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Ethiopia at an Ominous Crossroads (Herman Cohen)

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Since seizing the government by force of arms in 1991, the TPLF-controlled Ethiopian regime has maintained monopolies over economic and political power ever since, and has therefore dominated all other nationalities and ethnic groups. It is this refusal to share political power and wealth on the part of the TPLF that is causing the violent demonstrations of dissent within the Oromo and Amhara states. Government efforts to divert attention to cross border violence between Oromo and Somali states cannot hide its responsibility for the instability brought on by its refusal to grant the Ethiopian people the self-determination granted by their constitution.

Article 39 of the Ethiopian Constitution states:

“Every Nation, Nationality and People in Ethiopia has an unconditional right to self-determination, including the right to secession.”

This Constitution was adopted in 1994. and ratified in 1995. Between that year and the present, the “right of self-determination” among the country’s nine official “states,” within the official federal system, has never been implemented. On the contrary, political, economic and security power has been exercised centrally within the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), a coalition of parties with a Marxist-Leninist ideological heritage. The party members of the coalition are:

•    Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF)
•    Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organization (OPDO)
•    Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM)
•    Southern Ethiopian People’s Democratic Movement (SEPDM)

Within the EPRDF, political, economic and security power has been controlled exclusively, until the present, by the hierarchy of the TPLF, whose insurgent military arm defeated the former dictatorship, known as the Derg, in May 1991. In that month, the TPLF marched into the capital city, Addis Ababa, and proceeded to establish its authoritarian rule throughout Ethiopia, with, of course, the exception of the former province of Eritrea, which won the right of self-determination and secession through its own military efforts.

As of the end of 2017, the TPLF’s control of Ethiopia has begun to disintegrate. The two EPRDF coalition members that rule in Oromo and Amhara states, the OPDO and the ANDM, no longer accept directives from the ruling group in Addis. Ethiopian national military forces are operating against dissident groups in Oromo and Amhara states that host about half of the Ethiopian population. Police in these areas are not on the side of the federal military units.

Violence has broken out in the southwest between the Somali and Oromo states – and there are indications it has been provoked by the TPLF hierarchy to punish the Oromo state for its growing dissidence from central authority. Desperation is widespread. Upwards of 750,000 have been displaced, and both sides have participated in ethnic cleansing. Tigrayans in the Gondar region of Amhara State have been targeted for their ethnic background. Universities have been closed due to ethnic violence among students.

What are the causes of this breakdown in public order in Ethiopia?

•    Use of lethal force has been the first reaction to disagreement from unarmed civilians. The killing of students on the steps of Addis University in 2005 established an infamous precedent.

•    The educated younger generation is heavily unemployed. Prospects for those with diplomas are dim.

•    Economic power and accumulated wealth are concentrated in the hands of the Tigray political hierarchy within the TPLF.

•    Authoritarian power is exercised arbitrarily; farmers are evicted from their ancestral lands in order to lease massive acreage to foreign industrial agriculture interests.

•    The regime exploits ethnicity to divide rather than to unite.

If the reports of the regime inciting cross border conflict between Somali and Oromo states are true, then it is clear that Ethiopia’s prospects for national reconciliation within a democratic dispensation are still a long way over the horizon. It is time for ruling elites to understand that the opposition is not seeking revenge, nor is it seeking to confiscate the individual wealth of politicians. The opposition wants to assure the implementation of Article 39 of the constitution within the full meaning of the term “self-determination.”

(Image courtesy Wikimedia Commons)

About Amb. Cohen

I was Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs and served in the U.S. Foreign Service for 38 years. On this blog I provide commentary on the latest in African politics and development.

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Top news items in Ethiopia’s major media outlets

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ADDIS ABABA, Jan. 2 (Xinhua) — The following are news highlights in Ethiopia’s major media outlets on Tuesday.

–The Ethiopian Roads Authority (ERA) said it will implement 80 road projects with 46 billion birr (1.7 billion U.S. dollars) budget this Ethiopian fiscal year. (Fana Broadcasting Corporate/FBC)

–The Chinese-built Ethio-Djibouti railway line on Monday announced passengers and freight tariffs. (Fana Broadcasting Corporate/FBC)

—Omo Kuraz-II, one of the four sugar factories being built under Omo Kuraz sugar development project, has begun regular production. (Fana Broadcasting Corporate/FBC)

–The Ethiopian Ministry of Agriculture and Natural Resources (MoANR) is to let more than 7 million farmers participate in irrigation development in this Ethiopian dry season. (Fana Broadcasting Corporate/FBC)

–A four-day international management conference that focuses on building the capacity of African institutions will be held in Addis Ababa this week.

The conference will be held from January 3-6, 2018 at the School of Commerce of Addis Ababa University. (Ethiopian News Agency/ENA)

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Egypt denies demanding Sudan exclusion from talks with Ethiopia over dam project (ST)

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Egyptian president Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi (L), Sudanese president Omer al-Bashir (C) and Ethiopian prime minister Hailemariam Desalegn shake hands during a meeting in Khartoum on 23 March 2015 on the planned Grand Renaissance dam (Photo: Ashraf Shazly/AFP)

The Egyptian government denied it seeks to hold bilateral talks with Ethiopia on the disputed Renaissance Dam in a way to exclude Sudan from the discussions on the Blue Nile water shares.

Following a meeting in Addis Ababa with his Ethiopian counterpart On 26 December, the Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry proposed to include the World Bank in the tripartite discussions on the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) at the level of the technical committee.

By the end of 2017, The Addis Fortune, an Ethiopian newspaper disclosed that Shoukry proposed also to exclude Sudan from the talks.

The proposition came after the failure of a technical meeting held in Cairo last November to agree on a report prepared by two French consulting firms.

Cairo wants separate technical talks because Addis Ababa refuses to acknowledge the 1959 agreement just like its rejection of the Nile water treaty of 1929, the newspaper explained.

It further cited a statement to the press by the Egyptian top diplomat saying that “The case Egypt has with Sudan is completely different with Ethiopia’s case, and it is necessary to differentiate the two”.

