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Sudan’s Bashir appears in public for first time since being ousted

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The Guardian

Ex-president is taken out of prison to the office of the anti-corruption prosecutor

Omar al-Bashir (C) is escorted into a vehicle as he returns to prison. Photograph: Ashraf Shazly/AFP/Getty Images

Sudan’s former president Omar al-Bashir has appeared in public for the first time since he was overthrown, as he was taken out of prison to the office of the anti-corruption prosecutor.

Bashir, wearing traditional white robes and turban, was driven to the prosecutor’s office in Khartoum on Sunday, a Reuters witness said.

The military overthrew and detained Bashir on 11 April after 16 weeks of street protests against his 30-year rule. He was being held in prison in Khartoum North, across the Blue Nile from the capital’s centre.

Meanwhile a top general vowed to punish those who carried out a deadly crackdown on protesters earlier this month that killed dozens and left hundreds wounded.

“We are working hard to take those who did this to the gallows,” Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, deputy chief of the ruling military council, said in a speech broadcast live on state television.

Thousands of protesters who had camped outside the Khartoum military headquarters for weeks were violently dispersed by armed men in military fatigues on 3 June, according to witnesses. More than 100 people were killed that day in Khartoum, according to doctors linked to the protest movement, while the health ministry put the nationwide death toll at 61.

On Thursday, the military council spokesman, Gen Shamseddine Kabbashi, expressed regret over the crackdown. But the council insisted it did not order the dispersal, saying it had actually planned to purge an area near the protest camp where people were said to sell drugs.

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Find your blood in Africa

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The full genetic structure of Ethiopians against other Africans. It is clear that Sandawes were from Ethiopia though they now are considered from the jungle simply because they speak click language. Most Ethiopian share three major bloods: Levant (France), Ari and one unknown that seems indigenous to Ethiopia (the one shared with Maasai in larger load.  Most Ethiopians lack West African blood as can here be seen in Yoruba or YRI but Anuak and Gumuz do. Afar, Amhara Tigray and Oromo are undifferentiated. Somali with a very slight difference. The two Somali: Ethiopian and the Somali land indeed are exactly the same. Yet the blood composition is exactly the same as the rest like Amhara, Tigray, Oromo, and Afar. This is a clear evidence that linguistic variation does not go with the actual genetic makeup.

D.Sertse Desta

 

The post Find your blood in Africa appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia restores internet after one week outage

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CNN

(CNN)One week after a web blackout in the country, internet and text messaging services were restored in Ethiopia Tuesday, Ethio Telecom, the country’s mobile service provider said.

Acknowledging the interruption for the first time, Cherer Aklilu Shaffo, the Executive Director of Ethiopia’s lone telecoms provider, told CNN the company would credit customers for services that were affected during the shutdown.
CNN requested a comment on the outage from the spokeswoman for the Ethiopian Prime Minister but has yet to receive a response.
The blackout sparked anger and frustration among citizens as access to social media platforms were blocked.

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(CNN)One week after a web blackout in the country, internet and text messaging services were restored in Ethiopia Tuesday, Ethio Telecom, the country’s mobile service provider said.

Acknowledging the interruption for the first time, Cherer Aklilu Shaffo, the Executive Director of Ethiopia’s lone telecoms provider, told CNN the company would credit customers for services that were affected during the shutdown.
CNN requested a comment on the outage from the spokeswoman for the Ethiopian Prime Minister but has yet to receive a response.
The blackout sparked anger and frustration among citizens as access to social media platforms were blocked.
In the capital of Addis Ababa, business owners and journalists told CNN Monday they were using VPN to connect to the internet and access messaging platforms.
Tour operator Serak Tadele complained that he has been struggling to get online to book travel plans for his clients since the internet restrictions began last week.
“Every time there is a suspension of internet, we continue to use the business center at luxury hotels,” Tadele told CNN.
“It’s expensive and is an added cost to us, and sadly, we can not simply pass that on to our customers. But it ultimately, this hurts our business,” he added.
Speculation is rife that the internet restrictions was put in place to prevent cheating by final year secondary students sitting for national examinations.
Connections were partially restored at different times last week but many people were unable to go online most of the time. T
An Ethiopia and Eritrea researcher with Human Rights Watch (HRW), Felix Horne said the web outages could negatively impact the country’s economy and commitment to freedom of expression.
“Blocking the internet countrywide to deter a few possible exam cheats makes it impossible for all Ethiopians to access information,” Horne said. “It hurts the economy, it hurts Ethiopia’s international image, and it flies in the face of the government’s stated commitments to freedom of expression.”
Before Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed took office in April 2018, the internet had been switched off for three months in many regions where there had been pockets of unrest.
When he took office, Abiy ended the blackout; freed political prisoners, journalists and bloggers and implemented economic reforms to attract foreign investment to the country.
“While Abiy’s government has made impressive progress on freedom of expression and access to information, blacking the internet is a step backward and reminiscent of the previous government he is so keen to distance himself from,” Horne added.

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Boeing 737 Max jet: A timeline of the crisis and where the plane maker stands now

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“This, coupled with industry-leading reliability and maintainability, is what customers have told us they wantOpens a New Window.. As a result, we are seeing overwhelming demand for this new and improved version of the 737. We are working with our customers to finalize these and other agreements in the weeks and months ahead.”

December 8, 2015

BoeingOpens a New Window. rolls out its first 737 MAX jet in Renton, Washington with a goal of a first flight the following year.

According to the press release announcing the launch, “The new single-aisle airplane will deliver 20 percent lower fuel use than the first Next-Generation 737s and the lowest operating cost.”

January 29, 2016

737 MAX performs its first flight.

Image 1 of 3

Pictured here is an artist’s rendering of a 737 MAX 9. (Boeing)

May 16, 2017

Boeing marked the first delivery of the new 737 MAX. The airplane, a 737 MAX 8, was handed over to Malindo Air at the Seattle Delivery Center. The Malaysia-based airline will be the first to put the 737 MAX into commercial service.

October 29, 2018

A Lion Air Boeing 737 MAX 8 crashes into the Java Sea shortly after taking off from an airport in Jakarta, Indonesia, killing all 189 people on board.

November 6, 2018

Boeing details what pilots should do if a sensor failure erroneously triggers an automated flight-control system called MCAS that may cause the plane to pitch downward, a scenario suspected in the Lion Air crash.

Boeing’s bulletin provides the first description of MCAS, which pilots and airlines had previously been unaware of, according to reports.

November 13, 2018

In a FOX Business exclusiveOpens a New Window., Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg said the company plans to continue to “fully cooperate” in the investigation into last month’s fatal Lion Air Crash in Indonesia.

January 31, 2019

Despite the crash, Boeing reportedly has 5,011 orders for the new 737 MAX from 79 customers through the end of January.

March 10, 2019

An Ethiopian Air flight crashes shortly after takeoff on its way from Addis Ababa to Nairobi, Kenya, killing all 157 people on board. The circumstances of this crash were similar to Lion Air.

March 12, 2019

A number of countries around the world close their airspace to the Boeing 737 MAX planes, with Canada and the U.S. remaining key holdouts. Aviation regulators in China, Indonesia, Australia and Europe are among those banning the plane. The FAA releases a statement noting that it will not ground the 737 MAX. Amid the crisis, President Trump weighs in via a tweet, stating planes have become “too far complex” but stops short of mentioning Boeing by name.

Donald J. Trump

✔@realDonaldTrump

Airplanes are becoming far too complex to fly. Pilots are no longer needed, but rather computer scientists from MIT. I see it all the time in many products. Always seeking to go one unnecessary step further, when often old and simpler is far better. Split second decisions are….

62.4K people are talking about this

Donald J. Trump

✔@realDonaldTrump

….needed, and the complexity creates danger. All of this for great cost yet very little gain. I don’t know about you, but I don’t want Albert Einstein to be my pilot. I want great flying professionals that are allowed to easily and quickly take control of a plane!

40.6K people are talking about this

March 13, 2019

Following analysis of the new Ethiopian Air crash data, the FAA issues an emergency order, temporarily banning the aircraft from flying in the U.S. or entering its airspace, citing “new evidence” from the Ethiopian Airlines crash. FAA concluded that it saw similarities between the two crashes based on recently analyzed satellite data and evidence investigators found in the wreckage in Ethiopia.

Boeing also releases a statement saying it remains confident in the aircraft’s safety but recommends a temporary suspension of operations of the global fleet.

March 17, 2019

Information retrieved from the “black boxes” of the Ethiopian Airlines crash shows “clear similarities” to the October Lion Air crash. A Seattle Times report revealed that deadline pressure prodded the FAA and Boeing to delegate more safety decisions to the plane maker’s engineers working on behalf of the FAA.

March 18, 2019

The Wall Street Journal reports that a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., issued a broad subpoena dated March 11 to at least one person involved in the 737 MAX’s development, seeking related documents, including correspondence, emails, and other messages.

March 19, 2019

Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao called for her agency’s internal watchdog to open an inquiry into the process the department followed to certify the Boeing 737 MAX, saying that “safety is the top priority of the department.”

March 20, 2019

It is reported that the FBI has joined the DOT’s criminal investigation into the certification of the Boeing’s 737 MAXOpens a New Window.. Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) also announces he will hold a Commerce subcommittee hearing to examine the government’s oversight of the jet.

March 27, 2019

Boeing unveils new fixes to the MCAS software system and says it plans to send the software updates and new plans for pilot training to the FAA for approval by the end of the week.

March 29, 2019

The investigation into the Ethiopian Airlines crash reaches a preliminary conclusion that the MCAS “activated before the plane nose-dived into the ground,” according to a Wall Street Journal report.

April 1, 2019

FAA says Boeing is expected to submit its proposal for new fixes to the MCAS software system “over the coming weeks,” emphasizing more time is needed “for additional work” to ensure that Boeing “has identified and appropriately addressed all pertinent issues.”

Upon receiving the fix, the FAA said it will “subject Boeing’s completed submission to a rigorous safety review … [and] will not approve the software for installation until the agency is satisfied with the submission.”

April 4, 2019

Boeing says it has identified an additional software issue the FAA will require to be repaired before the planes are cleared to fly again. It characterizes the newly detected issue as “relatively minor,” but the Washington Post reports the problem is still classified as “critical for safety.”

April 5, 2019

Boeing announces plans to cut MAX productionOpens a New Window. by 20 percent, to 42 aircraft per month.

Donald J. Trump

✔@realDonaldTrump

What do I know about branding, maybe nothing (but I did become President!), but if I were Boeing, I would FIX the Boeing 737 MAX, add some additional great features, & REBRAND the plane with a new name.
No product has suffered like this one. But again, what the hell do I know?

62.5K people are talking about this

May 5, 2019

Boeing said it knew of a safety alert flaw in the cockpit of its 737 MAX jetliners months before the first of 2 fatal crashes involving the now-grounded aircraft, but it didn’t immediately notify regulators.

May 9, 2019

Bloomberg interviewed a handful of former Boeing employees who described a corporate culture that prioritizes cost-cutting and profitability over reporting plane defects to upper management.

May 14, 2019

A preliminary conclusion from an internal FAA review has “tentatively determined that senior agency officials didn’t participate in or monitor crucial safety assessments” of the MCAS system, per the Wall Street Journal.

May 29, 2019

The head of Boeing acknowledged that the company “clearly fell short” in dealing with the accident-ridden 737 MAX and said that it had not adequately communicated with regulators.

Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg’s remarks to CBS News — his first interview since the global grounding of the plane following two crashes that claimed 346 lives.

Muilenburg was pressed by CBS about failing to notify the FAA for more than a year that the company had deactivated a signal designed to advise the crew of a disagreement between the plane’s “angle of attack” sensors, which measure its angle vis-a-vis oncoming air to warn of impending stalls.

The sensors provide data to the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, a flight handling system connected to the deadly crashes of Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines MAXs.

June 2, 2019

U.S. air-safety regulators said nearly 150 parts inside the wings of more than 310 of Boeing  737 jets, including grounded MAX models, may be defective and need to be replaced.

June 7, 2019

Reports suggest that Boeing planned to wait three years to fix a nonworking safety alertOpens a New Window.on its 737 Max aircraft and sped up the process only after the first of two deadly crashes involving the planes.

The company acknowledged that it originally planned to fix a cockpit warning light in 2020 after two key U.S. lawmakers disclosed the company’s timetable Friday.

Reps. Peter A. DeFazio (D-Ore.) and Rick Larsen (D-Wash.) wrote to Boeing and the Federal Aviation Administration and asked why the company took more than a year to tell the safety agency and airlines that the alert did not work on Max jets.

The feature, called an angle of attack alert, warns pilots when sensors measuring the up-or-down pitch of a plane’s nose relative to oncoming air might be wrong.

June 9, 2019

American Airlines announces it is extending cancellations for the 737 MAX through Setpember 3, 2019

Ticker Security Last Change %Chg
AAL AMERICAN AIRLINES GROUP INC. 32.52 -0.04 -0.12%

June 11, 2019

Boeing said Tuesday that it delivered 30 commercial airliners in May, a 56% drop from a year ago, when 68 jets were delivered. Deliveries of 737s dropped from 47 last year to just eight last month, all of which were an older model of the jet.

The Chicago-based company has 4,550 unfulfilled orders for the Max, but stopped deliveries after regulators around the world grounded the jets following crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia that killed 346 people.

June 12, 2019

FAA official says 737 MAX could be back in the air by December.

It’s not possible to give an exact date as work progresses on safety fixes to the aircraft, said Ali Bahrami, the Federal Aviation Administration’s associate administrator for aviation safety, in an interview Wednesday at a conference in Cologne, Germany.

June 13, 2019

Southwest Airlines joins AA in removing the Boeing 737 Max from its schedule through the start of September.

Ticker Security Last Change %Chg
LUV SOUTHWEST AIRLINES CO. 51.70 +0.52 +1.02%

June 16, 2019

Boeing’s chief executive said on Sunday that the company made a “mistake” in how it handled a cockpit warning lightOpens a New Window. on the 737 Max. Dennis Muilenburg, the executive, made the comments while addressing reporters on the eve of the Paris Air Show. Mr. Muilenburg also said the company’s “inconsistent” communication with regulators and customers about the warning light was “unacceptable.”

June 17, 2019

Boeing Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith revealed the possibility of a name change for the 737 MAX while speaking to Bloomberg on the sidelines of the Paris Air Show.

Boeing executives later pushed back on this report.

June 18, 2019

It’s reported that Boeing Co. ended a two-month drought of orders for its airliners in the wake of the grounding of its 737 MAX fleet, by securing a commitment from Korean Air Lines Co. Ltd. and Air Lease Corp. to buy 787 Dreamliners. Previously, Boeing had not announced any new sales since late March, shortly after its bestselling jet, the 737 Max, was grounded.

Boeing Airplanes

✔@BoeingAirplanes

Thank you International Airlines Group for your trust and confidence in the 737 MAX and the people of Boeing: IAG Announces Intent to Buy 200 Boeing 737 MAX Airplanes.

RELEASE: https://boeing.mediaroom.com/2019-06-18-International-Airlines-Group-Announces-Intent-to-Buy-200-Boeing-737-MAX-Airplanes 

486 people are talking about this

Additionally, International Airlines Group announced plans to buy 200 737 MAX jets in a deal valued at $24 billion.

*Sources compiled from FOX Business’ reporting as well as major news outlets including The Associated Press, The Wall Street Journal, Reuters and others.  

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U.S. Should Acknowledge Critical Challenges for Ethiopia’s Transition

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Ethiopia’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed responds to questions at the Parliament in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on February 1, 2019. Tiksa Negeri/Reuters

by Michelle Gavin

Anyone fishing for a good news story out of Africa recently, and rightly, has celebrated Ethiopia, where dynamic young Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has dramatically opened political space, departing from decades of repressive, tightly controlled government. Abiy is a charismatic whirlwind of activity—making peace with neighboring Eritrea, working to open the Ethiopian economy to new opportunities for growth, and even mediating between protestors and securocrats in Sudan. Anyone who cares about stability and prosperity in Africa, and anyone who understands how important African partnership will be to tackle the foreign policy challenges of the future, is pulling for him to succeed. Just days ago, Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg wove Ethiopia into a major foreign policy address, citing the country as an example of “what it looks like when hope triumphs over hostility.”

But Ethiopia faces real and urgent challenges, and it is critical that well-wishers not ignore them. Abiy has lifted the lid off of a pressure cooker—one his predecessors held in place with sometimes brutal force—and in some cases the result has not been euphoria, but rather messy, complex eruptions of communal violence. Ethiopia’s story is not a simple one, and the millions internally displaced over the past year, the worrying reports of forced returns, and the potential for 2020 elections to be a flashpoint should focus the minds of policy-makers around concrete ways to provide support to what is sure to be a long and complex transition.

Ethiopia Abiy Ahmed Political Transitions Sub-Saharan Africa
Ethiopia is one of the world’s dozen most populous countries, characterized by tremendous ethnic and linguistic diversity. Over 60 percent of the population is under the age of twenty-five. Despite real gains over the past years, many Ethiopians still live in severe poverty, and official literacy rates hover at around half of the population. It is not an easy country to govern in any circumstance. Against that backdrop, and at a moment of profound change, in which the role of the state and indeed the unifying national idea is being rethought, the possibility of more instability is very real.

The Unites States and others ought to be more ambitious in finding new ways to support the resilience of governing institutions, mechanisms for reconciling longstanding grievances, and the capacity of a government inclined to respect the civil and political rights of citizens to also deliver services and opportunity. Countless talented and patriotic Ethiopians from around the country and across the diaspora have mobilized, sometimes upending their own lives, to lend support to their government’s liberalizing project. They know this will not be a year’s work—it is a generational project. A clear sense of U.S. strategic interests indicates that it is one that deserves more of our own attention and support.

 

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Vision Ethiopia Eighth Conference successfully completed

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Vision Ethiopia is a 501 (c) (3) nonprofit organization incorporated in Washington,  D.C.  EIN 81-0729204

The three-day long colloquium on the interface between culture, heritage, conflict resolution, democratic governance & national unity was successfully completed. The conference was held between June 12 and 14, 20191 in the City of Bahir Dar, at the Wisdom Hall of Bahir Dar University. It was organized in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, and Bahir Dar University. Consistent with the mission of Vision Ethiopia, the conference became an independent forum for academics and professionals who shared their vision about Ethiopia. The eighth conference was qualitatively different and perhaps even better in that it involved medical professionals, social scientists, senior public servants and officials of the government of the day.

The conference was preceded by two calls for papers. Authors were provided with detailed guidelines and were requested to succinctly outline the policy implications of their manuscripts. There were forty-one submissions. Thirty-four papers were accepted and twenty-two availed themselves to present their works. In addition to the papers, four panel discussions were held. Fourteen distinguished academics and senior public servants that administer three federal level ministries participated. There were a total of 36 speakers at the colloquium. The presentations were formalistic and informed by the relevant theoretical and practice literature.

Over 14 of the 36 speakers came from Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States. There were also a few dedicated individuals who came from North America to attend the conference. The rest of the speakers were from the local universities and civil servants. More than half of the speakers dealt with the interfaces between

 

  • The colloquium coincided with another important meeting that involved both regional administrators and federal level government and ruling party officials. The period also coincided with school leaving examination, the unavailability of internet services throughout the country, and some news of campus unrests at the country’s universities.

culture, heritage, tourism, development, higher education quality, research and traditional medicine. Using photographic illustrations, a number of speakers highlighted the worrying state of heritage buildings, artifacts, museums (including the national museum in Addis Ababa), and religious relics. Neglect, lack of proper preservation and protection efforts, poor city and road construction planning, absence of control over illicit trade and corruption in the so-called sale and transfer of heritage assets (buildings), underinvestment in heritage preservation, lack of skill in curatorship and museum management were among the list of problems outlined by the speakers. The need for an integrated tourism policy and management was also highlighted.

 

At the start of the conference, Dr. Zewdu Emeru, Vice President of Bahir Dar University invited the Master of Ceremonies, Dr. Yohannes Zeleke, Research Associate at the Smithsonian Institute Washington D.C. where he in turn requested the President of the University, Dr. Frew Tegegne, to address the participants. The opening remarks outlining the purpose and timing of the eighth conference was delivered by Vision Ethiopia’s President, Professor Getachew Begashaw of Harper College, Chicago. The keynote speaker for the first day of the conference was the Hon W/O Busiena Alkadir, State Minister for Tourism, Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. The keynote speaker for the second day was the Hon Professor Afework Kassu, State Minister for Science and Higher Education. The conference was hosted by Bahir Dar University, which provided a conference hall, logistic services, audio-video, refreshments and lunch. The conference ended with the closing remarks of the Hon Ato Merha Tsedek, Special Advisor to the President of the Amhara Regional State. The poem that was eloquently read by a participant and the play by the performing arts troop of the National Theater, added additional flavors to the conference. At the end of the conference dinner was hosted for the Board Members of Vision Ethiopia. Dr. Mulunesh who represented the regional government, the Special Advisor to the regional President and the Mayor of the City of Bahir Dar attended the dinner.

 

The paper presentations and panel discussions began with the presentation of the senior civil servants of the Ministry Culture, Sports and Tourism. Dr. Tadele Fentaw (Expert, Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, and Former Vice President of Debre Berhan University) and Ato Seleshi Girma (Expert, Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism) presented detailed work (part of a PhD thesis project) that dealt with

 

policies, perspectives and constraints. Later, Dr. Mulugeta Fesseha (Director of Heritage Agency, Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, and Associate Professor at Addis Ababa University) presented a paper that indicated the importance of involving local communities in the development of tourism. Dr. Yohannes Zeleke, Research Associate at the Smithsonian Institute Washington DC moderated the session

 

Next came the panel discussion on triangular partnership. Given that foreign aid has not been successful in building capacity in developing countries, the panelists in this segment focused on the Ethiopian diaspora. “Triangular partnership” in the medical discipline was the focus of the conversation. Leading specialists in neurology, cancer research and pain management and epidemiology spoke at the colloquium. The discussion was moderated by the Hon Professor Afework Kassu, State Minister for Science and Higher Education. Dr. Enawgaw Mehari (University of Kentucky), Professor Salahadin Abdi (Research Professor, Anderson Cancer Center, University of Texas, Houston) and Professor Yemane Berhane (epidemiologist, formerly Addis Ababa University and now at Addis Continental Institute of Public Health) presented papers that dealt with triangular partnership and its successes. It was felt that the model can be replicated in other disciplines.

