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Kenya: Murder of election official and threatening statements raise fears ahead of elections

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AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

PRESS RELEASE

Chris Msando’s body was found on the outskirts of Nairobi. Photograph: AP

Recent events in Kenya, including the chilling murder of a top electoral commission official, are creating a cloud of fear that must be properly addressed, warned Amnesty International today, ahead of next week’s election.

Chris Msando, who was in charge of the electronic voting system at the Independent Electoral and Boundaries Commission (IEBC), was found murdered three days after his family reported him missing to the police.

“This brutal murder has sent a chill down the spine of many Kenyans and raised the spectre of violence,” said Muthoni Wanyeki, Amnesty International’s Regional Director for East Africa, the Horn and the Great Lakes.

“Msando’s murder is the most horrendous incident this election year, but it is not the only one with the potential to sow fear. Numerous threatening statements have been made by high-ranking officials and politicians that infringe on people’s rights to freedom of expression and to access information.”

Statements by some government officials have been a cause for concern. Information Communication and Technology Cabinet Secretary Joe Mucheru has threatened to revoke media houses’ licenses if they broadcast live the results announced by the electoral commission.

“The government must take concrete measures to calm this tense situation and to reassure voters that their safety is a priority. This means launching an independent and effective investigation into Chris Msando’s murder and holding those responsible to account,” said Muthoni Wanyeki.

“The authorities must also desist from remarks that threaten journalists and civil society organizations. Media houses must be able to broadcast results as soon as they are announced by electoral officers at polling station and constituency tallying centres, and to keep their own running tally of nationwide results.”

Public document

 

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Ethiopia MPs to decide on extension or lifting of state of emergency

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East African News

Ethiopia’s parliament will meet on Friday to decide whether or not to extend the state of emergency imposed since October last year.

Originally imposed for a six-month period, the state of emergency is in its tenth month after it was extended by four months upon the first expiration in March 2017.

The move was occasioned by spreading anti-government protests in the Oromia and Amhara regions of the East African country. A local news portal, the Addis Standard launched an appeal to MPs to end the state of emergency.

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AS would like to call upon members of the parliament to end the current  and return to the rule of law  

Since January 2016 the human rights situation in Ethiopia has stagnated according to a Human Rights Watch reports which said security forces have killed more than 500 people during protests over the course of 2016.

The government reported mass arrests of persons believed to be behind the protests, some have been released after training whiles others have been arraigned before the courts on offences of destroying private and public property.

The Command Post administering the curfew has reported that relative peace has returned to the country, consequent to which most stinging restrictions under the state of emergency were lifted.

The United States United Kingdom maintained their travel advisories for Ethiopia even though some European countries have lifted theirs with the ‘return to peace.’

Days after the imposition of a six-month state of emergency by the government, the Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, said the government was committed to broad-base political reforms. The European Union chief and German Chancellor all weighed in for such efforts to be all inclusive.

The government in November 2016 announced a cabinet reshuffle which saw the appointment of two Oromos – the ethnic group behind agitations in one of the protest regions – to cabinet positions of Foreign Affairs and Communications.

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EU chief tasks Ethiopian PM to initiate inclusive political dialogue quickly

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By Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban with European Union External Action

The High Representative of the European Union (EU) for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Federica  Mogherini, has tasked the Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn to respect democratic principles and civil rights in the country.

Mogherini, who is also Vice-President of the European Commission said there was the need to initiate an inclusive political dialogue within the shortest possible time. The dialogue ‘‘will require space, not restriction,” an EU statement said.

She further underlined the need for transparency and determined engagement by the government to respond to the grievances of the population. The EU said it expected the opening up of the democratic space, and respect of fundamental freedoms.

The two leaders, spoke in a phone call, where they discussed developments in the country – particularly the recently imposed six-month state of emergency.

The EU chief expressed concern over the curfew imposed on October 9 and its possible effect on democratic principles and civil rights of citizens. The Prime Minister on his part assured that the state of emergency will not breach human rights protected by the Ethiopian constitution.

The PM had earlier this week assured that plans were underway for electoral reforms and the EU further urged that necessary political reforms are conducted to achieve this goal.

Mogherini also emphasized that talks between the government and opposition if done expeditiously will provide an inclusive economy with benefits for all, notably the youth.

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Focus on social entrepreneurship

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S. R. Praveen

Prof. Mammo Muchie urges innovators to have a non-profit dimension

Prof. Mammo Muchie

From someone immersed in the field of innovation, Mammo Muchie’s concerns also extend to the destruction, of jobs and livelihood, that innovation and the march of technology leaves in their wake. Muchie, the Research Chair and Professor of Economics Research on Innovation at the Tshwane University of Technology in South Africa, spoke to The Hindu on the challenges thrown up by technological advancement.

“We have now entered the fourth industrial revolution, one which deals with knowledge and innovation. Here, we are not dealing with incremental technologies. What we now have are exponential technologies, the pace of growth of which is causing dramatic effects. The more technology takes control, the more impact it has on the people. Human relationships are changing, some are failing to cope with the changes. We need to think on whether this growth is destructive or constructive, and devise ways to make it constructive,” says Mr.Muchie.

He says that there needs to be correctives to ensure that the creative destruction by technology changes into creative construction.

Zero jobs

“If the technology trend goes on like this, without value change, we will create zero jobs. We will have a situation where many people will be out of jobs, which they have been holding for many years. What do the people do then? There should be a balance between what is created and destroyed, so that the sociological impact of technology is minimised. Automation should have its limits,” he says.

According to Prof.Muchie, entrepreneurship should not be just individual-centric, rather we should create social entrepreneurship.

“The industries can generate profit, but there should be non-profit dimension too. A new language, beyond that of profit, should be created. When the gain is calculated, it should not be calculated not just on the economical gain, but the social or even environmental gain,” he says. He says that these conversations should happen among stakeholders, in Governments, in private companies and amongst communities. “Technology can do many things, but unless it is connected to the human values. I think these conversations that are happening in the academic sphere should happen among the various stakeholders. If there is no such engagement between everyone, there is not much use having sustainable developmental goals,” he says.

Prof.Muchie says that the process should happen from the student community, as he is doing at his own institution.

Work together

“One of the things I do is to make sure that the students create together. They work together as competitors, and more importantly as friends, in creating socially relevant solutions,” he says.

He will be delivering a lecture on ‘Know Africa – History, Development and Science’ at the Institution of Engineers hall in the city on Monday at 5 p.m.

The post Focus on social entrepreneurship appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

ESAT DC Daily News Wed 02 Aug 2017

Rembering Ababa Tesfaye Sahlu SBS Amharic

WFP Ethiopia Drought Emergency Situation Report #4, June 2017

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In Numbers

7.8 million people in need of relief food assistance under the 2017 Humanitarian Requirements Document.

4.2 million people reached with relief assistance by the joint WFP-GoE response in May.