But the Egyptian foreign ministry on Tuesday denied that the Egyptian minister had proposed to exclude Sudan from the process, stressing they wanted to include the World Bank for its expertise.

“The Egyptian proposal to request the participation of the World Bank as a neutral party in the negotiations of the Tripartite Technical Committee was also officially submitted to the Sudanese government,” said Ahmed Abu Zeid the spokesperson of the Egyptian foreign ministry.

“Egypt is waiting for both Ethiopia and Sudan to respond to the proposal in as soon as possible,” Abu Zeid further added.

The Egyptian diplomat called on the media to be cautious against publishing false information poiting that Minister Shoukry told reporters in Addis Ababa about Egypt’s intention to submit the World Bank participation proposal to Sudan within days.

Following the failure of the Cairo meeting last November, the Sudanese water resources who represented his country in the meeting said they reject the French study because it ignored the baseline and the terms of reference (ToR) the French consulting firms had to observe in their report.

According to the Sudanese side, the two firms, BRL and Artelia, in their study on the GERD impact on Egypt and Sudan didn’t observe the 1959 agreement between Sudan and Egypt over the Nile water based on the 1929 treaty.

In line with the bilateral deal, Egypt has the right to 55.5 billion cubic meters of Nile water a year and Sudan 18.5 billion cubic meters per year. But in fact Sudan does not use its share.

However, Sudanese officials say the dam will allow the full use of Sudan’s share.

(ST)

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Breaking News…. Ethiopia’s prime minister has announced the release all political prisoners

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BBC News

Ethiopia’s prime minister has announced the release all political prisoners and the closure of a notorious detention centre which allegedly used torture to extract confessions.

Hailemariam Desalegn told a press conference charges would also be dropped for those still awaiting trial.

The move is designed to allow political dialogue, he said.

Ethiopia is accused by human rights groups of using mass arrests and detention to stifle opposition.

Ethiopia PM Hailemariam Desalegn ‘open to criticism’
The country declared a state of emergency in 2016, following a year of protest calling for political and economic reforms, which prompted a crackdown.

Mr Hailemariam’s announcement included the closure of Maekelawi – a detention facility at the centre of the torture allegations, which have been denied by the government.

According to Ethiopian newspaper the Addis Standard, the prison will become a “modern museum”.

A new detention centre will be opened, Mr Hailemariam said, which would comply with international standards.

It is unclear exactly what prompted the decisions, which came after days of consultations within the ruling coalition, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF).

However, the Addis Standard links it to two days of action across social media at the end of December, raising awareness of the plight of political prisoners.

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Press Statements: Lema Megersa : Debretsion Gebremichael; Hailemariam Desalegn & Demeke Mekonenn

Maekelawi Detention, Investigation Center to be shutdown

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Politicians to be freed, acquitted of charges

In a joint briefing they gave to the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC) and Ethiopian News Agency (ENA), the chairpersons of the four member parties of the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) announced today that the infamous detention and investigation center a.k.a. Maekelawi will be closed.

The briefing by Hailemariam Dessalegn, chairman of the Southern Ethiopian Peoples’ Democratic Movement (SEPDM) and the EPRDF, Demeke Mekonnen chairman of the Amhara National Democratic Movement (ANDM) and deputy chairman of the EPRDF, Lemma Megersa, chairman of the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO) and Debretsion Gebremichael (PhD), chairman of the Tigriyan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) came following the self-criticizing communiqué the party released after its intensive 17-day meeting.

The detention center, which has been in use since the time of the Derg, will be transformed into a modern museum, according to Hailemariam. The investigative body that used to use Maekelawi will be moved to a new building.

It was also stated that “as part of the process of building a better national consensus and widening the democratic space, it has been decided that politicians and other individuals will be acquitted of their charges while detainees will be freed.”

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Chairman Royce Statement on Ethiopia Political Prisoners Announcement

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StateWashington, D.C. – House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Ed Royce (R-CA) issued the following statement on the human rights situation in Ethiopia:

“Ethiopia has finally acknowledged that it holds political prisoners. Now, the government should quickly follow through on its commitments to release them and close a prison camp notorious for torture. If Ethiopia is to remain a strong U.S. partner and a source of stability in a dangerous region, the government must respect the rights of the Ethiopian people.”

Note: The Foreign Affairs Committee unanimously passed a resolution in July condemning excessive use of force by Ethiopian security services that has resulted in the deaths of protesters, and the wrongful detainment of journalists, students, activists and political leaders.

 

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House speaker returns to his post (By Yohannes Anberbir)

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The Speaker of the House of Peoples’ Representatives (HPR), Abadulla Gemeda is reported to have resumed his regular duties as Speaker today as he is seen presiding over proceedings at today’s parliamentary session.

Abadulla tendered his resignation to the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) and the Oromo People’s Democratic Organization (OPDO) in October leaving his position as Speaker of HPR on the grounds that the dignity of the people and the party that he represents has been compromised and claiming that he could not continue in this situation any longer.

Abadulla gave open press stamen to the Oromia public broadcaster OBN and EBC at the time that he is not ready to divulge the full reason behind his resignation and said that he will reveal everything in due time. In subsequent weeks the HPR fall to the deputy Shitaye Minale while Abadulla was visible only in OPDO and EPRDF meetings and events.

According to Prime Minister Hailemariam Dessalegn the Government of Ethiopia (GoE) is yet to accept the resignation of the Speaker while saying he has accepted Bereket Simon’s, who also decided to resign from all of his government responsibilities around the same time Abadulla did.

However, in an unprecedented turn of events last week, both Abadulla and Bereket have announced their decisions to retract their resignations and return to government.

Following this, Abadulla has been seen returning to his position in today’s parliamentary session which is listening to the reports of a taskforce organized to assess conflicts that occurred in many parts of the country especially along the borderlines of the Somali and Oromia Regional States.

the reporter

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EPRDF vows to widen democratic, media space

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The Executive Committee of the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), having completed its 17-days intensive meeting, pledged to take serious measures with regards to the increasingly narrowing down political space in the country, highly repressed media environment and severely undermined role of the civil society and democratic institutions in Ethiopia.