 

The panel on the interface between culture, traditional medicine and modern medicine was composed of Dr. Almaz Afera (Vice President of Debre Berhan University), Dr. Assefa Negewo (Former President of Wollo University), Dr. Asfaw Debella (Lead Researcher, Ethiopian Public Health Institute, Ministry of Health), Ato Asmare Talie (Debre Markos University) and Professor Fetene Gebrewold (Department of Health Sciences & Social Work, Western Illinois University). The moderator for this panel was Dr. Enawgaw Mehari, Senior Neurology Consultant at King’s Daughters Medical Specialties, Kentucky and Adjunct Clinical Faculty at University of UK, University of Pike Ville, and Addis Ababa University. The message was that research on Ethiopia’s traditional medicine is poor, and appear to have been ignored. The intellectual property rights (patent protection) for traditional healers was another sticky point.

 

The quality of teaching, learning and research in Ethiopia’s higher education institutions was another area of conversation. Global trends in the deregulation of the higher education sector, importing foreign degrees without quality assurance

 

standards, alleged fraud and corruption in academia, and massification were subjects of discussion. Despite the increase in the number of universities, Ethiopia’s institutions of higher learning did not feature favorably in international ranking systems. Graduate competency and unemployment levels were additional concerns. Intellectual integrity, work ethics, poor salaries, neglect of duties, campus unrest and the lack of internationalization, were noted. Professor Minga Negash (Metropolitan State University of Denver and University of the Witwatersrand) moderated the panel discussion. It was also noted that the country is spending a substantial percentage of its annual budget in higher education. The panel was composed of Dr. Yemataw Wonde (Director of Quality Assurance at Gondar University), Dr. Abebe Deres (Coordinator, Quality Assurance, Faculty of Social Sciences, Bahir Dar University), Dr. Tsedeke Abate (Former Director General of the Ethiopian Institute of Agricultural Research), and Engineer Araya Fisseha (Director General, Ethiopian National Accreditation Organization). Consensus emerged that Ethiopia’s universities need to be concerned at their international standing, and researchers were advised to avoid predatory journals. It was also emphasized that the curricula need to take account of the country’s particular situation (e.g., land and water scarcity, climate change, population density, food self-sufficiency, population demographics, land productivity, etc.). Dr. Tsedeke supported his presentation with a statistical output, and pleaded for policy breakthrough in revolutionizing Ethiopia’s agriculture.

 

Speakers underscored that deregulation and massification of higher education need to be supported by proper supervision, differentiation of universities and stumping out fly by night institutions. It was also noted that universities need to be engaged in both knowledge creation and knowledge dissemination, and prioritize their spending accordingly. The opening of new masters and doctoral (often duplicative) programs without sufficient preparation and differentiation, was also a concern. Even though degree per capita remains low in Ethiopia, it was felt that multiple issues, including twining of programs, need to be considered. Balancing quantity and quality appear to have become a serious challenge for the sector. The conclusion of the panel was largely in line with the State Minister’s keynote address where he announced the reasons for the creation of the new ministry, the existence of a number of cooperation agreements, including with Vision Ethiopia, and the establishment of the statutory Advisory Council for Science and Higher

Education. The charge for the newly established Ministry is to oversee the 45 or so state funded universities offering 883 programs, 174 universities and some 1547 colleges and polytechnics serving close to one million students.

 

The number of papers presented were close to 22. Professor Seid Hassan (Murray State University, Kentucky) and Professor Getachew Metaferia (Morgan State University, Maryland) did the review work. The selection of abstracts and manuscripts objectively would have been difficult without their work. The first paper was presented by Professor Worku Aberra (Chair, Department of Economics, Dawson College, Canada). His paper was entitled the economic dimensions of cultural policy in Ethiopia. Professor Minga Negash (Metropolitan State University of Denver & University of the Witwatersrand; co-authors Dr. Tesfaye Lemma, Towson University; and Dr. Lulseged Ayalew, University of North Carolina) presented a research pointer about the feasibility of using a modified integrated reporting for establishing accountability and a system of reporting in institutions that control, use and own heritage assets (public goods). Researchers were encouraged to use newer theories in explaining culture, institutions and heritage assets. Dr. Ashenfi Gossaye, Housing Expert at the City of Seattle chaired this segment of the conference. Ato Shegalem Fekadu (Department of History and Heritage Management, University of Gondar) and Ato Getenet Gedefew (Debre Tabor University) presented papers about the worrying state of heritage buildings at Fasil Ghebbi and Baths, and Bahir Dar Giorgis and Alata Bridge. Many agreed that these were samples of the status of heritage assets in various parts of the country. Ato Beshawred Ayele (Former Hospitality Consultant and President of American Business Enterprises Inc.) moderated the session.

 

With regard to the interface between culture and governance, there were two part presentations. There were six papers. The first set of papers were presented by Ato Geletaw Zeleke (Author and commentator, Boston, Mass) where he proposed a “dual federalism” system while Ato Dibaba Tesfaye (Department of Law, Governance & International Relation, London Metropolitan University) presented a paper entitled “The role of social capital in nation building: A sociological approach”. His remarks about the intellectual integrity of academics working for Ethiopian universities caught the attention of many. He argued that Ethiopian universities are controlled by politicians, and were/ are far removed from documenting/speaking the truth. The paper by Professor Getachew Begashaw,

(Department of Economics, Harper College, Chicago) used international benchmarks, such as the World Bank’s voice and accountability index for evaluating the state of governance and accountability in Ethiopia. His paper identified several deficits in the current constitution. It was entitled “Good governance with checks and balances for Ethiopian national unity”. The session was moderated by Professor Getachew Metaferia, Professor of Political Science at Morgan State University.

 

The second set of papers dealt with the governance of Addis Ababa, ethnic territories and minority rights, and corruption. The size and shape of the capital city and its governance caught the attention of many as it is a contemporary rallying point for both civil rights activists and regional nationalists. Dr. Ashenafi Gossaye, formerly Assistant Professor at Addis Ababa University and now housing expert at the City of Seattle in state of Washington, reviewed the international experience of federal government seats, and indicated that the current constitution back-tracked from the Transitional Charter of 1991. He reminded the audience how the city was used to appease/penalize certain groups. The constitution, he argued, deprives the rights of the residents (citizens) of Addis Ababa. He outlined the various policy options and elevating the City of Addis Ababa to a City State status might be a preferred avenue for resolving the current tension. He questioned the alleged demographic change and the appointment of Mayors through political fiat, apparently by successive Prime Ministers. The “special interest” provision also needs to be reexamined, he argued. The spirit of “special interest” is different from the spirit of cooperation and creation of interlinked metropolis, Dr. Ashenafi underscored. Dr. Ashenafi’s presentation did not deal with the economic outcomes and tensions that resulted from land speculation, increased urbanization, pollution, and the dispossession of the poor from ancestral and disturbing the dead as a result of the desecration of burial sites.

 

Dr. Sonja John (Assistant Professor of Political Science and Coordinator of the PhD Program, Bahir Dar University) raised another sensitive issue: the issue of minorities and ethnic territories. Using Wolkait as case study, she examined the complexity of the problem. Minority rights and territorial reorganization questions are igniting conflicts and displacing millions of Ethiopians in various parts of the country. Dr. John’s presentation was appreciated by the audience in that she attempted to play the role of public intellectual by trying to present her key

 

messages in the Amharic language. She echoed Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s statements and identified that the EPRDF government has violated several provisions of its own constitution. Her research methodology was interviews of the affected people from the region. She questioned whether there is a political will to resolve the problem peacefully. During the question and answer session, a question was raised as to whether allegations of depopulation and demography change can be resolved by forgiveness (apparently without establishing truth though a judicial enquiry), and some kind of restorative justice.

 

The third paper on culture and governance was jointly authored by Professor Seid Hassan of Murray State University (Kentucky) and Professor Getachew Metaferia of Morgan State University (Maryland). Professor Getachew presented the work. Using purposeful sampling and an interview method, the authors compared the state of corruption in Ethiopia under its three post war governments. They highlighted the institutional nature of contemporary corruption. Political power and business interests were found to be interwoven. The lack of separation between party and government on one hand and politics and business on the other hand, the control of the regional militia by politicians were found to be obstacles for the actualization of the promises of the ruling party. Speaker after speaker noted that corruption is linked with the form of governance. Speakers identified the weakness of the federal government’s institutions in maintaining law and order, the existence of power struggles within the ruling party, corruption, money laundering, and illicit trade (including in weapons). However, unlike some western analysts, no speaker anticipated the disintegration of the country because of the newly constituted power blocks.

 

The last set of papers dealt with the indigenous writing system and musical instruments of the Ethiopian Orthodox Twehido Church (EOTC). Dr. Aberra Molla (Denver Colorado, Inventor and Patent Holder for Computerizing Ethiopic Writing System) spoke about the ability of the Ethiopic alphabet to write many Ethiopian and African languages. He used the forum to announce the donation of the software to government departments and public schools and universities, provided they get the memory stick for a token amount. Ato Yetmgeta Alemneh, an Art Historian, presented a paper entitled “Historical overview of the symbolism of the musical instruments of the EOTC and its relationship with other Orthodox Churches”. Ato Melaku Desta (Debre Markos University) attributed the lack of adherence to iron and folic acid supplementation by pregnant women to culture. Ato Gubaye Assaye (Bahir Dar University and Haramaya University) presented a paper about blood feud and its settlement in the Amhara Region. Dr. Desalegn Mekuria (Debre Markos University) examined the relationship between the people of Gojam and Wellega while Ato Yohannes Mersha (Bahir Dar University) used one of the regional government departments to outline the “gender mainstreaming” challenges in the region. Ato Beshawred Ayele (Formerly Hospitality Consultant and President of the America Business Enterprises Inc. Washington D.C) moderated the sessions.

 

The three-day long colloquium was also enriched by several questions and answers. Senior academics recommended ways and means of improving the works that were presented. The conference ended with vote of thanks, concluding remarks and tokens of appreciation to the Board Members of Vision Ethiopia. The successful conference would not have been possible without the support of many individuals and institutions. From the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, the Honorable Dr. Hirut Kassaw, the Honorable Busiena Alkadir, Dr. Tadele Fentaw, Ato Sileshi Girma and Dr. Mulugeta Fesseha deserve much appreciation. From the Ministry of Science and Higher Education, support and presence of the Honorable Professor Hirut Wolde Mariam and Hon. Professor Afework Kasu were instrumental. From the Ministry of Health, Dr. Asfaw Debella has made a notable contribution. Our special vote of thanks goes to Dr. Enawgaw Mehari of University of Kentucky for putting together the panel discussions on triangular partnership and traditional medicine. The team at Bahir Dar University, especially Dr, Frew Tegegne and Dr. Zewdu Emeru, respectively President and Vice President, have indebted us. The excellent hospitality and personal attention given to the speakers and those of us who travelled from afar will remain with us. Thank you and we look forward to future cooperation. The performing arts troop of the National Theater from Addis Ababa used the power of the Arts to demonstrate the state of affairs in the country, and was very much in line with the themes of the colloquium. Finally, to those who were not able to attend, consistent with our past practice, the videos of the entire conference will be uploaded to http://visionethiopia.org in due time. Please stay tuned.

 

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The chief of staff of the Ethiopian army, Gen Seare Mekonnen, has been shot dead by his own bodyguard in the capital, Addis Ababa.