2.6 million children, and pregnant and nursing mothers in need of specialized nutritious food to treat moderate acute malnutrition (MAM). Of this, 1.3 million live in Nutrition Hotspot Priority 1 woredas (districts).

Highlights

  • With current resources, WFP will only be able to assist 1 million people in the Somali Region, meaning that WFP will be unable to cover the food needs of 700,000 vulnerable people that have been receiving WFP assistance since March.
  • As a result of the lower than expected spring rainfall the 2017 Humanitarian Requirements Document (HRD) caseload is expected to be revised after the Mid-Year-Review of the 2017 HRD due to be launched in the coming weeks.
  • July onwards, WFP will be forced to reduce cereal rations by 37 percent in most of the refugee camps due to limited resources, representing the second major cut in the last 20 months. WFP urgently requires USD 42 million to support 600,000 refugees till December.

Situation Update

  • Under the current 2017 Humanitarian Requirements Document (HRD), 7.8 million people are in need of food assistance in Ethiopia.
  • Results of the 2017 multi-sector and multiagency Mid-Year Needs Assessment indicate that the 2017 Belg rains have been poor in many parts of the country. Due to which, the Belg crop production will be below normal this year. In the Belg dependent areas of Oromia this is the third year with below normal rainfall. In addition, despite improved rains in late April and May, livestock production is not expected to improve in pastoral areas.
  • As a result of the lower than expected spring rainfall the HRD caseload is expected to be revised up after the Mid-Year-Review of the 2017 HRD, due to be launched in the coming weeks.
  • In the Somali region, the situation is particularly dire for the 1.7 million people who rely solely on WFP for food. WFP’s current resources will be able to provide assistance to only 1 million of the planned 1.7 million people through July, just as the lean season starts.
  • Due to funding constrains, in July, WFP will be forced once again to reduce cereal rations to refugees by 37 percent in most of the refugee camps, representing the second major cut in the last 20 months.
  • According to the Government’s National Flood Task Force, more than 1.5 million people are projected to be affected by flooding during the summer/kiremt season, of whom nearly 500,000 people are expected to be displaced. The Somali region is not expected to be affected.

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Interview with Tazebew Assefa – SBS Amharic


Azeb Mesfin & Sebhat Nega exposed by former Spy Ayalew Mengesha – Hiber Radio

EDF Commends Congressman Christopher Smith and the U.S. House Foreign Relations Committee for Advancing Human Rights and the Rule of Law in Ethiopia

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የኢትዮጵያ፤የውዪዪትና፤መፍትሔ፤መድረክ

Ethiopian Dialogue Forum

9900 Greenbelt RD.  E#343 –  Lanham, MD 20706

__________________________________

August 2, 2017

 

Press Statement from EDF

EDF Commends Congressman Christopher Smith and the U.S. House Foreign Relations Committee for Advancing Human Rights and the Rule of Law in Ethiopia

 

Ethiopian Americans, Ethiopians at home and in the Diaspora as well as people of good will across the globe commend Congressman Christopher Smith for spearheading a Resolution on Ethiopian Human Rights. On July 27, 2017, the Ethiopian Dialogue Forum (EDF), a non-governmental think tank registered in the United States, was delighted to learn that “The full House Foreign Affairs Committee voted to advance a resolution, authored by Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ), highlighting the human rights violations of

the Ethiopian government, and offering a blueprint to create a government better designed to serve the interests of the Ethiopian people.”

We welcome and commend this encouraging development. We urge all Congresswomen and men, the U. S. Senate and the government of the United States to support H.R. 128 so that it become law. EDF wishes to record its appreciation to a network of human rights advocates that have shown consistency in calling on the global community to advance democratization and to desist from providing legitimacy to one of the most brutal regimes in the world. For more than a quarter of a century now, Human Rights Organizations such as Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, the Committee to Protect

Journalists (CPJ) etc., the U.S. Department of State, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights as well as Ethiopian civic and human rights groups and activists have been engaged in providing a plethora of evidence concerning gross human rights violations, including extrajudicial killings, arrests, tortures and other forms of cruel and inhumane punishment in Ethiopia; and in urging the donor and diplomatic community to do the right thing in Ethiopia.

EDF’s leadership appreciates and recognizes the extraordinary efforts of Congressman Christopher Smith and his colleagues; as well as members of the U. S. Senate who have been proactive in advancing the cause of human rights, the rule of law and democracy in Ethiopia. The most recent “ Resolution, which passed without objection, also calls on the U.S. government to implement Magnitsky Act sanctions, targeting the individuals within the Ethiopian government who are the cause of the horrific abuses.”

The draft resolution quotes the U.S. State Department’s latest human rights report on Ethiopia that notes rightly and appropriately that “The most significant human rights problems were security forces’ use of excessive force and arbitrary arrest in response to the protests, politically motivated prosecutions, and continued restrictions on activities of civil society and NGOs.” More than 1,000 lives were lost in the Oromia and Amhara regions alone.

EDF is gratified by Congressman Smith’s statement that “H. Res. 128, is like a mirror held up to the Government of Ethiopia on how others see them, and it is intended to encourage them to move on the reforms they agree they need to enact.. For the past 12 years, my staff and I have visited Ethiopia, spoken with Ethiopian officials, talked to a wide variety of members of the Ethiopia Diaspora and discussed the situation in Ethiopia with advocates and victims of government human rights violations. Our efforts are not a response merely to government critics, but rather a realistic assessment of the urgent need to end very damaging and in some cases inexcusable actions by the government or those who act as their agents.”

 

The draft resolution H. Res. 128 entitled “Supporting respect for human rights and encouraging inclusive governance in Ethiopia” comes at a most critical time in the history of an ancient nation with a promising future for all its people. Among other things, H.R. 128 “condemns the human rights abuses of Ethiopia and calls on the Ethiopian government to:

  1. Lift the state of emergency;
  2. End the use of excessive force by security forces;
  3. Investigate the killings and excessive use of force that took place as a result of protests in the Oromia and Amhara regions;
  4. Release dissidents, activists, and journalists who have been imprisoned for exercising constitutional rights;
  5. Respect the right to peaceful assembly and guarantee freedom of the press;
  6. Engage in open consultations with citizens regarding its development strategy;
  7. Allow a United Nations rapporteur to conduct an independent examination of the state of human rights in Ethiopia;
  8. Address the grievances brought forward by representatives of registered opposition parties;
  9. Hold accountable those responsible for killing, torturing and detaining innocent civilians who exercised their constitutional rights; and
  10. Investigate and report on the circumstances surrounding the September 3, 2016, shootings and fire at Qilinto Prison, the deaths of persons in attendance at the annual Irreecha festivities at Lake Hora near Bishoftu on October 2, 2016, and the ongoing killings of civilians over several years in the Somali Regional State by police.”