In a lengthy press statement that the party’s executive committee issued on Friday, it was noted that the top-level leadership is the one that should take responsibility to the widespread political instability the country has experienced in the past three years.

In the same statement, the Committee also admitted that the party’s top leadership has had it fair share in the increasing narrowing down political space and the diminishing role the civil society is playing in shaping the political life of the nation. According to the Committee, the party’s leadership and its reluctance in taking the appropriate measures to ensure the plurality of views has resulted in undermining the country’s multiparty democracy.

“Although it could not be concluded that the narrow political space in the country would immediately improve upon the blessing of the party or by changing the legal framework, the Committee has agreed that it has had its fair share in contributing to the current situation,” it reads.

On the other hand, the executive committee also admitted to the sluggish growth Ethiopia exhibited over the past 25 years and said that it should take it share of the blame for that. Most importantly, the party has down played recently observed trends in public media where some of them are reported to be “fueling ethnic tensions”.

In addition to that, the party also admitted to the weakening state of the civil society in Ethiopia and the undermined role it is playing in the nation’s political life. And vowed to strength the civil society and take measures improve inclusiveness.

All in all, the party made admission as to all sorts of evils that the country went through in recent times and renewed its pledge to work to improve the situation.

On the party front, the Executive Committee also admitted that lack of inter-party democracy has contributed to the wide range failures in serving the public.

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Ethiopia will have to do a lot more than release political prisoners to end repression

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WRITTEN BY Abdi Latif Dahir@Lattif
Quartz

The Maekelawi detention center in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, has a reputation as a site for the detention, investigation, and abuse of protesters and opposition politicians. For three months in 2014, it was blogger and human rights activist Atnaf Berhane’s home. Charged with terrorism for his critical writing and reporting on the government, Berhane says he was kept in a dark cell with no sunlight and questioned up to eight hours a day.

In an unexpected move on Wednesday (Jan. 3), Ethiopia’s government announced that it would close Maekelawi, release its political prisoners, including those awaiting trial, and turn the controversial facility into a museum. In a press conference, prime minister Hailemariam Desalegn said the move was aimed at creating national consensus, opening up political dialogue, and widening the democratic space. “Politicians currently under prosecution and those previously sentenced will either have their cases annulled or be pardoned,” Desalegn said.

Berhane, who was at home when the news first broke, was astonished by the decision. “I didn’t expect that the ruling party would admit that there are political prisoners in Ethiopia,” said the 28-year-old, who is out on bail while defending his case.

The announcement follows weeks of meetings between the four political parties that make up the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition, which has governed Africa’s second most populous country since 1991. The decision is a peace offering, observers say, meant to appease growing internal discord that has threatened to bring the country to the brink of collapse.

Ethiopia has struggled to deal with ongoing protests by the country’s two largest communities, the Oromo and Amhara, who are calling for an end to decades of systemic exclusion. (The government is primarily controlled by the minority Tigray community.) The government has reacted to these protests with force, drawing sharp criticism from Ethiopia’s allies in the West. The unrest has jeopardized the country’s booming economy and its place as an important center for global apparel sourcing.

Hassen Hussein, a Horn of Africa analyst and assistant professor at St. Mary’s University of Minnesota, says the recent concessions constitute the most significant change in Ethiopia in the last three years. “It is a step towards more openness,” Hassen said. “The devil would still be in the details and reversals are possible. So the next two to three weeks will be the most crucial to watch.”

A demonstrator chants slogans while flashing the Oromo protest gesture during celebrations for Irreecha, the thanksgiving festival of the Oromo people, in Bishoftu town, Oromia region, Ethiopia, October 1, 2017.
A demonstrator chants slogans while flashing the Oromo protest gesture. (Reuters/Tiksa Negeri)

Questions still loom over the plan, such as who qualifies as a political prisoner, how many will be released and under which preconditions, and when Maekelawi will be closed.

Mohammed Ademo, the editor of the OPride, a website that reports on the Oromo diaspora and advocates for social justice in Ethiopia, wants the government to urgently release more details about Maekelawi, including “the fate of dozens of people, mostly Oromo leaders, who disappeared without a trace and are allegedly being held in secret prisons since 1991. Their families need closure,” Ademo said. Only by acknowledging the true extent of the ill-treatment at Ethiopian prisons, military camps, and police stations can “a true healing and national reconciliation commence.”

Human rights organizations believe the prisoner release will only be meaningful if followed by serious political and human rights reforms. These include opening up space for free speech and political protests, distributing power within the security sector, and reforming electoral laws to allow for robust participation.

They’d also like the government to curb its surveillance of critics and lift its restrictions on the media and the internet. Five journalists are currently imprisoned in the country, according to Courtney Radsch, an advocacy director for the Committee to Protect Journalists. Radsch hopes the journalists will be released along with the political prisoners and the charges against them dropped.

Berhane is hopeful that prisoners like journalist Eskinder Nega and opposition party leader Andualem Aragie, who were sentenced several years ago to 18 years and life respectively, will be part of the release. The idea is “so exciting,” Berhane said. “It puts me in tears.”

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Ethiopia PM ‘misquoted’ over prisoners

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BBC News

Hailemariam Desalegn said a new detention centre will comply with international standards

Ethiopia’s government has denied that all political prisoners will be freed, saying that only some imprisoned politicians will be pardoned.

An aide to the prime minister said a mistranslation led to him being quoted as saying that all political prisoners would be freed to promote dialogue.

The prime minster also said a detention centre, allegedly used as a torture chamber, would be shut.

Ethiopia has been hit by a wave of political unrest in recent years.

Amnesty International welcomed the initial announcement, saying it could signal “the end of an era of bloody repression in Ethiopia” – although it warned that the closure of the Maekelawi detention centre should not be used to “whitewash” the “horrifying” events which took place under its roof.