He and another officer died trying to prevent a coup attempt against the administration in Ethiopia’s northern Amhara region, PM Abiy Ahmed said.

In Amhara itself, regional governor Ambachew Mekonnen was killed along with an adviser.

The government says the situation is under control after arrests were made.

The prime minister has gone on TV to urge Ethiopians to unite in the face of “evil” forces set on dividing the country.

The US state department has warned its staff in Addis Ababa to stay inside.

Ethnic violence has hit Amhara and other parts of Ethiopia in recent years.

Since his election last year, Mr Abiy has moved to end political repression by releasing political prisoners, removing bans on political parties and prosecuting officials accused of human rights abuses.

Africa’s oldest independent country, Ethiopia is also the continent’s second most populous (after Nigeria), with 102.5 million inhabitants from more than 80 different ethnic groups.

A transfer hub for long-haul air travel, it has one of the fastest-growing economies in the world, but a vast number of young Ethiopians are without work.

What do we know about the attacks?

Gen Seare was killed on Saturday evening at his residence along with another general, Gezai Abera, by the bodyguard who is now in custody, the prime minister’s press office says.

Gen Seare Mekonnen (TV screen grab)Image copyrightETHIOPIAN TV
Image captionGen Seare Mekonnen’s death was confirmed by TV channels

The government says it has reason to think the attack was linked to the assassination of the governor of Amhara a few hours earlier in the region’s capital, Bahir Dar.

Mr Ambachew was killed at a meeting in his office along with his senior adviser, Ezez Wasie, while the region’s attorney general was wounded.

Lake Ayalew has now been appointed as the region’s acting governor.

The prime minister’s office accused Amhara’s regional security chief, Brig-Gen Asaminew Tsige, of plotting the coup attempt. It is unclear whether he has been arrested.

Prime Minister Abiy AhmedImage copyrightREUTERS
Image captionPrime Minister Abiy appeared on TV wearing military fatigues

Many of those involved in the coup attempt are under arrest and operations are in progress to detain others, the PM’s press office said.

“The coup attempt in Amhara regional state is against the constitution and is intended to scupper the hard-won peace of the region,” it added.

“This illegal attempt should be condemned by all Ethiopians and the federal government has full capacity to overpower this armed group.”

The mayor of Addis Ababa, Takele Uma, has said life will resume as normal on Monday and he called on the city’s public employees to go to work as usual.

Safety and security would be maintained in the capital, he promised.

A toxic political atmosphere

By Emmanuel Igunza, BBC Africa, Nairobi

These are tumultuous time for Ethiopia and Prime Minister Abiy, who is already facing increased ethnic tensions.

Chief of staff Seare Mekonnen had only served as head of the military for a year having being appointed by Mr Abiy, who made sweeping changes in the security apparatus when he took office last April.

It is clear there is still significant opposition within the military opposed to the PM’s style of leadership.

The killing of Amhara’s governor is also a big blow for Mr Abiy, who is credited with installing Ambachew Mekonnen in office.

He was a key ally in Amhara, which is itself facing security problems and clamour from some groups for greater autonomy from the central government.

The first general election since Mr Abiy came to power is supposed to be held next year, but it is very hard to see how this will go ahead in a country that is highly polarised. The atmosphere is just too toxic.

Short presentational grey line

Why is Amhara so important?

The homeland of the Amhara ethnic group is the country’s second most populous region and has given Ethiopia its state language, Amharic.

Violence between the Amhara and Gumuz ethnic groups left dozens of people dead last month in Amhara and its neighbouring region, Benishangul Gumuz.

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Ethiopia’s Amhara state chief killed amid regional coup attempt

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The president of Ethiopia‘s Amhara region and his top adviser were killed in an attempted coup in which the country’s army chief was also shot dead, the office of Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said.

Spokeswoman Billene Seyoum told journalists a “hit squad” led by Amhara’s security chief Asaminew Tsige burst into a meeting in the state offices of Amhara’s capital, Bahir Dar, on Saturday and shot regional government President Ambachew Mekonnen and his adviser Ezez Wassie.

The men were “gravely injured in the attack and later died of their wounds,” she said.

“Several hours later, in what seems like a coordinated attack, the chief of the staff of the national security forces Seare Mekonnen was killed in his home by his bodyguard in Addis Ababa.”

Also shot dead was a retired general who had been visiting him, Billene added.

The bodyguard has been apprehended while Asaminew is still on the loose, sources said.

Al Jazeera’s Leah Harding, reporting from Addis Ababa, said Abiy called those responsible “mercenaries”.

“The army intelligence general said the coup was meant to create chaos and division in the military. He said the military now has control over the situation … and he reiterated that there are no divisions within the military,” Harding reported.

“This is particularly important because the two generals that were killed in Addis Ababa are part of the Tigre ethnic group, and the person who we believe is responsible for the coup plot is part of the Amhara group.”

Analysts said the incident showed the seriousness of the political crisis in Ethiopia, where efforts by Abiy to loosen the iron-fisted grip of his predecessors and push through reforms have unleashed a wave of unrest.

“These tragic incidents, unfortunately, demonstrate the depth of Ethiopia’s political crisis,” said International Crisis Group analyst William Davison.

“It is now critical that actors across the country do not worsen the instability by reacting violently or trying to exploit this unfolding situation for their own political ends,” the expert said.

Ethiopia unrest
Ethiopia Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed condemned the unrest in an appearance on state television [Reuters]

Residents of Bahir Dar said late on Saturday there was gunfire in some neighbourhoods and some roads had been closed off.

The US embassy issued alerts about reported gunfire in Addis Ababa and violence around Bahir Dar.

Travel – State Dept

✔@TravelGov

: The U.S Embassy is aware of reports of gunfire in Addis Ababa. Chief of Mission personnel are advised to shelter in place. http://ow.ly/kcLf50uKB0w 

159 people are talking about this

Early on Sunday, Brigadier General Tefera Mamo, the head of special forces in Amhara, told state television that “most of the people who attempted the coup have been arrested, although there are a few still at large.”

Since coming to power last year, Abiy has tried to spearhead political reforms to open up the once isolated, security-obsessed Horn of Africa country of 100 million people.

He has released political prisoners, lifted bans on political parties and prosecuted officials accused of gross human rights abuses, but his government is battling mounting violence.

Ethnic bloodshed – long held in check by the state’s iron grip – has flared up in many areas, including Amhara, where the regional government was led by Ambachew Mekonnen.

“Since Abiy Ahmed took power and the country moved towards democratisation … there have been different forms of mobilisations, by different actors, particularly nationalists.” Awol Allo, a lecturer in law at Keele University, told Al Jazeera.

“[In] Amhara regional state, there is this feeling that they were marginalised, and these individuals that were suspected to be behind the coup recently said that Amhara people have never been subordinated.. so there is this sense of grievance and victimhood that is driving the nationalist movements,” he added.

Ethiopia is due to hold a national parliamentary election next year. Several opposition groups have called for the polls to be held on time despite the unrest and displacement.

Ethiopia map

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES

Turkey’s opposition set to win rerun of Istanbul’s mayoral vote

AK Party’s candidate concedes defeat after initial results show CHP’s Ekrem Imamoglu leading with 53.69 percent.

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Supporters of the main opposition Republican People's Party (CHP), celebrate in Istanbul, Turkey [Cansu Alkaya/Reuters]
Supporters of the main opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP), celebrate in Istanbul, Turkey [Cansu Alkaya/Reuters]

The ruling Justice and Development Party’s (AK Party) candidate in the controversial rerun of Istanbul’s mayoral election has conceded defeat after initial results showed the opposition leading the vote.

The state-run Anadolu news agency said on Sunday that the opposition Republican People’s Party (CHP) candidate Ekrem Imamoglu was leading with 53.69 percent of the vote, compared with AK Party’s Binali Yildirim’s 45.4 percent, with more than 95 percent of ballots counted.

“According to the result as of now, my competitor Ekrem Imamoglu is leading the race. I congratulate him and wish him good luck,” Yildirim said. 

CHP’s win in the Istanbul election ends the 17 year rule by the AK Party in Turkey’s largest city and commercial hub.

The Istanbul mayoral election was first held on March 31, when Imamoglu secured 48.8 percent of the vote, while the AK Party’s Yildirim held 48.55 percent, granting Imamoglu the title of mayor with a razor-thin margin.

The AK Party proceeded to file an ‘extraordinary objection’ to the results, leading the Supreme Electoral Council (YSK) to annul the results and schedule Sunday’s rerun.

Not just a local election

The Istanbul election has become far bigger than any local vote, as the rerun put into question the country’s democracy and threatened the AK Party’s stronghold on power over the last two decades.

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan – who served as Istanbul’s mayor in the 1990s – has famously said: “whoever loses Istanbul loses Turkey.

Erdogan cast his vote on Sunday amid high security in Uskudar, a predominately conservative district on the city’s Asian side.

Bilkent University Assistant Professor of International Relations, Berk Esen, described it as being a “major personal blow for Erdogan.

“It has marked the beginning of the end for the Turkish style presidency and become difficult for the AKP machine to sustain itself without the corrupt use of Istanbul resources,” he said.

After AK Party mayoral candidate Yildirim cast his vote today he addressed a gathered crowd with a statement seemingly pointing to the pressure felt by his party.

“If we ever made any wrongdoing to any rival or brother in Istanbul, I would like to ask for their forgiveness and blessing,” Yildirim expressed.

Voting in Beylikduzu in west Istanbul, CHP’s Imamoglu said Istanbul will vote with the rule of law, justice and democracy at the forefront of their minds.

“In the name of our democracy, in the name of Istanbul and in the name of legitimacy of all future elections of our country, today my people will make the most accurate decision,” Imamoglu said.

Countering counting irregularities

To ensure no “illegal wrongdoings” were made in Istanbul’s mayoral rerun, various independent mechanisms have been erected in order to monitor the voting and counting process.

For example, at the call of CHP, lawyers from across Turkey volunteered their time to travel to Istanbul in order to counter election fraud.

One lawyer was appointed to each voting booth erected in nearly 2,000 polling stations across the city.

Esen told Al Jazeera this is a very important for Turkish politics, as the vote counting process has not been very accurate and fair in previous elections.

It’s important for the opposition party to organise and mobilise supporters not only to come out and vote but also observe the counting process to make sure no votes will be stolen,” Esen said.

“Lawyers … would be able to make sure that the ruling party will not be able to cancel the result on a mere technicality.”

Since the state-run Anadolu Agency became the outlet to distribute live election results to the media in 2014, the voluntary Vote and Beyond (Oy ve Otesi) organisation has been trying to ensure “transparent and accountable elections.”

After controversy surrounded Anadolu Agency’s release of data in the March 31 election, in which is ceased broadcasting at 11pm when Imamoglu came into the lead, Vote and Beyond launched a new mobile application to post live updates.

The data is sourced from volunteers at each polling station recording “minutes” of the counts.

A group of citizen journalists who founded the group Dokuz8, also in 2014, have also released live updates of the vote counting.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

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Attempted Coup Leaves Ethiopia’s Army Chief and 3 Senior Officials Dead

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By Reuters

ADDIS ABABA — The chief of staff of the Ethiopian Army and at least three other senior officials have been killed in different parts of the country when a general tried to seize control of the northern state of Amhara in an attempted coup, the prime minister’s office said on Sunday.