While EDF regrets that H.R. 128 “does not call for sanctions on the Government of Ethiopia,” we appreciate the fact that it “calls for the use of existing mechanisms to sanction individuals who torture

or otherwise deny their countrymen their human and civil rights.” We hope that similar measures will be undertaken by Parliamentary bodies in the European Community, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and other Western democracies.

 

Finally, EDF calls on Ethiopian activists, the media, civil society and others to conduct a coordinated and sustained campaign at the local, state, regional and country level in support of the passage into law of H.R. 128.

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Ethiopia lifts emergency rule imposed last October after months of unrest

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ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) – Ethiopia on Friday lifted a state of emergency imposed last October following months of protests that killed hundreds of people.

More than 29,000 people were arrested during the period

and nearly 8,000 of them are on trial for taking part in the violence, Defence Minister Siraj Fegessa said.

The unrest was provoked by a development scheme for the capital Addis Ababa and turned into broader anti-government demonstrations over politics and human rights abuses. It included attacks on businesses, many of them foreign-owned, including farms growing flowers for export.

“The country’s stability is in far better shape. In some areas where security issues remain, local security forces have the capacity to restore order,” Fegessa said in a report read in parliament.

Siraj said nearly 29,000 people were arrested in the provinces of Oromiya, Amhara and SNNP, as well as Addis Ababa during the period.

“7,737 of them are currently on trial over charges of taking part in violent and terrorist acts during the unrest,” he said.

Measures initially imposed under the declaration included granting powers to security services to stop and search suspects and to search homes without court authorization.

Ethiopian Members of Parliament attend an emergency meeting to lift the state of emergency, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, August 4, 2017.Tiksa Negeri

Another rule barred diplomats from traveling beyond a 40 km (25 miles) radius of the capital without permission. There was also a dusk-to-dawn curfew on access to economic installations, some infrastructure and factories for unauthorized people.

Those restrictions were eased in March but Addis Ababa maintained a ban that stopped citizens from having any contact with opposition groups branded as terrorist movements.

Ethiopian Members of Parliament attend an emergency meeting to lift the state of emergency, in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, August 4, 2017.Tiksa Negeri

Ethiopia has designated five groups, including two armed secessionist groups, as terrorist organizations.

Another directive barring the “preparation, distribution and exhibition of material that could incite chaos” was also retained in March.

The violence in Oromiya, the largest and most populous region which surrounds Addis Ababa, and to a lesser extent in the Amhara province north of Addis Ababa, put a shadow over a nation where a state-led industrial drive has created one of Africa’s fastest growing economies.

The government also often faces international criticism and opposition to its authoritarian approach to development.

In April, a government-sanctioned investigation said 669 people had been killed in the violence.

The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein has called on Ethiopia to allow his agency to investigate abuse claims.

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Ethiopia Arrests State Minister for Finance on Suspicion of Corruption

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By Aaron Maasho /  Reuters.

ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) – Ethiopia has arrested its state minister for finance on suspicion of corruption, state-run television said on Friday, part of an anti-graft drive that the government says has led to dozens of arrests in the last two weeks.

Alemayehu Gujo is the highest-ranking official to have been detained so far in the sweep that has also involved business owners. Zayed Woldegabriel, Director General of the Ethiopian Roads Authority, was also detained on Friday, the state-run Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC) said.

In an emergency session, Ethiopia’s House of People’s Representatives lifted Gujo’s immunity from prosecution, the EBC said in a breaking news announcement.

“A warrant was then issued and led to his arrest,” the broadcaster said, citing the Attorney General’s Office.

Friday’s arrest followed the detention of more than 40 officials from the Ministry of Finance and Economic Cooperation, the capital’s housing development agency, the state-run Ethiopian Sugar Corporation, and the Ethiopian Roads Authority.

Charges brought so far include embezzlement and the siphoning off of billions of birr.

The anti-corruption drive is partly a response to unrest that wrecked the Horn of Africa country in 2015 and 2016 and which was sparked by a scheme to development and expand the capital, Addis Ababa. The protests turned into broader anti-government demonstrations over politics and human rights abuses.

The violence included attacks on businesses, many of them foreign-owned, including farms growing flowers for export.

The government subsequently acknowledged that maladministration and abuse of power was rife and that it needed to broaden political participation.

On Friday, it lifted a 10-month state of emergency that was imposed in the wake of the unrest.

(Reporting by Aaron Maasho; Editing by Katharine Houreld and Catherine Evans)

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Interview with Prof Bereket Habte Selassie – SBS Radio

Olympic champion Ayana destroys field to win 10,000 metres

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ESAT Breaking News Sun 06 Aug 2017


The T-TPLF’s Corruption Prosecution Con Game – Al Mariam

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Author’s Note: If I assembled all of the commentaries I wrote on the T-TPLF’s corruption, it would comprise of at least two solid volumes. Back in 2013, I commented extensively on the range of T-TPLF corrupt practices in a number of sectors of the Ethiopian economy and society based on the World Bank’s 448-page report, “Diagnosing Corruption in Ethiopia”. (See my commentaries in 2013 at almariam.com.) I even coined a word to discuss T-TPLF corruption. It is “horruption”. Horrible corruption.

Every now and then, the T-TPLF bosses put on corruption show trials to distract the population, panhandle the loaner and donors and draw attention away from their criminality.  They have done it again in July 2017.

Here we go again! The corruption prosecution con game of the T-TPLF

In May 2013, I wrote a commentary entitled, “The Corruption Game” of the T-TPLF.

That commentary dealt with the arrest of some two dozen “high and medium ranking officials of the Ethiopian Revenues & Customs Authority (ERCA) and prominent businessmen”. Among them were ERCA “director general” with the “rank of minister”, his deputies and “chief prosecutor” along with other customs officials. “Ethiopia’s top anti-corruption official” Ali Sulaiman told the Voice of America Amharic “the suspects had been under surveillance for over two years.”

At the time, T-TPLF bosses were in the middle of their recurrent internal power struggles in the aftermath of the passing of their thugmaster Meles Zenawi.

The recent arrests are part of the ongoing “civil war” within the T-TPLF. It is intended to send a message to others who may think about opposing the current faction of the T-TPLF that the sledgehammer of corruption prosecution will also be visited upon their heads if they want to try anything.

Simply stated, the current dominant T-TPLF faction is simply “killing the chicken to warn the monkeys”, to use a Chinese idiom.

Today, the T-TPLF slicksters are trying to kill three birds with one stone: Rack up some PR credits to demonstrate good governance during the “state of emergency” and drum up popular support.  They also believe they could divert and distract attention from their atrocious human rights record, including the Irreecha Massacres of October 2016, by showcasing their “anti-corruption” campaign.  Last but not least, the cash-strapped T-TPLF bosses are hoping to squeeze American taxpayers for a few billion dollars (fat chance under Trump) by talking the talk of anti-corruption while walking and swimming in corruption.