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Ethiopia has always denied that there were any political prisoners in the country, as alleged by human rights and opposition groups.

In a statement on Thursday, Prime Minster Hailemariam Desalegn’s office said that “some members of political parties and other individuals that have been allegedly suspected of committing crimes or those convicted will be pardoned or their cases interrupted based on an assessment that will be made so as to establish a national consensus and widen the political sphere”.

It remains unclear how many people will be freed, or when.

One of the main opposition groups, the Ethiopian Federal Democratic Unity Forum (Medrek), said the government often engaged in “face-saving” measures and tried to “buy time” when it was “cornered”.

Medrek was, nevertheless, prepared to enter into dialogue with the government, if it was genuine and the talks led to free and fair elections, said the group’s deputy leader, Beyene Petros.

Who are the prisoners?
Those held in jails across the country include opposition activists from the Amhara and Oromia regions, which were at the centre of anti-government protests in 2015 and 2016, and journalists who have criticised the government, says BBC Ethiopia correspondent Emmanuel Igunza.

The prisoners also include UK citizen Andargachew Tsege, who was seized in 2014 when changing planes in Yemen and forced to go to Ethiopia, where he had been sentenced to death in absentia for his political activities against the state.

It is difficult to know exactly how many politicians have been imprisoned, but our correspondent estimates that about 1,000 are held under the country’s anti-terrorism proclamation, including high profile leaders from the opposition.

However, there are another 5,000 cases still pending, made up of those arrested after a state of emergency was declared in October 2016, he adds.

Will they actually be released?
The government has given no timeline on the release of the prisoners, including those still awaiting trial.

Our reporter notes a number of cases have political backgrounds, but are also linked to groups the government considers to be terrorists. Nineteen people linked to Ginbot 7 – deemed a terror group – were sentenced to prison terms just this week.

Anti-government protester in EthiopiaImage copyrightAFP
Image caption
Thousands have been detained since anti-government protests broke out
Whether they will all be released remains to be seen.

Any dialogue would have to include legitimate opposition groups like the Oromo Federalist Congress, whose leaders would have to be freed to fully participate in the process, our correspondent says.

What about the detention centre?
As well as releasing the prisoners, Mr Hailemariam announced the closure of Maekelawi – a detention facility in the capital, Addis Ababa, which Amnesty International described as a “torture chamber used by the Ethiopian authorities to brutally interrogate anybody who dares to dissent, including peaceful protesters, journalists and opposition figures”.

“A new chapter for human rights will only be possible if all allegations of torture and other ill-treatment are effectively investigated and those responsible brought to justice,” Amnesty International added.

The government strongly denies the torture allegations, but it has now decided the prison will become a “modern museum” – a move the privately-owned Addis Standard newspaper called for in an editorial in 2016.

A new detention centre will be opened, Mr Hailemariam said, which would comply with international standards.

Why now?
Our correspondent says detentions have always been a major concern. In December, social media users staged a day of action to remember those held behind bars.

Media captionEthiopian PM Hailemariam Desalegn on regional concerns and human rights
But this decision comes hot on the heels of a meeting between the parties which make up the ruling Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) coalition.

Over the past months, infighting within the coalition, which has been in power for more than 25 years, has led the prime minister to acknowledge the need for change.

The Oromo Peoples’ Democratic Organization and the Amhara National Democratic Movement, which are part of the coalition, have been pushing for increased political space and the “respect of their people” following the massive anti-government demonstrations that have been witnessed in the country.

Who is Hailemariam Desalegn?
A trained engineer, Mr Hailemariam took the reins of power in 2012, after the death of Meles Zenawi, who had ruled since 1991.

However, while the former deputy prime minister was a close ally of Mr Meles, he struggled to gain approval of the other EPRDF leaders in order to assume his new role.

He is not known for tolerating dissent well, despite statements to the contrary, his critics say.

In 2016, he blamed “anti-peace forces” for the violence in the Oromia region, a year after he told the BBC that bloggers and reporters arrested were not real journalists and had terror links.

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African Union Celebrates Release of Political Prisoners in Ethiopia

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African Union (AU), Moussa Faki Mahamat

The President of the Commission of the African Union (AU), Moussa Faki Mahamat, today celebrated the announcement made by Ethiopia to pardon or suspend the ongoing judicial cases of members of political parties and other people.

From the headquarters of the organization, Faki Mahamat praised the Ethiopian authorities for this important and far-sighted decision, and for their commitment to foster national consensus and expand the democratic space.

The measure, announced the day before by the Ethiopian Prime Minister, Hailemariam Desalegn, also implies the closure of the detention center of Maekelawi, accused of holding illegal interrogations and practicing torture.

Faki Mahamat emphasizes that the measures initiated by Desalegn will help create an enabling environment for the search and consolidation of the impressive socio-economic achievements of Ethiopia over the last decade.

These steps will also improve the stability of the country, which is very important for the region and for Africa in general, the official said in a statement released by the AU.

The president of the Commission also appealed to all Ethiopians, regardless of their political affiliations, to adopt and maintain the spirit of forgiveness and unity in the interest of their country.

Source- .plenglish.com

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Ethiopian Renaissance Dam: Bringing in the bank

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Doaa El-Bey , Thursday 4 Jan 2018

“It was a totally unexpected step,” commented Diaaeddin Al-Kousi, an expert on water issues and former adviser to the minister of water resources and irrigation, in reaction to news that Egypt wants the World Bank to give technical advice on the building of the controversial Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD).

In a meeting with his Ethiopian counterpart Workneh Gebeyehu in Addis Ababa last week, Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukri proposed the involvement of the World Bank as an impartial third party in meetings of the technical committee studying the effects of the construction of the dam on downstream countries.

The one-day meeting between Shoukri and Gebeyehu aimed to break the impasse regarding the work of the tripartite technical committee made up of representatives of Egypt, Ethiopia and Sudan.

Ethiopia is attempting to prolong negotiations on technical matters in order to sidestep a report stating that the dam will harm downstream countries until after the completion of the dam’s construction, Al-Kousi added.