A spokesman for Ethiopia’s prime minister told The Associated Press that the army chief, Gen. Seare Mekonnen, had been shot dead at his residence in the capital, Addis Ababa, by his bodyguard. He said a retired army general visiting the army chief at the time had also been killed in the same attack late on Saturday.

Amhara’s state president, Ambachew Mekonnen — who is an ally of the prime minister — and Mr. Ambachew’s adviser, Gize Abera, were also killed in the region, according to state media.

“He was shot by people who are close to him,” Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said of Mr. Ambachew in a televised address on Saturday.

The president’s spokesman, Nigussu Tilahun, said the attacks in Addis Ababa and in Bahir Dar, the capital of Amhara, were linked.

Officials said the coup attempt had been orchestrated by the region’s head of security, Gen. Asamnew Tsige. General Asamnew was released from prison last year, having been granted amnesty for a similar coup attempt, according to media reports.

Regional government officials had been in a meeting to discuss how to rein in the open recruitment of ethnic militias by General Asamnew when the coup attempt began, officials said.

A week earlier, General Asamnew had openly advised the Amhara people, one of Ethiopia’s larger ethnic groups, to arm themselves, in a video spread on Facebook.

Residents in Amhara’s capital, Bahir Dar, said late Saturday that they could hear gunfire in some neighborhoods and that some roads had been closed off.

The United States Embassy said on Saturday that it was aware of reports of gunfire in Addis Ababa, and some residents said they had heard about six shots fired in a suburb near Bole International Airport around 9:30 p.m. local time on Saturday.

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed of Ethiopia gave a televised address on Sunday.CreditETV, via Associated Press
CreditETV, via Associated Press

“Chief of Mission personnel are advised to shelter in place,” the embassy said on its website.

On Sunday, Brig. Gen. Tefera Mamo, the head of special forces in Amhara, told state television that “most of the people who attempted the coup have been arrested, although there are a few still at large.”

Mr. Abiy said in the statement on Sunday, “The situation in the Amhara region is currently under full control by the Federal Government in collaboration with the regional government.”

Since coming to power in April last year, Mr. Abiy — a former soldier, minister of science and technology, and vice president of the Oromia region — has tried to spearhead sweeping political reforms in the nation of 100 million in the Horn of Africa, where years of political violence had led to the resignation of his predecessor, Hailemariam Desalegn.

He has pulled Ethiopia back from the brink of a political implosion, since the country has been rocked in recent years by violent protests and had been in a state of emergency since the previous prime minister’s resignation in February.

Mr. Abiy has released political prisoners, removed bans on political parties, prosecuted officials accused of gross human rights abuses, and reestablished relations with neighboring Eritrea.

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June 23, 2018; June 22, 2019: Dates Which Will Live in Infamy in Ethiopia

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A Special Tribute to Victims of a Terrorist Attack in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia on June 23, 2018 and Amhara Region on June 22, 2019

Today, high level iconic leaders of Amhara kilil (region) were shot by their own brothers (colleagues). Some were killed and others wounded. The man who was coordinating the (military) operation against the coup plotters, our beloved and most respected armed forces chief of staff Seare Mekonen was killed by the hired hitmen of the coup plotters. We have put the situation in Amhara kilil under complete control. It was a coup attempt that did not even last an hour. It was a complete failure. We are pursuing those who managed to escape arrest… P.M. Abiy Ahmed, televised statementJune 22, 2019.

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Let us separate private individuals from ethnic groups. Let’s separate the thorns from the rose flowers. Because of one crooked tree, we must not destroy the whole forest…

We will always remember today’s martyrdom as the price we paid for Ethiopian love, Ethiopian peace, Ethiopian unity and Ethiopian  reconciliation. We earned this very day with great sacrifice.

It is a day we got by losing so many of our people. It is a day we have learned once again what we got through sacrifice and a day we did not expect to get without sacrifice. Regardless, what I want to announce to my Ethiopian brothers and sisters is that love conquers all.

Forgiveness conquers all. To kill is to be defeated. To kill is to bear shame.

For anyone to work and thwart and destroy the joy of a country is a sign of smallness. But we Ethiopians are not small. We are a great people.

— P.M. Abiy Ahmed, rally speech and televised statementJune 23, 2018 

At the scene of the terrorist attack in Mesqel Square, Addis Ababa on 6/23/18

As I remembered the terrorist victims of June 23, 2018, another terrorist attack took place on June 22, 2019.

I had prepared this tribute for release on June 23, 2019 when I heard news of an attempted coup in the Amhara region of Ethiopia and the assassination of Chief of General Staff Saere Mekonen on June 22, 2019.

I was deeply saddened by the news.

Is it déjà vu?

Someone trying to take power by the barrel of the gun, again? Almost exactly a year to the day?

This was intended to be my memorial tribute to those who died and were wounded on June 23, 2018 in a terrorist attack at Mesqel Square, Addis Ababa.

Today, it is also my memorial tribute to those who died on June 22, 2019.

H.E. Dr. Ambachew Mekonnen, Amhara Region President

I honor the service and sacrifices of Amhara region president H.E. Dr. Ambachew Mekonnen, armed forces Chief of Staff General Saere Mekonnen (no relation), Maj. General Gezai Abera (ret.), Ato Ezez Wassie, Amhara regional government advisor and others who were wounded in the abortive coup. My deepest condolences to their families.

Armed Forces Chief of Staff General Saere Mekonnen

I remember…

I remember June 23, 2018 just like June 22, 2019.

I was in Washington, D.C. at the Architect Hotel. A CNN reporter popped on the TV screening. “Breaking news. An  explosion at a rally in Addis Ababa… 156 people injured, one fatality.”

I can say I was present at Mesqel Square on June 23, 2018. I cannot say I was completely surprised by the terrorist attack.

Still, I was angry as were millions of others who wanted to act out their outrage.

Those who planned, financed and coordinated the terrorist attack on June 23, 2018 did not aim to kill one individual. They wanted to kill a whole nation in a civil war.

Those who planned, financed and coordinated the terrorist attack on June 23, 2018 intended to abort the birth of a new and free Ethiopia. They wanted to forever seal Ethiopia in the womb of ethnic apartheid.

But on June 23, 2018, ethnic apartheid died miserably and was buried deep in the trash heap of history. But the Forces of Darkness wanted to go out with a bang at the funeral of ethnic apartheid.

Nearly 160 innocent people became victims of the terror of the Forces of Darkness.

All Ethiopians owe a heavy debt of gratitude to these martyrs of freedom  who died or were injured on June 23, 2018 at Mesqel Square.

They are the unknown and unsung heroes who deserve our eternal respect and appreciation.

I salute them all for their heroic sacrifices.

On that day, they were the thin red line between civil peace and civil war.

If things had gone the other way that day, I shudder to think how many hundreds of  of thousands of innocent people would have died in mindless acts of vengeance.

I learned a great lesson on June 23, 2018.

We must not lose faith in our fellow Ethiopians. Ethiopia is an ocean. If a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty. We must learn to “separate the thorns from the rose flowers.”

Ethiopian Days of infamy

Ethiopia has seen many dark days that will forever live in infamy.

November 24, 1974. A day that will forever live in infamy.

Junta leader Mengistu Hailemariam ordered the massacre of 60 officials  (Mengistu Massacres) of the imperial government of H.I.M. Haile Selassie. That massacre marked the era of “Red Terror” in Ethiopia.

June 8, 2005. November 1 to 10, 2005. November 14-16, 2005. Thirteen days that will forever live in infamy.

Following the 2005 parliamentary election, Tigrean People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) Don and capo di tutu capi (boss of all bosses) Meles Zenawi declared a state of  emergency and ordered his troops to shoot-and-ask-questions-later. In the  Meles Massacres, 193 unarmed protesters were killed and 763 wounded.

October 2, 2016. A day that will forever  live in infamy.

Under the leadership of TPLF puppet prime minister Hailemariam Desalegn, TPLF troops opened fire indiscriminately on crowds attending one of the most important cultural and spiritual events in Ethiopia. The Irreecha Massacres resulted in the deaths of an estimated 700 people.

June 23, 2018. A day that will forever live in infamy.

An terrorist dressed in a police uniform unsuccessfully attempted to throw a grenade at a rally killing at least two  persons and wounding 156. “Nine Addis Ababa police commission officials including the deputy Addis Ababa police commissioner” were arrested.

June 22, 2019. A day that will forever live in infamy.

Certain individuals intent on effecting a coup d’etat killed Amhara region president H.E. Dr. Ambachew Mekonnen, armed forces Chief of Staff General Saere Mekonnen (no relation), Maj. General Gezai Abera (ret.), Ato Ezez Wassie, Amhara regional government advisor and others.

Power does NOT grow out of the barrel of the gun — Days of the gun are over and gone. Violence is the weapon of losers!

Mao Zedong, the father of the People’s Republic of China was dead wrong when he proclaimed, “Every Communist must grasp the truth, ‘Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun.’ Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party.”

The only thing that grows out of the barrel of a gun is death and destruction.

But such has been the slogan of the Tigrean People’s Liberation Front and its leaders.

Meles Zenawi’s favorite taunt to the opposition was, “If you want power, get it like we did. Go to the bush and fight your way back.”

For 27 years, the TPLF leaders enforced their cruel and brutal rule in Ethiopia with the barrel and butt of the gun.

For 27 years, the TPLF succeeded in their propaganda that they can be removed from power only through brute force, the barrel of AK-47s.

For 27 years, the TPLF brayed, neighed and cackled about how powerful they were with the gun. They boasted, “We made the mountains shake, rattle and roll with our guns!”

Ha!

In the end, the TPLF was defeated without a single shot being fired.

In the end, the TPLF packed up and stealthily skipped town like a family of gypsies.

In the end, the TPLF is holed up under a rock somewhere to avoid detection.

Of course, I always knew in the end the TPLF would prove to be a Beast with feet of clay.

In 2013, I proclaimed the TPLF is not to be feared. “When gazed upon, the TPLF appears awesome, formidable and infinitely powerful. It has guns, tanks, rockets, planes and bombs. Though the T-TPLF has legs of iron, its feet are made of clay.”

In the end, the TPLF was defeated not by guns, tanks and war planes.

The TPLF’s guns, tanks and rockets were defeated through mass civil disobedience and peaceful resistance.

In 2009, I told the TPLF the people of Ethiopia united can never be defeated.

In 2013, I warned the TPLF to stop killing, jailing and torturing people or they will seal their doom in the trash heap of history.

In 2018, the TPLF was doomed just like I predicted!

In 2018, the young people of Ethiopia, Ethiopia’s Cheetahs, were united against TPLF oppression, brutalization, exploitation and apartheid rule. My prophesy came to pass!

In 2019, the TPLF is finds itself in the trash bin of history hoping to escape legal accountability for its crimes, corruption and human rights violations.

My way or the secession highway?

Today, TPLF capo and casanova Debretsion Gebremichael runs around frothing at the mouth, “It is my way or the secession highway.”

We have heard that wolf cry for decades.

The TPLF took up guns in the early 1970s to secede from Ethiopia and establish an independent “Republic of Tigray”.

Then, lo and behold, they found a bottomless gold mine called Ethiopia.

For 27 years, the TPLF gold diggers literally ripped out all the gold in Ethiopia.

Now, they think there is gold at the end of the rainbow of secession.

