racial

conception of who is entitled to rule, and who is not. I told him it would be

good riddance if his thoughts were coloured with such vile racism.

Identities that offer premium to natural attributes of genealogy,

kinship, race, clan and religion are narrow-minded and often lead to

barbarian consequences. Such conceptions resist hybridisation, and are

driven by a desire to control and oppress.

 

Control of women’s sexuality is often at the top of the list of the

expression of essentialist identity. Women have to be controlled to bring up

children to grow up as members of the inside, and not the outside – the

race, ethnic group, religion, clan or kinship. Marriages are arranged

formally or by informal pressure to gear women’s reproductive capacities

to reproduce the particular racial and ethnic group. This control of

women’s sexuality is at the core of an essentialist strategy for keeping

identity undiluted and pure. Some religions also insist that marriages have

to remain within the religion and frown upon inter-faith marriages.

In Africa we have a serious problem in relation to the oppression of

women by naturalistic and religious expressions of identity. In South

Africa, there is a serious attempt to carry out a gender revolution to

confront all forms of essentialist conceptions that limit women’s agency in

Africa.

 

Making African Identity

When we speak of African identity, such an identity must be built on a

rejection of essentialism. There is no such thing as an essential African

character that has been frozen from time immoral. Africa has always lived

in history and through history. Its identity must be expressed through the

rejection of racism, ethnicity, parochialism, exclusivity and barbarism. It

must be an identity rooted in its earlier civilization, its experience of

resisting injustice and its record of humanising the world. Thus African

identity must posit an inclusive, non-essentialist and emancipatory goals.

The negative connotation of essentialism has to be replaced by the positive

connotation of building an inclusive, tolerant, civilized and combinational

African identity. As the distinguished African scholar Ali Mazuri puts it,

Africa needs a social engineering: “emphasizing what is African,

nationalising what is tribal, idealising what is indigenous and indigenising

what is foreign.” This is one of the greatest challenges in the making of the

African and of the Africa –nation. The African and the Africa-nation exist.

They are recognised by those who define Africa by its negative and those

who define it by its positive such as Kwame Nkrumah and Thabo Mbeki.

Africa invokes negative definition as it does positive. Those who define

Africa only with its negatives contest fiercely any positive narratives of, or

from Africa. Those who define Africa with its positives constantly contest

the negative representation of the African and the Africa-nation.

 

The substantive discursive referent of the negative representation of the

African and Africa is reproach, which is itself born from the undiluted

prevalence of essentialism and racism when it pertains to anything

African. The most potent way by which the idea of Africa is relayed to the

world by those who buy into the essentialist discourse (Africans and

non-Africans) is the reduction of African capabilities to solve problems

through African own resources. Its main mode of representation is to

associate the name of Africa with reproach and despair, and Europe with

civilization and hope. “Africa is a nation that suffers from incredible

disease.” (President Bush Jr.) Africa is “out of the world” operated by

“private indirect Government.”(Achille Mbembe). Africa is a “shackled

continent” (R. Guest). It is a ‘hopeless’ continent. (The Economist). It is the

heart of darkness (J.Conrad). Africa works through disorder (Chabal and

Daloz). Like Adam and Eve’s fall from grace , Africa’s hopes lies only if

there is hope from a tree of evil (Bayart). The kind of staggering

self-defeat mentioned above, simply boggles the mind. This goes beyond

describing a situation; it becomes a total moral condemnation of Africa.

Africa is defined by condemnation, reproach and lack of agency.

In our time we have a positive definition of Africans and Africa in

Thabo Mbeki’s notion of African Renaissance. This optimistic,

non-condemnatory and non-reproachful direction opens a new

perspective for Africa to seize the historical opportunity to bring about a

post-colonial revolution. The new conception builds on the positive

achievements of Africans throughout the world, without denying the

problems and the challenges.