Belatedly, T-TPLF puppet prime minister (PPM) Hailemariam Desalegn is also trying to prove that, despite his repeated public cathartic confessions that he is the handmaiden of Meles, he is Mr. Clean, not Mr. Clone (of Meles). Desalegn is still trying to prove to the loaners and donors that he is a different breed from his thugmaster Meles. He wants to perpetuate an image of Mr. Clean  cleaning the “House of Meles”. Oh! Behold in 2017 the “Dirty 3 Dozen” he bagged!

2017: Sleazy investigating greasy and cheesy for corruption

Over the past couple of weeks, the T-TPLF has been rolling out the rogue’s gallery of alleged corruption suspects. Among them are “high level government officials” and sundry other businessmen.

They even allegedly jailed the “wife” of one of the founders of the T-TPLF, Abay Tsehay.

The “wife” was arrested “while she was attending her son’s wedding family reunion ceremony.” Tsehay was at the wedding but not arrested.

Obviously, the wife was “arrested” to send a clear message to Tsehay.

But if allegations of corruption are to be thrown around, Tsehay should be at the very top of guilty-as-sin suspects.

Tsehay was Board chairman of the “Commercial Bank of Ethiopia”, the largest and oldest bank in the country, even though he had absolutely no financial background whatsoever! During Tsehay’s tenure, the Commercial Bank lost hundreds of millions of dollars.

Shouldn’t Tsehay be held accountable for that loss?

He was replaced by another T-TPLF ignoramus named Bereket Simon in 2011.  Such was the height of T-TPLF nepotism and corruption.

It was clear to me in April that Tsehay was toast. Done. Finished.

As I indicated in my April 30 commentary, “The Good Kops/Bad Kops T-TPLF Con Game (Over) in Ethiopia”, I knew Tsehay was in deep doo-doo when PPT Desalegn dismissed a “study” done by Tsehay and his henchmen. “I don’t know [anything] about the study. It does not concern me. The study does not offer a correct analysis,” said Desalegn offhandedly.

I concluded that Desalegn would not have been emboldened to dismiss a report by a founding member of the T-TPLF unless that founding member was on his way out to pasture or something even worse. Alternatively, I reasoned that there is definitely a gang within the T-TPLF gunning for Tsehay. Either way, it was clear to me that Tsehay was history.

Curiously, Tsehay, a charlatan at best, must have been trying to reinvent himself as some sort of respectable academic or scholarly analyst when he put together a ragtag crew of “researchers” to issue a report. I suspected the T-TPLF gangsters ganging against Tsehay must have been offended by his bold report or considered it an effort by him to ingratiate himself with the public and gain ascendancy and tactically undercut them. After all, Tsehay practically called the T-TPLF “lawmakers” a bunch of morons who sit around rubberstamping whatever is  sent to them by the “executive branch”.

What has happened to Tsehay is a clear indication to me that there is a “creeping civil war” among various T-TPLF factions today. The only reason the “civil war” has not broken out in public is because they are all tangled up in the same web and morass corruption and criminality.

The T-TPLF criminals know all too well that they must hang together or hang separately, to quote Ben Franklin.

Anyway, Tsehay’s cannibalistic T-TPLF friends threw him under the bus, just as he ganged up with them to throw so many others before. That is karmic poetic justice!

It must feel like hell to feel so disposable!

Back to the current corruption prosecution con game.

Just to maintain the suspense, the T-TPLF has been announcing arrests almost daily. Just yesterday, they announced the arrest of  Alemayehu Gujo, T-TPLF  “minister of finance” and the highest-ranking official in the roundup and  Zayed Woldegabriel, Director General of the Ethiopian Roads Authority.

The “anti-corruption” prosecutors have completely avoided  charging any of the top T-TPLF leaders despite mountains of evidence of all types of corruption and criminal wrongdoing. They have gone after the small fish and left the big sharks, the capo di tutti cappi (boss of all bosses) alone.

The fact of the matter is that the whole T-TPLF corruption prosecution is a bunch of horse manure!

For the T-TPLF to accuse its disfavored members, ministers and lackeys of corruption and criminal wrongdoing is exactly like Tweedledee accusing Tweedledum of taking his rattle (toy).

/‘Tweedledum and Tweedledee/ Agreed to have a battle;/For Tweedledum said Tweedledee/ Had spoiled his nice new rattle./Just then flew down a monstrous crow, As black as a tar-barrel;/Which frightened both the heroes so,/They quite forgot their quarrel./

Simply stated, the T-TPLF is just having an internal battle in their corruption nonsense over their 26-year-old rattle. They are quarreling over who should steal, cheat and rob the most.

That is exactly what the T-TPLF corruption prosecution con game we see played out today is all about. One gang of T-TPLFers quarreling with and battling against another gang of T-TPLFers about who should ripoff the most of their 26-year-old rattle (toy) called Ethiopia.

There is nothing new in the current corruption prosecution con game.

The T-TPLF bosses have been playing their corruption prosecution game to knock each other out from day 1.

The T-TPLF canned its first prime minster Tamrat Layne on corruption charges in 1996.

That cunning and ruthless thugmaster Meles Zenawi forced Layne, under threat of penalty of death, to admit corruption and abuse of power before the rubberstamp parliament.

Of course, Layne did nothing that every top T-TPLF leader did not do. If Layne could be convicted for corruption, then each and every T-TPLF member beginning with the thugmaster himself are all guilty as sin of corruption. But the corruption prosecution was a tactic used to neutralize and sideline Layne.

In 2002, Seeye Abraha, T-TPLF defense minister and chairman of the board and CEO of Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray (a T-TPLF rabbit hole of high corruption, money laundering, conspiracy and sundry other criminality) was also jacked up on corruption charges and jailed for six years. Following the Ethio-Eritrean war in the late 1990s, the T-TPLF had split into two groups, one headed by Meles, the other by Seeye. Meles tactically outplayed and outfoxed Seeye and consolidated power. If Abraha could be convicted for corruption, then each and every T-TPLF member beginning with the thugmaster himself are all guilty as sin of corruption. But the corruption prosecution was a tactic used to neutralize and sideline Abraha.

In 2007 when Ethiopia’s auditor general, Lema Aregaw, reported that Birr 600 million of state funds were missing from the regional coffers, Zenawi fired Lema and publicly defended the regional administrations’ “right to burn money.”

In 2009, Meles publicly stated that 10,000 tons of coffee earmarked for exports had simply vanished from the warehouses. He called a meeting of commodities traders and in a videotaped statement told them that he will forgive them this time because “we all have our hands in the disappearance of the coffee”. He threatened to “cut off their hands” if they should steal coffee in the future.

Barely eight months ago in December 2016, the T-TPLF announced it had arrested 130 unnamed individuals on corruption charges.  An additional 130 were said to be under investigation.

Just yesterday, to add suspense to excitement, the T-TPLF called an “emergency meeting” of its  rubberstamp parliament without a public explanation for the meeting. Apparently, it had partly to do “with lifting the state of emergency order”, but the “parliament” removed “immunity” from two members at the ministerial and high administrative positions and jailed them. (More on that comedic drama in another commentary.)