The TPLF leaders could learn a lesson from the fable of King Midas who wanted to change everything he touched to turn into gold. He learned to be careful what to wish for.

“Be careful what you wish for, it might just come true”, Debretsion and TPLF!

Hear! Hear!

“All that glitters is not gold.”

That includes black gold (oil) Debretsion thinks he can squeeze out of rocks.

If Debretsion and his TPLF gang think there is going to be a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow of secession, I got news for them.

They will find only fool’s gold.

They will find nothing but privation, hardship, misery, sorrow and suffering.

That is a FACT!

Debretsion and his TPLF should be forewarned: Those who seek gold in secession should beware they will only find El Dorado.

We must be like the foolish old man who removed the mountains

Mao Zedong was right on the money when he invoked an ancient Chinese fable called “The Foolish Old Man who Removed the Mountains” to teach his people.

The Foolish Old Man had a house that faced the two great peaks, Taihang and Wangwu (metaphorically representing feudalism and imperialism), which obstructed his view.

The Foolish Old Man got his sons and began digging up the two mountains.

A Wise Old Man who was watching remarked, ‘How silly of you to do this! It is quite impossible for you to dig up these two huge mountains.’

The Foolish Old Man replied, “When I die my sons will carry on; when they die, there will be my grandsons and then their sons and grandsons, and so on to infinity. High as they are, the mountains cannot grow any higher and with every bit we dig, they will be that much lower.

The Foolish Old Man and his sons continued to dig everyday firm in their conviction that in the end they will clear the mountains. God was moved by this, and he sent down two angels who carried the mountains away on their backs.

The two mountains we must clear in Ethiopia

Today, two big mountains lie like a dead weight on the people of Ethiopia.

One is a mountain called Tribalism.

It goes by many other names: ethnic chauvinism, ethnocentrism, ethnic apartheid, ethnic federalism, communalism, sectarianism and clannism.

The other consist of a mountain called Underdevelopment with triple peaks called poverty, disease and illiteracy.

If Ethiopia’s children stand together and dig together in good will and common purpose, we can clear out these two mountains in a single generation.

If we can’t clear them, our grandchildren, great grandchildren can clear them out.

How do we remove the mountains of tribalism and underdevelopment?

Before we can tackle the job of removing the mountains of tribalism and underdevelopment, we must arouse the political consciousness of the entire people of Ethiopia with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr’s message: “We must all learn to live together as brothers or we will all perish together as fools.”

My adaptation of Dr. King’s message is this: We must dig together to clear away the twin  mountains of tribalism and underdevelopment that are a dead weight on Ethiopia with the reckless abandon of the Foolish Old Man and his sons or perish like damned fools.

WE can clear out the mountain of tribalism and underdevelopment only when we work together like fingers on our hands and dig together like a cete of badgers.

I use the pronoun “We” in a specific way.

I mean WE as in “We, the People of the United States”.

WE as in “We the people of Ethiopia”, NOT as the so-called nations, nationalities and peoples in Ethiopia. (I have discredited the nonsense about “nations, nationalities and peoples” in Ethiopia.)

WE as in the united people of Ethiopia, NOT as the disconnected people of the Kililistans of Ethiopia.

When I first came to America nearly 50 years ago, I attended a foreign student’s orientation at my college and was told America is a melting pot of races, ethnicities, cultures, nationalities, etc.

That was the first time I heard Benjamin Franklin’s saying, “United we stand, divided we fall”.

I learned about the motto of the United States, “E pluribus unum” (out of many, one).

I learned about the pledge of allegiance, “one Nation under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all”.

I believe there is one indivisible Ethiopian nation that is home to diverse communities. The most beautiful garden has flowers of all varieties with different sweet fragrances.

I believe Ethiopia must be a nation where each citizen is entitled to equality, liberty and justice regardless of ethnicity, religion, race, color, gender or age.

I should like to think of myself the Foolish Old Man digging at the two mountains Mao Zedong was metaphorically talking about.

I have been digging and digging for the past 14 years, not with a hoe and shovel but with my pen and computer keyboard.

Today, the Foolish Old Professor is digging right along the most dynamic Ethiopian Cheetahs (young people) to clear out the mountains of tribalism and underdevelopment.

But the Foolish Old Professor has the easiest job.

All he has to do is carry water for the young Cheetahs who do all of the heavy lifting  and heavy digging in building the New Ethiopia.

Medemer: The roadmap out of the valley of tribalism and underdevelopment

Ethiopians have an old saying. “If spiders’ web could be made into twine, it could tie up a lion.”

If thousands of spiders could come together for a common purpose and work together, they could snag and bag that big ole king of the jungle.

“Medemer” is the political translation of the old spider metaphor.

Medemer is our roadmap out of the mountainous wilderness of tribalism, poverty, disease and ignorance.

Last August, I told Ethiopians the only question they face is Medemer or not Medemer.

This past October, I formulated an equation for Medemer.

M(edemer)= Sc(social capital) x Ac(active citizens)

Where Sc is social capital defined as the networks of relationships among people who live and work in a particular society, and

Ac is defined as the number of people getting involved actively in their local communities and democratic governance at all levels (from towns to cities to nationwide activity).

In more philosophical terms, Medemer is based on the principle, “Without you, there is no me. Without me, there’s no you. We must come together as a fist.”

The essence of Medemer is that all Ethiopians are tied together in the single garment of destiny.

In other words, without Oromos, there are no Amharas; without Amharas, there are no Tigreans; without Tigreans there are no Somalis; without Somalis, there are no Sidama; without Sidama, there are not Woleyita; without Woleyita, there are no Afari; without Afari, there are no Harari; without Harari, there are no Anuak; without Anuak, there are no Gurage and on and on.

When we include everyone into the whole fabric of Ethiopia — that single garment of destiny Dr. King talked about — undivided by ethnicity, religion, language, etc., then we know we have attained greatness in Ethiopia.

Without each other in Ethiopia, there is only “the other”.

The “other” who is the enemy.

The “other” who must be annihilated.

The “other” who is a stranger among us, even though in every way s/he is one of us, our flesh and blood.

In Ethiopia, H.E. Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed has chosen the path of Medemer.

Every day, he preaches the gospel of inclusiveness,  “We and Us.”

For PM Abiy, “We and Us” include our neighbors who border us, all Africans and all people of the world.

Medemer requires passionate and dedicated exertions by individual Ethiopians who are willing to fight the insurgent and primitive forces of hate, tribalism and division.

The martyrs of June 23, 2018 and Ethiopia’s road map for the future

On June 23, 2018, I trembled in cold sweat alarmed Ethiopia was inching – plunging — towards a creeping civil war.

On June 23, 2019, I am filled with the confidence and conviction that despite bumps in th road, we have a clear road map for the future.

Ethiopia was saved on June 23, 2019 because a grenade intended for one man was deflected and the pain and suffering of 110 million people was borne by 158 innocent individuals.

Ethiopia shall rise today because it has young leaders who are willing to pay the price for liberty and democracy.

The Forces of Darkness behind the June 23 terrorist attack believed they could stop the peaceful change by killing the leaders brought forward by the blood, sweat and tears of the young people of Ethiopia.

The Forces of Darkness behind the June 22, 2019 coup also believed could stop the peaceful change by killing the leaders brought forward by the blood, sweat and tears of the young people of Ethiopia.

But the die is cast. Neither grenades, guns nor tanks can stop Ethiopia’s march towards democracy.

Notwithstanding the gripes and complaints of the naysayers and nitwits, Ethiopians today live in civil peace without fear of civil war. They are enjoying the benefits of civil  government, civility, civic reconciliation and the rule of law.

But to make the sacrifices of the 158 people, the thousands of others who paid with their blood, tears and sweat lasting and durable and the leaders who paid the ultimate sacrifice, we must all come together and do our share.

We must renounce violence.

If we must fight, let’s fight with our ideas.

Let’s make the hearts and minds of the people of Ethiopia our battlegrounds. .

In my very first major commentary in 2006  after I joined the Ethiopian human rights movement entitled “Awakening Giant”, I wrote:

We prove the righteousness of our cause not in battlefields soaked in blood and filled with corpses, but in the living hearts and thinking minds of men and women of good will.

In the worst days of TPLF rule — during the days of the Meles Massacres—I never advocated the use of violence to remove the TPLF.

Many laughed at me as naïve and idealistic. They said the ONLY way to get rid of the TPLF was through armed struggle.

I never stopped telling anyone who cared to listen or read my commentaries, the only way to get rid of the TPLF is through nonviolent political action, noncooperation and resistance.

I was proven right!

I was always proud to call myself a “utopian Ethiopian”.

I realized long ago violence is a convenient altar for the power hungry and thirsty to sacrifice the blood of innocent people so they can seize power.

I realized long ago violence is a never-ending cycle. Violence solves nothing. Hate is the cradle of violence.

I know violence will remain  a political tool as long as the love of power reigns supreme over the power of love.

On June 23, 2018, those who planned, financed and coordinated the terrorist attack believed they can stop the change with violence, murder and assassinations.

On June 22, 2019, those who planned, financed and coordinated the coup believed they can stop the change with violence, murder and assassinations.

They all failed!

I shall always remember June 23, 2018.

I shall always remember June 22, 2019.

There is an eternal truth we must all accept: Violence ultimately destroys those who perpetuate violence.

For it is written:

The wicked draw the sword and bend the bow
to bring down the poor and needy,
to slay those whose ways are upright.
But their swords will pierce their own hearts,
and their bows will be broken.

Let those who have violence and hate in their hearts take notice!

The post June 23, 2018; June 22, 2019: Dates Which Will Live in Infamy in Ethiopia appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia security forces kill alleged coup leader

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A newspaper shows the pictures of Amhara state President Ambachew Mekonnen and Army Chief of Staff Seare Mekonnen, who were killed [Tiksa Negeri/Reuters]

Ethiopian security forces have killed the man accused of orchestrating a failed coup d’etat in the northern Amhara region over the weekend.

General Asamnew Tsige, who allegedly led the coup attempt, was shot on Monday near the Amhara state capital Bahir Dar, the prime minister’s press secretary, Negussu Tilahun, told Reuters news agency on Monday.

Tilahun declined to give any other details.

“Asaminew Tsige – who has been in hiding since the failed coup attempt over the weekend – has been shot dead,” state broadcaster EBC reported.

The failed putsch on Saturday led to the killing of five senior officials, including the army chief of staff. The latest to die was the attorney-general of Amhara state, Migbara Kebede, who succumbed to his wounds on Monday.

Asamnew had been on the run with some of his supporters while other plotters have been arrested.

The streets of the capital Addis Ababa appeared calm as military vehicles patrolled the city, while flags were flying at half mast on Monday. Access to the internet appeared to be blocked across Ethiopia, users reported.

The reasons behind the attempted coup in the state remain unclear, although it may have been a reaction from Asamnew to a plan by state officials to rein him in after they were alarmed by reports of his ethnic rhetoric and recruitment of militias.

Brigadier-General Tefera Mamo, head of special forces in Amhara, told state television on Sunday “most of the people who attempted the coup have been arrested, although there are a few still at large”.

‘Hit squad’

Saturday’s violence unfolded in two separate attacks.

Ethiopia government says rebellion quashed after arrests made

According to a government spokeswoman Billene Seyoum, a “hit squad” led by Asamnew burst into a meeting in the state offices in Bahir Dar – 500km north of the capital Addis Ababa – and shot dead regional government President Ambachew Mekonnen and his adviser Ezez Wassie.