Involving the World Bank has several advantages, as it was the party that initiated the Nile Basin Initiative (NBI) in 1999 on the management of the River Nile’s water and thus has ample experience in this regard.

The NBI was a partnership initiated by the Nile Basin countries as a platform for dialogue and joint work on sharing the river’s resources, promoting peace and stability in the region.

According to the international laws governing international rivers, differences between countries should be settled via direct negotiations between the involved parties followed by involving a third party or more. If the mediation fails, the issue can be referred to international organisations like the United Nations.

Al-Kousi added that the bank has experts who have long experience in mediation issues. “I cannot describe it as 100 per cent unbiased, but they have the skills and the ability to read, understand and analyse the issues,” he said.

Mohamed Hegazi, former assistant to Egypt’s foreign minister, agreed. “During the difficult technical and political negotiations, World Bank experts assisted the involved countries in solving various legal hurdles and proposing the proper legal solutions to many problems that came up in the negotiations,” he said.

Hegazi pointed to the role played by the World Bank in the difficult negotiations between India and Pakistan which had led to the historic signing of the Indus Water Treaty in 1960.

This was signed after nine years of negotiations between India and Pakistan with the help of the World Bank, which is also a signatory to it. It lasted until December 2016, when India wanted to build various hydroelectric projects on the river, to which Islamabad raised objections.

The competition for water in the Indus River Basin has noticeably increased since the treaty was signed, necessitating the need for renegotiation of it. Delegations from India and Pakistan met at the World Bank headquarters in Washington in September last year for a round of talks on the issue.

After they had failed to agree, Pakistan requested the World Bank to fulfil its obligations by establishing a court of arbitration to settle the dispute in the light of the Indus Water Treaty.

Based on the success of previous third-party mediation in water-sharing issues, Egypt then suggested to Ethiopia last week that the World Bank be included in the River Nile negotiations.

“The failure of the technical committee to agree on the preliminary report submitted by the consultancy firms will impede the continuation of the studies on the impacts of the dam on Egypt and Sudan,” Shoukri told his counterpart in Ethiopia.

According to the Declaration of Principles signed in March 2015, the studies should be conducted before the dam filling process starts.

Assuring his country’s commitment to the Declaration of Principles and its determination not to cause harm to Egypt, Gebeyehu promised to study the Egyptian initiative and respond at the earliest opportunity.

Shoukri stated that he would submit the same initiative to Sudan within the next few days. The World Bank has not reacted to the Egyptian initiative, and no one was available to comment on the issue.

Negotiations between the three countries on the GERD broke down last November after the 17th round of technical talks was held in Cairo and attended by the irrigation ministers of the three countries.

After the meeting, Minister of Irrigation Mohamed Abdel-Ati declared that the technical track was facing deadlock. Egypt approved the preliminary report, but Ethiopia and Sudan demanded major amendments to the proposed studies. They failed to reach a compromise.

“It is strange that Ethiopia did not accept the preliminary report,” Al-Kousi said. “It is even stranger that Sudan did not either, although it signed an agreement with Egypt stating that both states should follow the same policies regarding Nile water issues,” he added.

The draft preliminary report was produced by a French consultancy firm in March last year. It includes studies to be conducted by the firm on the hydrological, hydraulic, environmental and economic impact of the dam.

During last week’s visit to Addis Ababa, Shoukri also met with Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn to discuss the upcoming visit by Desalegn to Cairo later this month in addition to bilateral relations and the challenges facing the technical track on the dam.

The involvement of the World Bank, Hegazi added, would be likely to provide a catalyst for establishing a framework for regional cooperation in which a multi-purpose project integrating water, power grids, railway and road network between the three countries could be drawn up.

“International financial institutions like the World Bank and other donors will certainly favour supporting a multi-dimensional project that involves many countries, in which water is just one factor in a multi-faceted cooperation programme,” he said.

The construction of the GERD has been a source of tension between Ethiopia and Egypt for some years. The dam, begun in 2011, is due for completion in the middle of this year. It will hold a massive 79 billion cubic metres of water and will be the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa.

Ethiopia argues that there will be no reduction of water downstream, as all the Blue Nile water will be cycled through the dam and eventually reach the downstream countries on its way to the Mediterranean. It also claims that more water will be available overall because there will be less evaporation.

*This story was first published in Al-Ahram Weekly

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The Tigrayan People’s Librration Front (TPLF) Should Face an Immediate, Complete & Independent Investigations

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TPLF

 

Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, concerned US politicians like Rep. Chris Smith, Rep. Mike Coffman, Ethiopian activists and others who care about human rights in Ethiopia have been exposing tortures, killings and massacres committed by the TPLF regime for more than twenty-five years. Most of these crimes are still being committed against many Ethiopians for their political views and ethnicities. Former prisoners, like Habtamu Ayalew, who were lucky enough to survive, have told us of unimaginable human suffering in TPLF prisons. A brave girl named Nigist Yirga and other have told us they are being tortured because of what ethnic group they are a part of.

TPLF cadres have defecated and urinated on Ethiopians in captivity, making the TPLF regime one of the worst human rights violators in history. Unfortunately, there were so many Ethiopians who never survived the inhumane torture practices of the TPLF at Maekelawi, Kilinto and other places including secret prisons in Tigray. If Maekelawi is to be converted to a museum, it should certainly include the stories and pictures of thousands of Ethiopians who were tortured and killed by the TPLF regime. The museum should certainly have to play a recorded interview of Habtamu Ayalew and others who are survivors of TPLF savagery.

The puppet prime minister has put all the blame regarding Maekelawi on the Derg Regime.  While the Derg has done a lot of despicable crimes on Ethiopians it is also a fact that Hailemariam Desalegn and Meles Zenawi took torture to the highest level of inhumanity. Listening to the prime minister’s denial of his regime’s crimes, it seems fair to ask if the religious, caring and family loving Hailemariam Desalegn could have survived the following done to him by TPLF cadres every day for months.