All the T-TPLF corruption prosecution crap is nothing more than a con game, an attempt to distract and divert attention from the fact that the T-TPLF is on life support, on its last legs.

But the T-TPLF is playing the same old con game. Corruption prosecution is the oldest trick in the book of dictators.

In any power struggle in dictatorships, it is very common for one group of power players to accuse members of an opposing group of corruption and neutralize them. It is less costly and uncertain than conducting coups. Corruption show trials are a powerful weapon in the arsenal of dictators who seek to neutralize their opponents.

Back during the Derg (military rule) days, the favorite charge to neutralize opponents was to accuse them of being a “counter-revolutionary” and jail them or worse.

To be blunt, it is the same _ _ _t, just different flies.

In China, Bo Xilai, once touted to be the successor to President Hu Jintao in China, Liu Zhijun and many other high level Chinese communist party leaders were prosecuted for accepting bribes, corruption and abuses of power. They were all neutralized and sidelined.

Yet in 2016 the campaign against corruption came to a grinding halt as “President Xi Jinping’s high-profile ahead of a period of change for the Chinese Communist party’s leadership.” Jinping became president in 2012 and cleaned house using corruption prosecutions to eliminate his opponents.

Putin jailed Mikhail Khodorkovsky (once considered the “wealthiest man in Russia”) on trumped up charges of “corruption” and gave him a long prison sentence.

In Russia, Vladimir Putin has used corruption prosecutions to neutralize his opposition and unfriendly power contenders. Putin’s favorite tactic to control his opponents is prosecution for  money laundering. A few months ago, Putin arrested his foremost critic and anti-corruption champion Aleksei Navalny during an anti-corruption protest in Moscow and had him barred from a presidential run.

Putin jailed Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian lawyer, who accused Russian officials of massive tax fraud. He was beaten to death in prison. The U.S. passed the Magnitsky Act  barring entry of officials involved in Magnitsky’s murder.

Tip of the T-TPLF iceberg of corruption

Corruption in Africa, and particularly Ethiopia, is a proven means of accessing and clinging to power. It is the grease that lubricates the patronage system where supporters are rewarded with the spoils of controlling power.

The core business of the T-TPLF is corruption.

The T-TPLF warlords who seized political power in Ethiopia in 1991 have always operated in secrecy like a racketeering criminal organization. Their  principal aim for more than a quarter of a century has been the looting of the national treasury which they have accomplished by illicit capital transfers and by plunging the country into a bottomless pit of foreign debt.

Corruption prosecutions in Ethiopia have been driven not by any unusual or extreme corrupt behavior, since all T-TPLF bosses  are deeply mired in corruption, but because of the recurrent divisions and struggles in T-TPLF power circles.

Anyone who believes the T-TPLF is engaged in corruption prosecution to improve good governance is simply delusional. The T-TPLF’s only reason for existence is clinging to power to conduct the business of corruption, not good governance or stamping out corruption. The only reason the T-TPLF is in power is because corruption courses in their bloodstream and the bloodstream of their body politics. Corruption is the hemoglobin that delivers life-sustaining oxygen to their anatomical and organizational nerve centers.

Without corruption, the T-TPLF will simply wither away, or implode.

The anti-corruption organizations and prosecutorial and investigative bodies are created and stage-managed by the top political leaders. The members of these bodies are hand selected by the top leaders. They intervene in corruption investigations when it gets close to them. The whole anti-corruption campaign is set up to make sure that the grandmasters of corruption and their minions at the top are immune from investigation and prosecution.

As I argued in my commentary “Africorruption, Inc.”, corruption under the T-TPLF regime is  widespread and endemic. It includes outright theft and embezzlement of public funds, misuse and misappropriation of state property, nepotism, bribery, abuse of public authority and position to exact corrupt payments. The anecdotal stories of corruption in Ethiopia are shocking to the conscience. Businessmen complain that they are unable to get permits and licenses without paying huge bribes or taking officials as silent partners. They must pay huge bribes or kickbacks to participate in public contracting and procurement.

Publicly-owned assets are acquired by regime-supporters or officials through illegal transactions and fraud. Banks loan millions of dollars to front enterprises owned by regime officials or their supporters without sufficient or proper collateral. T-TPLF officials and supporters do not have to repay millions of dollars in “loans” borrowed from the state banks and their debts are overlooked or forgiven. Those involved in the import/export business complain of shakedowns by corrupt customs officials. The judiciary is thoroughly corrupted through political interference and manipulation as evidenced in the various high profile political prosecutions. Even Diaspora Ethiopians on holiday visits driving about town complain of shakedowns by police thugs on the streets. In 2009, the U.S. State Department pledged to investigate allegations that “$850 million in food and anti-poverty aid from the U.S. is being distributed on the basis of political favoritism by the current prime minister’s party.”

The fact of the matter is that the culture of corruption is the modus operandi of the T-TPLF regime.  Former president Dr. Negasso Gidada declared in 2001 that “corruption has riddled state enterprises to the core,” adding that the government would show “an iron fist against corruption and graft as the illicit practices had now become endemic”.

Corruption today is not only endemic in Ethiopia; it is a terminal condition

The “holy cows” and “minnows” (fish bait) of corruption

Corruption in Ethiopia can no longer be viewed as a simple criminal matter of prosecuting a few dozen petty government officials and others for bribery, extortion, fraud and embezzlement,

The so-called “corruption investigations and prosecutions” today are no different from previous ones. They scapegoat the minnows, small fish while leaving the untouchable holy cows untouched.

Tradition has it that on the day of atonement, a goat would be selected by the high priest and loaded with the sins of the community and driven out into the wilderness as an affirmative act of symbolic cleansing. In ancient times, it made the people feel purged of evil and guiltless.

The individuals accused of corruption are low-level bureaucrats, ministers-in-name only and other officials-with-titles-only, suspected disloyal members and handmaidens of the regime. They all humbly and obediently served the T-TPLF bosses for years. Now the T-TPLF bosses want to make them out to be loathsome villains. The sins and crimes of the untouchable T-TPLF holy cows are placed upon their heads and railroaded them to prison.

The T-TPLF high priests want to show the public they have been cleansed and the nation is free from the evil of corruption. In this narrative, the corrupt T-TPLF bosses want to appear as “anti-corruption warriors”, the white knights in shining armor.

But no amount of sheep’s clothing can make the wolf a lamb.

A pig in lipstick at the end of the day is still a pig.

The untouchable holy cows of T-TPLF corruption can put on lipstick and nail polish and try to appear pure and chaste. But at the end of the day, those holy cows are just like the pigs in lipstick.

The day of reckoning for the T-TPLF is at hand.

Fight the power! Fight corruption!

What is the best way to deal with “horruption” (horrible T-TPLF corruption) in Ethiopia?