“Several hours later, in what seems like a coordinated attack, the chief of staff of the national security forces, Seare Mekonnen, was killed in his home by his bodyguard in Addis Ababa,” Seyoum said.

Asamnew had told the Amhara people to arm themselves and prepare for fighting against other groups, in a video spread on Facebook a week earlier.

The general had been released from prison last year after receiving an amnesty for a similar coup attempt.

Long-simmering ethnic tensions in Amhara and other areas has surged since Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed launched reforms. At least 2.4 million people have fled fighting, according to the United Nations.

 

Powerful enemies

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has pushed through sweeping changes since coming to power in April last year, making peace with Eritrea, reining in the security services, releasing political prisoners and lifting bans on some outlawed separatist groups.

The reforms in Africa’s second-most populous country have won him widespread international praise.

But his shake-up of the military and intelligence services has earned him powerful enemies at home, while his government is struggling to contain figures in Ethiopia’s myriad ethnic groups fighting the federal government and each other for greater influence and resources.

Monday was a national day of mourning following Saturday’s coup attempt.

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA

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Who is the mastermind behind the instability and current assassinations in Ethiopia?

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Date June 24, 2019

By Ermias Hailu

Egypt Reaction to the Construction of Great Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD)

It is a well-established fact that Egypt has been “the behind the curtain” organizer, financer, and leader of the instabilities Ethiopia has been experiencing over the last nine years. Same is also true on the current instabilities of Sudan where Egypt and its “de facto colony Eretria” are jointly working to put their puppet government in Sudan and destroy the Ethiopia-Sudan alliance established by the late PM Meles and President Omar al-Basher.

The Egyptians developed and are implementing   a “Grand Ethiopian Destabilization Strategy” after a careful study and analysis of the internal weaknesses of Ethiopia, such as the fluid nature of EPRDF, growing dissatisfaction of the Ethiopian people on EPRDF governance, historic and current rivalry within different ethnic and religious groups, weaknesses of the current federal structure and poverty. Egypt’s destabilization strategy has been implemented by involving various foot soldiers such as President Isaias of Eritrea, Dr. Berhanu Nega of Ginbot 7, Ato Daud Ibsa of OLF and so many underground agents with full involvement of various media outlets such as ESAT, OMN and  BNN. The Egyptian intelligence has recruited many Ethiopian agents sold out for money and their political ambitions and these agents are working 24/7 hand in hand with Egypt and Eritrea in spying and destabilization of Ethiopia and political groups which Egypt and Eritrea see as a threat to their interests on Ethiopia.

The central focus of Egypt’s destabilization strategy has been to weaken EPRDF by eliminating its leadership and dividing the Ethiopian people by demonizing the TPLF and the Tigrayan people which they have been able to implement it effectively.

The destabilization strategy of Egypt has the following goals:

  • Weaken the EPRDF government and install Egypt friendly government in Ethiopia that that will sign a binding water share agreement that protects so called “historical share “of Egypt (an agreement between Sudan and Egypt in 1959 allocated 78% of the Nile water by volume to Egypt). If this goal is achieved, Egypt will allow the completion of GERD as it will benefit Egypt as “free of charge” reservoir.
  • In case Egypt fails to install a friendly government, it will continue to destabilize and weaken Ethiopia including its defense force and destroy the GERD prior to its completion.

Where does Egypt stand regarding realization of its goals?

  • Ethiopia is currently a destabilized and cash starved country with a new inexperienced and divided EPRDF leadership that is highly vulnerable to foreign manipulation.
  • However, even though Egypt has a very high hope that the new Ethiopian PM Dr. Abiy will be easily manipulated to sign a water share agreement that benefits Egypt, it could not succeed so far.
  • Over the last one year, Egypt has tried to pressurize PM Abiy to put the verbal commitment he gave to President  Sisi in Cairo on July 11, 2018 in a binding agreement(At that time PM Abiy was coerced  by Sisi  during their joint press conference and said “We will take care of the Nile and we will preserve your share and we will work to increase this quota and President Sisi and I will work on this.”  )
  • Egypt is currently showing frustration on its inability to get a written water share agreement from PM Abiy and Egypt is continuing to destabilize Ethiopia using its foot soldiers and agents who are already in Ethiopia

When Egypt, the de facto colonizer of Eritrea, authorized President Isaias to make peace with Ethiopia and direct all so called “Ethiopian freedom fighters” that were stationed in Eritrea to enter Ethiopia, the following were the possible reasons:

  • Egypt and Eritrea may have believed that opening of borders between Eritrea and Tigray will enable them to continue their assault on TPLF, which will further weaken the EPRDF so that they can install their puppet government in Ethiopia without any hinderance.
  • The participation of the various agents of Egypt and Eritrea in the Ethiopian political process will pressurize the EPRDF to concede for Egypt and Eritrea. If that could not materialize, Egypt and Eritrea will destroy EPRDF and install their own puppet government.

Thanks to the bravery of the people of Tigray and the unified leadership of TPLF, Eritrea was the one that was forced to reclose its borders and TPLF came out victorious, strong and unified to save the mother Ethiopia.

The latest Assassinations of Ethiopian Officials

Egypt and Eritrea have found a fertile ground in the Amhara and Oromia states and they have been also successful to plant their agents in the EPRDF government which could do their dirty job at a time of their choice. The latest assassination of Amhara government officials and the Chief of Staff are part and parcel of Egypt’s strategy to destabilize Ethiopia as masterminded by Eritrea.

  • Why Egypt and Eritrea planted their killer agents as a body guard of the Chief of Staff General Seare and assassinated him?
    • He is the most respected and trusted General that was the right hand to the PM Abiy working hard to stabilize Ethiopia
    • Revenge by President Isaias as he was the prominent military leader that lead the Ethiopia- Eritrea war between 1998-2000 that humiliated President Isaias.
    • To destabilize the Ethiopian Military and making it unable to defend the country from foreign threats and enforce law and order.
  • Reasons for the conflict within the Amhara Democratic Party (ADP) leadership.

Connecting the various dots from General Asaminew Tisge’s, various actions and speeches, after he became the Chief of the Amhara Region Security forces, it is most likely that he was a direct or indirect agent of Egypt and Eritrea that was being used to instigate civil war between the people of Amhara and Tigray, with the objective of destabilizing Ethiopia and dismantling the TPLF. Recently, he was also making speeches that reflect rebellion and contempt to the Federal government.

After the various meetings conducted recently within EPRDF and the Amhara Democratic Party, it was decided to reinstate peace and stability in the Amhara state and open the road to Tigray and it looks General Asaminew Tisge, was trying to resist that and that could be the main reason for his conflict with Dr. Ambachew.   General Asaminew made a preemptive attack, prior to being sucked from his position, even though his objectives are not clear.

  • In my view the assassinations in ADP leadership in Bahr Dar and the assassination of the chief of Staff are not directly related, as it is very clear that the assassination of the Chief Staff was preplanned and waiting for the right cover-up. However, what makes both related is that they are part of Egypt/Eritrea strategy to destabilize Ethiopia.

The immediate clear and present dangers of Ethiopia and EPRDF:

  • Egypt and Eretria have active and dormant Ethiopian armed agents(cells) who are well positioned within Ethiopia and the EPRDF government that could be used to destabilize Ethiopia and EPRDF at the time of their choice and place
  • Eritrea has been able to smuggle hundreds, perhaps thousands of its armed intelligence personnel to Ethiopia
  • Various weapons have been smuggled to Ethiopia and so many people are armed
  • Civil war (ethnic and/or religious) could erupt any time soon and the country could be ungovernable
  • Armed branch of OLF and various Shiftas in the Amhara region could be the ones that could trigger civil war.

Recommendation to EPRDF:

  • Strengthen the EPRDF specially by resolving issues with TPLF
  • Reorganize and strengthen the civil and military intelligence
  • Root out Egypt/Eritrea agents within the EPRDF and Government (Intelligence and Military)
  • Root out Eritrean spies already in Ethiopia
  • Closely monitor all individuals and groups that came from Egypt and Eritrea
  • Closely monitor all companies/embassies associated with Egypt and Eritrea
  • Open roads to Tigray through Amhara and diffuse tensions at the borders
  • Organize unity conferences in the different parts of the country where all ethnic groups will meet and discuss issues and forge unity
  • Expose and escalate Egypt and Eritrea destabilizing actions to the African Union, United Nations and the superpowers
  • Closely monitor the flight between Addis Ababa and Asmara

God Bless Mother Ethiopia!

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Herman Cohen’s Second “Coup” in Ethiopia? We Demand an Apology!

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By  Prof. Alemayehu G. Mariam

How true the saying, “There is no fool like an old fool.”

My readers know I don’t tolerate old fools.

Of course, there are old fools; and there are offensive and villainous old fools.

Herman Cohen is an offensive and villainous old fool.

On June 24, 2019, Herman Cohen tweeted:

Failed coup in #Ethiopia’s Amhara state was an attempt by ethnic nationalists to restore Amhara hegemony over all of Ethiopia that existed for several centuries prior to 1991. That dream is now permanently dead.

To me, what Herman Cohen tweeted is pure and simple hate speech.

Demonizing an entire group as ethnic hegemons is hate speech.

If someone of Herman Cohen’s stature have said such an outrageous thing about a religious or ethnic group in the United States, there would have been hell to pay.

But Herman Cohen thinks he can demonize and defame Amhara people and get away with it.

Don’t think so!

Herman Cohen will be held accountable in the court of world public opinion!

But who is Herman Cohen?

The short answer is Herman Cohen is a nitwit on twitter.

But who really is Herman Cohen?

Herman Cohen is a washed up, done-for, don’t-forget-me American diplomat who tries to show he is still relevant by tweeting drivel every day on Africa on his Twitter pagewhich sports a picture of him with Nelson Mandela.

Herman Cohen is a has-been U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs (1989 to 1993).

Herman Cohen  blusters about having brokered “an end to the Eritrean-Ethiopian War in 1991, and conflicts in Angola and Mozambique.”

Herman Cohen is said to be “president of Cohen and Woods International”, a “firm established in 1994 to provides strategic planning services to African and Middle Eastern governments and multinational corporations doing business in Africa and the Middle East.”

I rarely get angry at anyone for having said something I don’t like.

For the past 13 years, people have called me every name in the book and criticized me for my views.

My attitude has always, always been, “Frankly, my dear I don’t give a damn what you say about me!”

But I give a goddamn about what Herman Cohen said about “Amhara hegemony over all of Ethiopia that existed for several centuries prior to 1991” in his June 24, 2018 tweet.

I am frigging mad about Herman Cohen’s unprovoked and scandalous defamation of Amhara people as hegemons.

Truth be told, I am hopping mad. I am foaming at the mouth. I am ticked off. Pissed off. Teed off. Flipped out. Gone ballistic.

I am spitting rivets. I have blown my stack.

Yes, I have gone bananas over Herman Cohen’s witless and asinine tweet:

Failed coup in #Ethiopia’s Amhara state was an attempt by ethnic nationalists to restore Amhara hegemony over all of Ethiopia that existed for several centuries prior to 1991. That dream is now permanently dead.

But what the hell happened in 1991?

Why is 1991 such a big year for Herman Cohen?