 

The key platform from which Africans can find solace is that they have

successfully dealt with, and defeated a major contemporary enemy. Yes,

Africans can be proud of their victory over formal colonialism and its

attendant institution of white minority domination. The harder problem

that remains to be achieved is Pan-African integration. Despite all the

efforts of the OAU, AU, NEPAD and other regional and sub-regional

groupings, Pan-African political and economic integration is still at the

lowest end of the curve. One of the key missing elements for the lack of

progress in actual integration is the absence of ideology. Pan-Africanism,

for all its worthy contributions, has evolved more as a movement rather

than providing a coherent framework for African integration. It was Walter

Rodney who said that the “OAU does far more to frustrate than to realize

the concept of African unity.” The reason for that is because the leaders of

the post-colonial states that constituted the OAU never shared a common

African ideology on how to forge a united political and economic African

space beyond opposition to colonialism and racism. Frantz Fanon also

pointed out that opposition to colonialism and racism in itself does not

provide a sufficient condition for Africa’s full freedom. In his words,

“colonialism and its derivates do not, as a matter of fact, constitute the

present enemies of Africa. In a short time, this continent will be liberated.

For my part., the deeper I enter into the cultures and the political circles,

the surer I am that the great danger that threatens Africa is the absence of

ideology.”

 

In Africa, there has always been a goal-identity that is shared by all

types of political communities. When the OAU was formed in 1963 both

the radical Casablanca group with its slogan of “Africa Must Unite Now!”,

and the more conservative Monrovia group’s belief that Africa should

unite gradually- had both unity as a shared goal-identity. We can say they

shared the ultimate goal but differed on strategy. The chief architect of the

Monrovia group, the late President Flex- Houphouet-Boigny had declared

that “Africa is seeking her salvation through unity, unity of action.” The

situation is exactly the same now with the African Union that replaced the

OAU. There are some Africans who wish to form a more integrated Africa

by accelerating the tempo of unification and others that think the best way

to avoid the chaos of immediate unity is a gradualist approach. Like in the

earlier period, both would like unity as a goal-identity to take place.

While the Right says we must bring about such unity through

functional coordination and ceding sovereignty inch-by- inch through the

long haul, the Left wishes to bring a rapid combination of African

post-colonial states into a unity-identity. The fact that there is no

difference in achieving the ultimate goal is perhaps a very welcome

development that bodes well for the project of African unity.

Diversity in Africa constitutes the Achilles hill of Africa’s undoing.

Fractured and disunited, the lack of primary loyalty to African-ness

remains the sore problem undermining efforts to bring about Africa’s fully

decolonized future. Africans have neither recognised being African as their

premier identity, nor have they discovered that identity. They still express

multiple identities from their birth to their death, and have not yet

privileged as a principal and dominant identity the fact that they are

Africans. The reason why many Africans find President Thabo Mbeki’s “I

am an African” speech very attractive is because it provides the basis for

building the Africa-nation. It is the basis for constructing a common and

shared identity.

 

Between the individual and humanity lies the nation. Africa as a

nation-identity emerges when the African becomes the key nucleus for

bearing citizenship. This process has accelerated over the last three years

with the new rhetoric to change AU from an only state-centred to a

peoples-centred institution.

Africa is not a country. Africa is more a concept bearing the logos of

final freedom for people who were forcibly excluded from its soil as well

as those whose resources are daily robbed, and whose humanity and

liberty are denied and undermined by an indifferent and exploitative

international arrangement which they were denied agency in forming as

partners. Thus, as an identity, being ‘African’ expresses the desire to dream,

to deal with fear, to resist oppression and to promote a project. What is

lacking is the ideology and purpose to bring Africans together to build on

resistance identity against colonialism and racism, and to build on a

renaissance project identity so ably articulated by the current president of

South Africa. Being African expresses a double purpose: reject reproach,

affirm renaissance, reject the negative idea of Africa, and bring in the

positive idea of Africa. Only the development of an ideology of an

Africa-nation can complete the liberation of Africans the world over.

 

References

Ali Mazuri, (1972): Cultural engineering and Nation Building, Evanston, North-Western University Press,1972.

 

Frantz Fanon, (1967): Towards the African Revolution, (Grove Press, New York)

 

Felix Houphout-Boigny, (1947): “

Le continent African en marche,” Democratie

 

Nouvelle, no.2 Ferier, pp.74-79 reprinted in Rupert Emerson & Martin

Kilson, (1965): The Political Awakening of Africa, Prentice-Hall, Inc, Englewood Cliffs,

N.J., pp.38-41

29

 

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