Simple. Line up the right social forces to fight corruption.

Allow the free press to flourish so that it can aggressively and doggedly investigate and report corrupt officials and practices for public scrutiny. Establish an independent prosecutorial office properly budgeted and staffed (supported by certified international anti-corruption experts) to go after not only the small winnows but most importantly the big whales and sharks splish-splashing in a sea of corruption.

Take comprehensive measures to increase the transparency of all public institutions and translate into action the mandate of Article 12 of the “Ethiopian Constitution” (“Functions and Accountability of Government”).

Eliminate the T-TPLF’s involvement in the economy.

Allow the functioning of an independent judiciary that is capable of adjudicating corruption cases with full due process of law.

Let civil society institutions flourish so that they can maintain ongoing vigilance and work at the grassroots levels to provide anti-corruption awareness, education, training and monitoring.

Let there be a genuinely competitive multiparty system that can hold the ruling party and its officials accountable.

In short, institutionalize the rule of law.

Then it is possible to act against “horruption” instead of talking about corruption.

Honesty contest between T-TPLF bosses

Can there be a beauty contest among hyenas?

There is really no difference between Tweedledee and Tweedledum.

The Greek philosopher Diogenes used to walk the streets of ancient Athens carrying a lamp in broad daylight. When amused bystanders asked him about his apparently strange behavior, he would tell them that he was looking for an honest man.

Like Diogenes, one may be tempted to walk the unhallowed halls of T-TPLF power, search the highest  of the high political and business offices and traverse the country with torchlight in hand looking for an honest and honorable T-TPLF leader, boss or operative. None will ever be found.

Today, the T-TPLF now finds itself between the devil and blue sea (perhaps it should be said the blue sea finds itself between devils).

The T-TPLF cannot live with corruption nor live without it.

By (pretending) fighting corruption, the T-TPLF will hasten its own end for corruption is the foundation of the T-TPLF state.

By doing nothing, it will allow the cancer of corruption to completely metastasize throughout its body politics.

Either way, the T-TPLF is in a terminal state and moribund. It will soon find its way to the ash heap of history where it belongs.

What is the next T-TPLF distraction, distraction, distraction…?

The T-TPLF bosses think they can distract and divert attention by talking about “corruption” and selectively arresting a few of their scapegoated members and supporters and putting them on show trials. That is interesting political theater but it will not solve the problem of T-TPLF horruption unless one believes, to paraphrase H.L. Mencken, “Nobody ever went broke underestimating the intelligence of the Ethiopian people.”

So what is the next distraction?

What will the clever and cunning T-TPLF bosses pull out of their behinds to distract public attention, discussion and focus from their criminality?

Could they spread rumors of war against a neighboring country? They tried that in the Ethiopia-Eritrea war games and did not work.

How about construction of an airport larger than Heathrow in London? They became laughing stocks on that one.

Space travel!? The T-TPLF announced their space program in April. I promptly volunteered to mobilize the Ethiopian Diaspora to financially support the program in the hope that we could pay for a rocket to transport all T-TPLFers back to Planet T-TPLF. (Well, they are still here.)

Well, what else?

I know!

How about passing a “law” to punish those who convert foreign currency into local birr without going through T-TPLF banks? In some places, they call it “hawala” (money is paid to an agent who then instructs a remote associate to pay the final recipient.)

It is an open secret that the T-TPLF is almost completely out of foreign exchange.

They can no longer pick pocket the American taxpayer with Trump at the helm.

The Ethiopian people refused to have their pockets picked by the T-TPLF when they engaged in mass civil disobedience and refused to pay arbitrary taxes.

So who has pockets that can easily be pick-pocketed?

Where can the T-TPLF find new fat cats, cash cows?!

Diaspora Ethiopians and their remittances, of course!

Yes!!!

I shall predict (just a wild guess) that the T-TPLF will now go after Diaspora remittances and require that all remittance payments to recipients in Ethiopia be made through Paypal, Western Union, all the credit card companies and other such financial institutions. That way, they will be able to amass billions in foreign exchange to finance their empire of corruption and continue to cling to power.

What a brilliant scheme. I mean scam.

In October 2010, I wrote a commentary on “The political economy of remittances in Ethiopia”.

At the time, Diaspora Ethiopians contributed a cool US$1.2 billion to the Ethiopian economy, only second to the amount generated by Ethiopia’s exports.

There was so much concern about potential reductions in remittances due to the global economy that a T-TPLF bank manager fretted, “We are concerned and worried that as a result of the financial crisis … some of the Ethiopians may lose their jobs and as a result they may stop sending money to help their families back home.”

By 2013, Diaspora remittances had exceeded $4 billion.

Demeke Atnafu, T-TPLF director of diaspora engagement in the “Ministry of Foreign Affairs”, declared remittances had “surpassed the amount that Ethiopia got from donor countries in the form of development aid.”

In 2015, the T-TPLF reported receiving $3.7 billion from remittances.

In July 2016, Atnafu said the country received $ 4 billion in remittances in the first 10 months of the year.

So there you have it!

I expect the T-TPLF will try to implement an extortion scam to bleed every Diasporan Ethiopian sending money back home.

Diasporan Ethiopians are now the low hanging fruit in the T-TPLF Empire of Corruption.

Diaspora Ethiopians, get ready to be ripped off royally by the T-TPLF!

Post Script: For what it is worth, if any of my readers want to know my personal opinion about the T-TPLF’s current corruption prosecution game, it is simply this:

The T-TPLF has selectively arrested  people in agencies that are money black holes where money disappears never to be seen.

Engineers Fekade Haile, Washihun Shiferaw and Ahmedin Buser and others from the “Addis Ababa City Roads Authority”, Zayed Woldegabriel, Abdo Mohammed, Bekele Nigussie, Gelana Bori, Yeneneh Assefa,  Bekele Balcha and others from the “Ethiopian Roads Authority” and Alemayehu Gujo, Musa Mohammed, Mesfin Workneh, Wassihun Abate, Seyoum Gobena, Tamrat Amare and others from the “Ministry of Finance and Economic Cooperation” are all charged with corruption to SHUT THEM UP BECAUSE THEY KNOW WHERE THE T-TPLF CORRUPTION SKELETONS ARE HIDDEN IN THESE BUREAUCRATIC BLACK HOLES.

 

 

asd

Professor Alemayehu G. Mariam teaches political science at California State University, San Bernardino. His teaching areas include American constitutional law, civil rights law, judicial process, American and California state governments, and African politics. He has published two volumes on American constitutional law, including American Constitutional Law: Structures and Process (1994) and American Constitutional Law: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights (1998). He is the Senior Editor of the International Journal of Ethiopian Studies, a leading scholarly journal on Ethiopia. For the last several years, Prof. Mariam has written weekly web commentaries on Ethiopian human rights and African issues that are widely read online. He blogged on the Huffington post at  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alemayehu-g-mariam/ and later on open.salon until that blogsite shut down in March 2015.