  1. Defecating and urinating on him
  2. Extracting his nails and then putting sticks on his fingers for fun.
  3. Tortured while crucified.
  4. A four-liter bottle of water hanged on his testicles while someone pushed him away.
  5. Left in a dark and extremely cold place for days without any of his coats.
  6. Tortured while being told he will be treated that way just because he is not Tigray.
  7. Forced to Push a wall while being tortured, tormented and told his ethnic group is to weak to push the TPLF.
  8. TPLF cadres stripping him of his clothes while telling him he is a disgusting pig because he is not a Tigray.

If any of these horrible crimes were committed against the prime minister, he would probably have admitted the inhumane practices of his government.

Right now, the regime should not only release all political prisoners without preconditions, but it should also face the following: complete and independent investigations on torture in all its prisons, including torture by ethnicity, killings and rape in its prisons, the identity and number of prisoners tortured as well as the number of prisoners killed during torture and the TPLF leadership members who approved such inhumane torture techniques. Furthermore, all torturer, killer cadres, police men and their superiors including top TPLF leadership should be persecuted by an independent court. Note: All investigations should be part of the suggested Maekelawi museum.

In addition, the regime should face independent investigations for the killings of peaceful demonstrators in Addis Ababa, Ambo, Kobel (Abay Mado), Dembi Dolo and other cities, including the killings of more than eight hundred Irreecha celebrators. They should also face such investigations for massacring and inciting violence and intentional displacement of Anuak, Somali, Oromo and Amhara brother and sisters in various regions of the country.

The TPLF is shamelessly trying to persuade Ethiopians that it could convert itself to a democratic government. However, the TPLF is a cruel, extremely corrupt, inhumane and ethnocentric mafia organization that must be removed for Ethiopians to establish a meaningful and sustainable democracy. Thus far, the regime in Addis Ababa has been imprisoning Ethiopians using a terrorism law that is completely designed to suppress descent and Ethiopians know very well the fact that the healing process will never start until terrorist TPLF along with its puppet prime minster who has no shame in telling Ethiopians there is a multi-party system are removed from power. Ethiopians should have a right to elect a government who works for them instead of spying, defecating and urinating on them.

We call upon the United Nations, Amnesty International, Human rights Watch, the US congress, the US senate, European Union and other Champions of Human Rights to demand for an immediate and independent investigation of the Ethiopian Regime for crimes against Humanity.

Human rights are rights inherent to all human beings

NY/NJ Ethiopians Task Force (www.ethionynj.com)

 

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FEDERALISM AND THE URGENCY OF CO-EXISTENCE

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By: Yared Terfassa

In a recent posting on Satenaw website, Prof. Alemayehu G.  Mariam presented what he dubbed as his “provocative and thoughtful argument and analysis” of ethnic federalism. In his writing (titled “Win-Et: Understanding the Mind of the Mastermind of Ethnic Federalism,” December 25, 2017), the Professor expressed his interest to find collaborative solutions to the country’s ills, and extended a challenge to others to offer competing perspectives, ideas and views on the theory and practice of federalism. In response to such an invitation as well as out of a desire to counter the perennial veiled attack on the Oromo struggle for freedom and recognition, I will attempt to make a modest contribution here.

Federalism is an arrangement of state structure based on the belief that the entire country functions better when the federal (national) government acknowledges the states (nations, sub-groups, etc.) as separate governments, and abstains from interfering in the states’ running of their respective governments. As such, it refers to the complete set of structures at the national, state, and local level and web of complex interrelationships between them. The choice of federalism generally implies a recognition of the fact that the entire country is made of a union of separate constituent parts, i.e., states, or national groups.

Federalism has been the primary choice of state arrangement for countries with large geography and/or diverse demography. Ethiopia, being large and diverse, is thus a suitable candidate for a federal arrangement. Considering the current worrisome political crisis, ethnic conflict, and the possibility of disintegration of the country, a federal arrangement is not only deemed suitable, but it has become indispensable for co-existence.

There have been various attempts at federalizing the Ethiopian state. These attempts have, however, been frustrated to a greater degree by the existence of divergent and competing views about the whole and the parts: the Ethiopian State and the nations within it.

To appreciate these divergent views and the resultant political quagmire, it is important to distinguish between the country of Ethiopia and the Ethiopian State. Country is generally considered of comprising a land, a terrain, a people, a culture, a history, a collective self-understanding, and a network of social institutions and framed and bound together by a distinctive juridical structure of a governing body. The State is an abstraction that basically refers to the administrative core of the country.

State formation is a phenomenon of the 19th century. Prior to that, countries have existed, in one form or another, without a need for a modern state. For example, the Oromo, like all African peoples of the time, had never had a state in the modern sense, they have always had a country of their own, Biyya Oromo (Oromia). When the idea of the modern state was coming to Africa, the Oromo were for the most part governing their country under the Gadaa system of direct democracy. The formation of the Ethiopian state may have preempted the transition of the Oromo from direct democracy to republicanism.

Since the state is not itself a country, there is nothing sacrosanct about the state. Thus, one may oppose a particular state formation in the name of a country. One may also defend the formation of the state without committing to the importance of the country. And, both phenomena have been unfolding in the Ethiopian political scene for over a century now.

One manifestation of the competing views on the formation of the Ethiopian State involves narratives about the age of the state itself: millennia versus a century. Some political forces claim that the Ethiopian State has existed for three millennia. Such longevity is supposed to make the state beyond reproach or reform. Long existence is thought here as a justification for continued existence, at any cost, and accuse others of sedition. The fallacy in this argument is that one need not see the Ethiopian State to have existed for millennia to see it as worthy.

Others view the Ethiopian state as having existed for only a century. They adopt such perspective with the knowledge about the malleability of the concept of the state, and with a view to challenge the moral dangers associated with the claim of there thousand years of history – chauvinism, supremacy, jingoism, and repression. They have come to believe that Ethiopian nationalism has become a refuge for scoundrels.

Based on these competing views, the goal of state formation has been presented as a binary choice between “UNITY” and “UNION.” Unity denotes the total absorption by or assimilation of the diverse groups into one ethno-linguistic group, regardless of whether these groups desire to maintain their heritage. Union, on the other hand, signifies the formation of a federal structure/model in which diversity is recognized and interaction among the groups is promoted.

The Unity versus the Union goals of state formation are in turn associated with two competing ideologies of state formation: Nationalist and Revolutionary Democracy. The Nationalist conception of the creation of political entities presumes that the state has prior existence, and hence the various cultural or linguistic groups must give way to the state/national culture and language, whereas the central idea of Revolutionary Democracy is that a state is consisted of sovereign, citizen-people.

The Unity/Nationalist group is driven by an instinctual urge to simplify issues and dictate orders. Thus, it just wants to resolve differences of ideas or cultures, or language into sameness. The proponents of this model want “ethnic identities” to give way to “national identities.” They view the desire for ethnic recognition and self-determination as sources of prejudice and war. They want to achieve harmony and peace by moving from ethnic to national, from particular attachments to universal reason.

Indeed, there are moral universals – the sanctity of life, the dignity of the human person, the right to be free, to be no man’s slave or the object of someone’s violence. In this regard, we are all members of the universal human family. Yet, we are also members of a particular human family with its particular history and memory, which confers upon us loyalties and obligations to the members of our community.

The Unity/Nationalis approach suffers from both moral impurity and methodological crudity/cruelty. There is no culture that is morally superior to another one. Thus, the idea of a national culture entails the arbitrary choice of one at the expense of others. The question then becomes, whose ethno-linguistic traits are to be promoted to the national status? Why undermine or kill a living language? Why destroy vibrant, long-standing identity of the Oromo, the Sidama, the Wolayita, the Konso, etc.? The nationalist common response to such concerns has been that “the state comes first; the end justifies the means.”

The other fundamental question regarding the creation of a uniform culture is whether it can be achieved without inflicting shame and pain on others? In countries where the nationalist approach has taken root, dehumanization and brutalization of peoples have been employed. These countries have used totalitarianism, fascism, Nazism, socialism, capitalism, conservatism, etc. to destroy civilizations and peoples with a view to create a new, same, national identity. The fact that native peoples in the Americas and elsewhere have been decimated does not justify the continuation of the inhumane practices of state formation. It is the contention of this writer that there must be a better, peaceful, humane way to enable various peoples to live together without resorting to barbaric means.

Any attempt to impose on different groups an artificial uniformity in the name of a single “national identity” represents a tragic misunderstanding of what it takes to form a new moral order in which the peoples flourish. Because the peoples in Ethiopia are different, each people have something unique to contribute, and every contribution counts. The Ethiopian nationalists’ primordial instinct to see differences as a threat is massively dysfunctional. It is not wise to impose an artificial unity on a divinely created diversity.

The Unity/Nationalist ideology, which has been in full swing for a century, got interrupted when the TPLF came to power in 1991, and declared its adoption of Revolutionary Democracy. Revolutionary Democracy was supposed to be an alternative to the nationalist perspective on state formation.  Under a Revolutionary Democracy state, it was envisioned that the sovereignty of the various groups of people in the country would be recognized. It was propagated that recognition and self-governance would lead to a symbiotic relationship among the peoples under one political entity, Ethiopia.

TPLF’s choice of revolutionary democracy was not purely a technical exercise. Rather, TPLF and Meles had their own assumptions and interests that lead them to describe the Ethiopian problem as a “national question” and prescribe Revolutionary Democracy as a panacea. Such description and prescription has enabled TPLF to stay in power for twenty-five years; although there really are clear signs of its impending demise.

As far as Oromos are concerned, Revolutionary Democracy has slightly mitigated historical dehumanization, but doubled the physical brutalization of the people. It has resulted in the establishment of the supremacy of a minority ethnic group and the dictatorship of one party. The TPLF rule has also produced a political class who publicly pronounce their “love” of Ethiopia and unabashedly despise the peoples in Ethiopia. Consequently, revolutionary democracy has now been rejected by all.

At this juncture, it is worthwhile to say a few words about relationship between the doctrine of ethnic federalism and the principle of self-determination. Self-determination is an empirical expression of human dignity by a group in making a choice of political association and/or structure. Ethnic federalism is one of the many ways of exercising self-determination. Although there is an organic link between ethnic federalism and self-determination, the nexus is not Stalin as Prof. Alemayehu alludes. Long, long before Stalin, the principle of self-determination has been exercised as a matter of course by and in all parts of the world. Self-determination, as a politico-social concept, has existed since the formation of human societies.

The attempt to discredit and denounce peoples struggle by deliberately linking the principle of self-determination and ethnic federalism to Stalinism is intellectually disingenuous and historically wrong. What animates nations, such as the Oromo, to desire and struggle for self-determination is not the writings of Lenin, Trotsky or Stalin on the rights of nations to self-determination. The Oromos do not need the intellectual guidance of Stalin, or anyone else for that matter, when they have the brain caliber of Haile Fida, Lencho Letta, Dima Negewo, Mekuria Bulcha, or Gadaa Maleba, and many others.

Oromos are guided by a belief that the received traditions of Gadaa and Irrecha as well as the Oromo language are worth reclaiming and reproduction, a conviction that they have the inalienable right to exist as a people like everybody else, an inextinguishable desire to defend ourselves against those who wish them ill, the knowledge that diversity is a natural phenomenon, and a hope of living in peace and prosperity as a member of the human family of nations, in union with those around us who share our destiny. The struggle for recognition and democracy are part and parcel of the struggle for self-determination. Such a struggle is not aimed against another group; it is rather waged to create a new moral order.

Finally, Professor Alemayehu declares that he knows “without a doubt, ethnic federalism is the intellectual product of the evil of hate.” It is not clear to this writer whether the Professor is adopting the “evil” description to the victims and the perpetrators of the Ethiopian tragedy at the same time. Is there a moral equivalence between those struggling for dignity and those who perpetrate violence to suppress them? Is ethnic federalism really the product of the evil of hate only? Could ethnic federalism be a product of a civilized mind that rejects violence, subordination and that aspires union, and peaceful co-existence?