The post The T-TPLF’s Corruption Prosecution Con Game – Al Mariam appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

The 22nd Annual conference of Ogaden Somali communities Worldwide Resolution

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The 22nd Annual conference of Ogaden Somali communities Worldwide held in Frankfurt.

The annual 22nd conference of Ogaden Somali communities Worldwide was held from 4 to 6 August 2017 in Frankfurt, Germany.

The three-day conference was organized by the Ogaden community in Germany was attended by delegates representing Ogaden Communities from all five continents and invited guests from Somalia, Oromo, Amhara, and Eritrean communities. In Addition, dignitaries Ogaden National Liberation Front, Oromo Liberation Front, the Peoples’ Alliance for Freedom and Democracy (PAFD) and Patriotic Ginbot 7 also attended the conference.

Throughout the three day event, the renowned Hilac Band constantly raised the tempo of the meeting by performing Epic Traditional Somali folklore dances moving patriotic songs that moved the participants. Moreover, Nina Simone’s moving song “I AINT GOT NO LIFE” was played to highlight the suffering of the Somali people in Ogaden.

Due to the Ethiopian government’s total disregard for the democratic rights of life, peace, choice, assembly, freedom of speech and other basic human rights in Ogaden and Ethiopia, the Ogaden Diaspora plays a crucial role in highlighting by providing evidence of the alarming humanitarian rights situation in Ogaden and the systematic human rights violations the Ethiopian regime is perpetrating in Ogaden which include extrajudicial killings, sexual violence as a weapon of war, mass arbitrary detentions and the use of torture.

During the conference, the attendees extensively discussed the dire situation in Ogaden, Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa and how to remedy the calamity in Ogaden and Ethiopia. After deliberating on all relevant issues that affect the Ogaden people in Ogaden, the Horn of African and the Diaspora and considering worsening situation in Ethiopia and the hysterical knee jerk reactions the regime to increasing resistance of the masses against its autocratic and genocidal policies and the possibility of sudden implosion of the regime from within, the participants resolved to :

Continue to

1. Strengthen the education of Ogaden Youth in the diaspora and refugee camps;
2. promote the Somali culture and language to the younger general in the diaspora;
3. streamline the activities of the Ogaden Communities Abroad and enhance advocacy and interaction with Human Rights and humanitarian rights institutions
4. increase the material and moral support to Ogaden Refugees, orphans, and victims of Ethiopian government atrocities
5. strengthen the relationships and interaction with host countries, communities and institutions and combat any acts that can create disharmony between Ogaden Somalis and host communities.
6. Maintain and develop relationships with all oppressed communities from Ethiopia, the Horn of African and the world
Support

1. The just struggle of the Somali people in Ogaden to exercise their right to self-determination and life
2. The peaceful resistance of all peoples in Ethiopia against the current undemocratic regime of Ethiopia led by EPRDF_TPLF
3. All democratic forces and institutions that believe in the rights of all peoples to self-determination, democracy and the rule of law in Ethiopia and the rest of the world
4. The noble effort of the Somali people in Somalia to re-establish their sovereignty, governance and rule of law
Condemns

1. The Ethiopian regime for its deliberate and systemic policies and practices of annihilation of the Somali people in Ogaden, by committing rampant human rights violations, blockading trade, and aid, while hampering the ability of the people to engage in economic activities that could sustain them, specially during draughts and other natural disasters
2. The Ethiopian regime for killing innocent civilians in Ogaden Oromia, Amhara, Gambella, Sidama, Afar, Omo, Konso and other parts of Ethiopia
3. The regime’s use of lethal force against peaceful demonstrators in Oromia and Amhara states and the general abuse of human rights of all peoples in Ethiopia
4. Those who support the Ethiopian regime, politically, diplomatically and economically while being fully aware of it crimes against humanity and war crimes in Ogaden, Oromia, Amhara, Sidama and Gambella and other parts of Ethiopia
5. Multinational corporations and banks that bankroll the mega-projects in Ogaden, OMO, Gambella, Benishangul and other parts of Ethiopia that forcefully displace the rural communities and destroy the livelihood of millions in Ethiopia
6. Condemns the use of local militias by the Ethiopian regime in order to suppress popular resistance and create civil wars among the neighborly communities, specially between the Somali and Oromo peoples.
7. Condemns certain regional administrations in Somalia in collaborating with Ethiopian regime security to forcefully rendition asylum seeker from Ogaden to the Ethiopian regime.
Calls Upon

1. The UN to seek security council resolution forcing the Ethiopian regime to allow independent UN commission to investigate human rights violations in Ethiopia, in particular in Somali, Oromia, and Amhara regional states and take appropriate measures to stop ongoing violations.
2. The USA and the EU as providers of the greatest aid to the regime to stop blindly supporting the current regime and instead support the rights of the peoples in instead of a decadent, undemocratic and callous regime that violates its own constitution and rule of law
3. The AU to stop acting as dump, paper tiger organization that always supports dictators in Africa and instead start acting on its charters and stand for the rights of African peoples. To date, the AU is silent about the atrocities perpetrated by the Ethiopian regimes against the Somali people in Ogaden and other parts of Ethiopia while thousands are massacred just across the AU headquarters!
Finally, the Conference calls upon the Somali people in Ogaden and all peoples in Ethiopia to unite and support each other against the vile and callous regime in Ethiopia.

Victory to peoples!!

22nd Annual conference of Ogaden Somali communities Worldwide

The post The 22nd Annual conference of Ogaden Somali communities Worldwide Resolution appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Track Nation Is Skeptical About Almaz Ayana’s Dominant 10K Win

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By David Monti, @d9monti(c)
2017 Race Results Weekly, all rights reserved

 

Aug 5, 2017
David Monti

LONDON (05-Aug) — With an astonishing performance which raised eyebrows across social media, Ethiopia’s Almaz Ayana crushed the field in the women’s 10,000m here at London Stadium at the 16th IAAF World Championships in Athletics.  Ayana, the 2016 Rio Olympic 10,000m champion who hadn’t run a race since last September, nearly lapped the field, winning by 46.37 seconds, doubling the largest previous winning margin at these championships.  She ran the second half of the race in 14:24.96, faster than her own World Championships 5000m record of 14:26.83 set in Beijing in 2015.

“I am very happy to win this title, much more than when I won the Olympic gold because I have been sick this year and didn’t expect it,” Ayana told IAAF interviewers.  “In fact, this was my first race of 2017.”

Behind Ayana, her Ethiopian teammate, nine-time world champion Tirunesh Dibaba, outsprinted Kenya’s Agnes Tirop to get the silver, 31:02.69 to 31:03.50.  It was Dibaba’s fourth world championships medal in the 10,000 discipline (she also has two in the 5000m).  Alice Aprot of Kenya (31:11.86), Susan Krumins of the Netherlands (31:20.24) and Emily Infeld of the United States (31:20.45) rounded out the top-six.