Who is evil? Feyisa Lelisa? Hachalu Hundesa? Ali Birra? Lense Lemesa? Seenna Solomon? Elfinesh Quenno? Jambo Jotte? Dawite Mekonnen? Abbas Gnamo? Ezekiel Gabissa?

Who is evil:

Merera Gudina? –  a political science professor who has spent his entire life for peace and equality for all peoples in Ethiopia; a fearless leader who has been in the fore front to challenge TPLF intellectually and politically inside Ethiopia?

Bekele Gerba? – a man of strong moral stance in the tradition of such Oromo leaders as Obbo Magarsa (Abuna Petros) who speak truth to power; who inspired a generation of Oromos to stand up for their dignity; a professor of literature; a staunch advocate of justice and equality?

Tadesse Biru? –  the father of Oromo nationalism who had served the Ethiopian state until it proved unwilling and unable to address the grievances of his people?

Ibsa Gutema? –  that man of iron in his soul who took the brunt of the Ethiopian state’s violence upon himself for the dignity of his nation?

Mohammed Hassen? – most gentle, history professor who has spent a life time correcting the deliberate distortions and falsification of Oromo history in Ethiopia?

Sisay Ibsa? – a selfless man who has spent his life empowering his people at home and abroad; a man who spearheaded the effort to articulate the Oromo question; a man of tremendous intellectual vigor; a proven community organizer, and political leader?

Dawud Ibsa? – the soft-spoken political leader who is the symbol of Oromo defiance in the face of the most brutal Ethiopian regime; a man would let his enemy keep him down even if they had put him in prison, tortured him, or poisoned him because he is Oromo and struggles for the Oromo?

As civilized men, these individuals realize the relative validity of their convictions, yet they stand for them unflinchingly. These individuals and million other Oromos want self-determination for the Oromo people. Millions of Oromos want ethnic federalism in which the ethno-linguistic identities of all peoples are recognized and developed.

Oromo is sacred. Oromoness began thousands of years ago in the hunger for immortality. It is sacred as over 40,000,000 Oromos live it, identify with it, find meaning and purpose in it. It is sacred because generation of Oromos are willing to fight for the revival, survival, and flourishment of their civilization.

The Ethiopian state is based on history, not some political or moral ideal. A century has now passed with debate about the content and age of this history dominating the political conflict in the country. The country has many other urgent challenges with respect to poverty, economic growth, wealth distribution, access to and quality of education, access to and quality of health care, technological development, infrastructure development, competition and security issues, and many more. It is high time that political actors move away from the debate about history and focus on the establishment of a humane, just, and democratic union.

 

Win-Et: Understanding the Mind of the Mastermind of Ethnic FederalismPosted (Al Mariam)

 

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Release, not Clemency! (Tsegaye Ararssa)

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Releasing prisoners through pardon and amnesty (on a case-by-case basis) is a normal, if infrequent, juridical process implemented through the exercise of the Executive’s clemency power. It is done as an act of mercy exerted to ‘humanize’ legal justice or ‘to give legal justice a human face’. It is a thin supplement to the judicial work of convicting and correcting the guilty and acquitting and releasing the innocent.

This Executive act of clemency is not to be confused with the political act of releasing political prisoners unconditionally. The former is technical but the latter, as the name indicates, is political. Opting for a technical response to a supremely political question, trying to apply technical-legal solutions for preeminently political problems–as the TPLF regime is trying to do in Ethiopia today–is to invite more trouble, thereby deepening the crises further.

Political prisoners are released precisely because they are innocent as such. Political prisoners are POLITICAL PRISONERS only because they are innocent victims of political violence.

In a country where one’s Oromo identity is securitized and all forms of dissent are criminalized, it stands to reason to demand an unconditional release of all Oromo (and other) political prisoners.

For otherwise, the protesters will destroy the prisons and all of the regime’s torture chambers in order to free themselves. We have seen this happen in various towns in Oromia before, albeit at a small scale, and there’s no reason why it can’t happen again only at a larger scale.

The mandate to exercise clemency power has expired, if it ever was there. Releasing political prisoners is not about granting pardon and amnesty! It is not about clemency! Releasing political prisoners demands a political decision not an exercise of the (non-existing) executive power of clemency!

#ReleaseAllPolPrisoners #FreeEthiopia

 

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Hopes and Concerns: What is to be done?

ESAT DC Daily News Thur 04 Jan 2018

Demeke Mekonnen, deputy prime minister, has been appointed by the Prime Minister to Chair MetEC Board

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Addis Fortune

Premier Appoints Deputy to Chair MetEC Board
Demeke Mekonnen, deputy prime minister, has been appointed by the Prime Minister to chair the board of directors of the state owned Metals & Engineering Corporation (MetEC), replacing Minister of Defence, Siraj Fergessa.

Siraj will, however, remain a member of the board, which added Fetleworq G. Egziyabher, recently elected as deputy chair of TPLF. Chief of Staff Samora Yenus (Gen.) sits in the board alongside Ahmed Abitew, minister of Industry.

Founded eight years ago, MetEC started operations with a registered capital of 10 billion Br and aiming to help the small and medium-sized enterprises to transform in the manufacturing industry. It is run by Kinfe Dagnew (Maj. Gen.).

Incorporating over 70 companies, the Enterprise, a state-owned military-industrial complex, is often criticised by MPs for delaying the nation’s mega projects, including the 10 sugar plants planned to get constructed in 2015 but has yet to realise them.

Its new board chairperson, Demeke, was formerly the Minister of Education for five years from 2008. Chairman of the ANDM, he was also a Deputy President of the Amhara Regional State and Head of Capacity Building Bureau for three years.

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Dr Abrham Alemu | Dr Derese Getachew | Lema Megersa | Hopes and Concerns

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