The race started out painfully slow with an 81-second first lap and a 3:30 first kilometer.  There were a series of nominal leaders, but nobody wanted to take the pace.  It wasn’t until 3600 meters that Ayana blasted to the lead, first with a 69-second lap followed by two 68’s.  That carried her through the first half in 15:51.38 with a 50-meter lead.

From there, Ayana zoomed around the track alone, showing no signs of fatigue.  From 3000m to 8000m she ran an improbable 14:30.82, prompting a skeptical tweet from 1991 world 10,000m champion Liz McColgan of Scotland.

So from 3k to 8 k Ayana 5 k split 14:30. Until Ethiopia follow proper doping procedures i for one do not accept these athletes performances

There were other tweets expressing disbelief, indicative of the skepticism among athletes, coaches, fans and the media in the wake of the doping scandals which have gripped athletics for the last several years.  Lee Troop, a three-time Olympian for Australia and now a respected coach in Colorado, offered perhaps the harshest comment.  He tweeted:

I’m sorry @iaaforg & @sebcoe but you have failed our sport just like your predecessors! That 10,000m for women was a joke & it’s your fault!

In the women’s 1500m semi-finals, world record holder Genzebe Dibaba of Ethiopia survived a scare, advancing on time after finishing sixth in heat one in 4:05.33 (she faded in the final sprint).  That heat was won by reigning Olympic champion Faith Kipyegon in 4:03.54, followed by Britain’s Laura Muir (4:03.64) and South Africa’s Caster Semenya (4:03.80).  Potential medalist Gudaf Tsegay of Ethiopia fell 340 meters into the race and finished last.

“The cheering for Muir also gives me some motivation to do what I have to do and it is her home crowd,” Kipyegon told IAAF interviewers.  “So, I know everybody is going to cheer for her and we are going to show the best.”

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In the second heat, Germany’s Konstanze Klosterhalfen made an impetuous move with two laps to go, gapping the field by perhaps 20 meters.  The medal contenders behind her –Sifan Hassan of the Netherlands, Meraf Bahta of Sweden, and Jenny Simpson of the USA– didn’t panic knowing that the German’s pace was unsustainable.  Klosterhalfen still had a 15-meter lead at the bell, but she was overtaken by most of the field in the final 150 meters.  Hassan (4:03.77), Bahta (4:04.04) and Simpson (4:05.40) finished 1-2-3, while Klosterhalfen faded to ninth.

“At least I tried,” Klosterhalfen, 20, told IAAF interviewers.  “Yes, I am a little disappointed because I will not be in the final. But I see this semi-final as a step forward for me.”

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In men’s 800m qualifying, the main casualties were Amel Tuka of Bosnia and Herzegovina (fifth in heat 6 in 1:46.54) and Michael Saruni of Kenya (DNS, heat 6).  Saruni, who competed this season in the NCAA system for the University of Texas – El Paso, was originally left of the Kenyan team despite finishing third at the Kenyan Trials.  But when reigning world champion David Rudisha pulled out of these championships with an injury, Saruni was back on the team but, tragically, he never made it to London in time to compete.

Nonetheless, the three Kenyans who did compete here –Kipyegon Bett, Ferguson Rotich and Emmanuel Korir– each won their heats and advanced.  Other medal favorites to make it to the semi-finals included Poland’s Adam Kszczot (third, heat 5), Canada’s Brandon McBride (second, heat 2), France’s Pierre-Ambroise Bosse (second, heat 5), and Ethiopia’s Mo Aman (second, heat 6).

Additionally, all three USA athletes –Drew Windle, Isaiah Harris, and Donavan Brazier– also advanced.  Windle, who runs for the Brooks Beasts, was about 15 meters behind the leaders with 250 meters to go, but managed to close well and finished third in heat 1 in 1:46.08.

“I felt awful going into it,” Windle told reporters.  “These preliminary heats usually come down to fitness, and I know my fitness is there, so I really relied on that to get into those top three spots.  The important part is that I survived to tomorrow.”

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Emirates treats Ethiopian families with movie screening and big savings to key destinations

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Addis Ababa, 5 August 2017: Emirates gave some families in Ethiopia a taste of the airline’s award winning in-flight experience when they treated a group of parents and their children to an exclusive screening of “Cars 3” – the latest Universal Pictures animation release.

Nearly 30 children with their parents and guardians came together at Edna Mall on 5th August 2017 to watch the much-anticipated animation movie followed by lunch at the same venue hosted by Emirates Manager for Ethiopia, Manoj Nair.

“Emirates is all about providing value for money and a committed to ensure excellent service both in the air and on the ground, and it’s no different when it comes to family travel.  For children, it’s important to keep them comfortable and entertained, and we take care of this by providing a wide selection of movies and programmes to suit their needs,” said Mr. Nair.

When flying Emirates, families can expect a wide variety of children’s programming with 90 channels of dedicated children’s entertainment on offer, including the very best movies and television from Disney, Cartoon Network, CBeebies and Nickelodeon channels plus much more.

Meal times on board are also given extra attention on Emirates flights. The special meals offered to children aged between two and 12 years old are served on newly designed meal trays featuring the iconic Emirates cabin crew and pilots.

Little explorers can make new friends on their flight with Emirates’ cuddly Fly With Me Animals. They are blanket buddies to wrap up with or little seat critters that attach to the seat belt. Children can be creative with magnetic sketchers, or explore the airline’s Fly with Me Animals magazine.

Emirates flight EK 723 departs Dubai daily at 1030hrs and arrives in Addis Ababa at 1335hrs. The return flight EK 724 leaves Addis Ababa at 1540 hrs and arrives in Dubai at 2105hrs.

Ends-

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PICTORIAL: BAHIR DAR CITY SHUTS DOWN BUSINESSES TO COMMEMORATE ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF PROTEST KILLINGS

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Addis Abeba, August 07/2017

Several businesses in the city of Bahir Dar, the capital of the Amhara Regional state, 558 kms from Addis Abeba, have spent today closed off.

 

BD 1

Residents of the city are commemorating the one year anniversary of the killings by security of several civilians during a weekend anti-government protests on August 07/2016.

BD 3

 

Last night, a bomb has exploded in the city in an area called Poly Peda. The city police chief Commander Walelegn Dagnew said there were no casualties and five people were arrested following the incident.

 

BD 2

Although the government news portal ENA reported that businesses have reopened and transport resumed, these pictures, taken late this afternoon, show that major businesses stayed closed and roads and business districts in several parts spent the day deserted. Residents also say there has been a heavy presence of city police and security apparatus throughout the city.  AS

The post PICTORIAL: BAHIR DAR CITY SHUTS DOWN BUSINESSES TO COMMEMORATE ONE YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF PROTEST KILLINGS appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News|Breaking News: Your right to know!.

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