I will tell you exactly why 1991 is a milestone year for Herman Cohen.

In 1991, Herman Cohen took a barrel of gasoline and dumped it on the fire of civil war burning in Ethiopia.

In 2019, Herman Cohen is trying to do the same thing on smoldering ethnic fires.

In 1991, Herman Cohen was the kingmaker in Ethiopia.

In 1991, Herman Cohen officiated the coronation of the Prince of Darkness Meles Zenawi and delivered the key to the palace to the Forces of Darkness.

Herman Cohen is single-handedly responsible for the crimes and abuses committed by the Tigrean People’s Liberation Front in Ethiopia for the past 27 years.

In 1991, Herman Cohen was the malignant mastermind who signed, sealed and delivered the secession of Eritrea from Ethiopia.

In 1991, Herman Cohen, with the stroke of the pen, executed a coup d’état  in Ethiopia.

In 2019, Herman Cohen defames an entire people as “ethnonationalist hegemons” because of a misguided actions of a few disgruntled officials involved in an amateurish and  doomed from the start coup d’état. 

Am I making up stories about Herman Cohen’s coup d’état because I am in a hissy fit?

Hell, no!

Exactly 28 years to the month, on June 9, 1991, Newsweek puzzled over Cohen’s intrigue in bringing the TPLF to power and orchestrating Eritrea’s secession in a piece entitled, “COHEN’S COUP IN ETHIOPIA?” Newsweek wrote:

The real bombshell that day came out of London, where Cohen, a 35-year veteran of the Foreign  Service, reversed decades of U.S. policy by calling a referendum on independence for Eritrea-for which Eritrean nationalists have fought a 30-year war–a ‘good idea.’

The man who signed, sealed, shredded and sold Ethiopia is now talking about ethnonationalists’ coup and “centuries long Amhara hegemony”.

The man who signed, sealed, shredded and sold Ethiopia in June 1991 is demonizing Amharas in June 2019.

But what is Cohen’s evidence of “Amhara hegemony”?

Without a doubt, Cohen’s historical reference on “Amhara hegemony” is the Manifestoof the Tigrean People’s Liberation Front.

According to TPLF historiography, “Eritrea is an Ethiopian colony. Ethiopia is a country created by (Emperor) Menelik. Tigray is an independent sovereign country which was invaded by (Emperor) Atse Menelik and became an Amhara colony. Tigray is a colonial territory of Amhara.”

I have it all documented! Check it out!

I pity that old fool Herman Cohen. He should know better.

The late British PM Edward Heath said, “A diplomat is a man who thinks twice before he says nothing.”

I say Herman Cohen is a has-been diplomat who does not think before he spits venom on people who have done absolutely nothing to him.

Could it be that Herman Cohen attended the Stick Your Foot in Your Mouth School of Diplomacy?

Herman Cohen’s disgusting allegation of “Amhara hegemony” is as true as the revolting allegation of international “Jewish hegemony” in “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion”.

There never was an “international Jewish hegemony”!

There never was an “centuries-long Amhara hegemony” in Ethiopia!

Cohen should know about the dangers of incendiary and inflammatory political rhetoric about racial and ethnic hegemony.

Shame on you, Herman Cohen!

Take down your picture with Nelson Mandela from your twitter page.

You shame Nelson Mandela’s memory with your drivel about “Amhara hegemony”.

Herman Cohen, did you know Nelson Mandela said:

Ethiopia has always held a special place in my own imagination and the prospect of visiting attracted me more strongly than a trip to France, England and America combined. I felt I would be visiting my own genesis, unearthing the roots of what made me an African. Meeting the emperor himself would be like shaking hands with history.

Is that the “Amhara hegemony” referenced in your dimwitted tweet?

Do you think Mandela’s imagination would have been captured by a nation under “Amhara hegemony” “over the past several centuries”?

Look at your handiwork Herman Cohen.

You single-handedly made possible the rise of ethnic apartheid in Ethiopia. 

Old misguided fools and babes must be disciplined

I don’t want to waste time and words talking about old fools.

But when an old fool demonizes an entire people, I must rise, defend and discipline him.

Herman Cohen should know that demonization of a people is the first step to seeking a final solution for them.

Talk of hegemony ends up in action to eliminate the purported hegemons. Using words like “hegemony” to indict an entire ethnic and religious group is an invitation to others to inflict violence on them.

Herman Cohen should know that.

The global rise in antisemitism today is driven by political rhetoric that demonizes a group of people because of their religion or race.

We don’t need a global voice for anti-Amhara rhetoric by one who should know better.

Herman Cohen deserves Shakespearean discipline for speaking out of turn.

Goneril, the cruel, deceitful and villainous daughter of King Lear, obsessed with overthrowing her father proclaims:

Old fools are babes again and must be used
With checks as flatteries, when they are seen abused.
Remember what I have said.

In plain English, old fools become like babies again. You can’t just flatter them. You must discipline them when you see that they are misguided.

Herman Cohen obsessed with overthrowing an imaginary Amhara hegemony must be publicly called out, named and shamed.

Herman Cohen, remember what I have said here!

Herman Cohen, please don’t demonize Amhara people. They have done nothing to you.

Leave them the hell alone.

Herman Cohen, please don’t defame and dishonor Amhara people. They have said nothing to defame or dishonor you.

Herman Cohen, please don’t smear, disparage and provoke Amhara people with your unfounded and scandalous drivel about “centuries-long hegemony”.

I shall forgive you for you know not what you say.

I forgive you because our prime minister H.E. Dr. Abiy Ahmed says, “We must separate the thorns from the rose flowers.”

You are a thorn on side of Amhara people. You have been a thorn on the side of the Ethiopian people since 1991.

Herman Cohen, you have done enough damage to Ethiopian politics.

Why can’t you leave us the hell alone. Let us solve our own problems. We don’t need your witless tweets or shallow advice.

I respect old people because they have wisdom. But I have no respect for an old twit who tweets morsels of drivel just to stay relevant.

I know there are many Ethiopians who are pissed off at Cohen’s tweet and his decades-long political tampering in their country.

I hope I have delivered a measured response to Herman Cohen on their behalf in this blog.

But as Ethiopians we  must never lose faith in each other because of what outsiders say who we are.

We must never carry the burden of hate placed upon us by those who have caused injury, misery and sorrow in the past.

As I have said before, “We must not lose faith in our fellow Ethiopians. Ethiopia is an ocean. If a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty (applying Mahatma Gandhi’s wisdom to Ethiopia).”

Let’s focus on a positive message and groove to positive vibrations.

Paraphrasing the words of the great Bob Marley, we should all stand up and sing:

One Love! One Heart! One Ethiopia. Let’s get together and feel all right. Give thanks and praise to the Lord and we will feel all right/ We will be alright. Let’s get together in One Love! One Heart! One Ethiopia and feel all right.

The teachable moment for Herman Cohen is this: Should he continue in his defamation, demonization and persecution campaign against Amharas or any Ethiopians, I am ready, willing and able to defend and wage a vigorous and unrelenting anti-defamation campaign against him and his ilk.

We demand an apology from Herman Cohen for his defamation of Amhara people.

Apology not forthcoming,

NOTICE SERVED!

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The British suffragette who was crowned an “honorary” Ethiopian

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By Abdi Latif Dahir in Addis Ababa

History and religion converge at the Holy Trinity Cathedral in Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa.

Initially established by Emperor Menelik II in 1891, the current grand and ornate church wasn’t built until 1942 during the reign of Emperor Haile Selassie. With its copper dome, pinnacles, modern statues, murals, and colorful interior, the cathedral serves not just as a tourist attraction but one of the most important places of worship in the entire Horn of Africa nation.

The church also serves as a burial ground for the citizens who died fighting the Italian invasion in the 1930s, along with Haile Selassie and his consort, Empress Menen Asfaw. It’s also the final resting place for the leaders killed by the Derg military junta that controlled Ethiopia between 1974 and 1987, besides ex-prime minister Meles Zenawi who led the country until his death in 2012.

Buried among these prominent Ethiopians is Sylvia Pankhurst, the British suffragette, writer, artist, and anti-colonial crusader. Born in Manchester, England in 1882, Sylvia was the daughter of the prominent activist Emmeline Pankhurst who founded the Women’s Social and Political Union in 1903 to campaign for the rights of women to vote in the United Kingdom. Sylvia joined her mother and sister Christabel in the movement, designing leaflets and banners including the famed Holloway Prison brooch given to WSPU members who had been jailed.

REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
The Holy Trinity Cathedral Church.
REUTERS/TIKSA NEGERI
Inside the Holy Trinity Cathedral church.
Yet the tension between Sylvia and her family deepened particularly around World War I, which she opposed and they supported. As she became a vocal pacifist and socialist feminist, she also agitated against fascism and colonialism especially in Ethiopia where Benito Mussolini was ramping up his imperialist and military campaign in the 1930s.

In 1936, she went to Geneva to request the League of Nations to intervene and stop Italy’s invasion of Ethiopia—but in vain. She also started publishing The New Times and Ethiopia News to bring attention to horrors of the fascist occupation. Sylvia also befriended Haile Selassie who was forced into a five-year in exile in Bath, England after Italy occupied Ethiopia.

Even after Ethiopia was liberated and the monarch reinstalled in 1941, Pankhurst’s advocacy didn’t wane. Officials at the British foreign office labeled her a “busybody,” a “crashing bore,” and a “mischievous” campaigner who “only wants to be tiresome.”

AP PHOTO
Sylvia Pankhurst in 1942 after Ethiopia’s liberation.
Given her relentless activism, Haile Selassie invited her to come and live in Ethiopia where she eventually moved and settled in 1956. There, she published the popular monthly Ethiopia Observer; raised funds for Ethiopia’s first modern teaching hospital, the Princess Tsehai Memorial Hospital; and founded the Social Service Society voluntary welfare organization. In recognition of her work, Haile Selassie awarded her the Queen of Sheba medal.

Her deep affection for Ethiopia was also carried on by her son Richard, an academic who wrote dozens of books about the country and founded the Institute of Ethiopian Studies at Addis Ababa University. Sylvia, who was opposed to marriage, had Richard with her Italian partner Silvio Corio—an issue that irrevocably ended her relationship with her mother Emmeline who couldn’t fathom a child born out of marriage.

QUARTZ/ABDI LATIF DAHIR
The tombs of Sylvia Pankhurst and her son Richard.
Through her subversiveness and her anti-imperialist activism, Sylvia Pankhurst led a profound life much of it in service to Ethiopia. When she died in 1960 at age 78, Haile Selassie decorated her an “honorary Ethiopian.” She also became the first foreigner buried among the “patriots” in the Holy Trinity grounds. She, along with Richard who died in 2017, are buried in adjacent tombs facing the cathedral’s grand façade.

Following her death, tributes poured in from African leaders and political parties including Kwame Nkrumah and the South Africa’s African National Congress.

But one of the most poignant remembrances that captured her life as a fearless gadfly came from American scholar and civil rights activist W. E. B. DuBois who said that “the great work of Sylvia Pankhurst was to introduce black Ethiopia to white England … and to make the British people realize that black folks had more and more to be recognized as human beings with the rights of women and men.”

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The underlying tension behind Ethiopia’s flawed federal system and its risks

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By Yohannes Gedamu

Editor’s note: Ethiopia was hit with a coup attempt over the weekend in its Amhara region in which the country’s army chief of staff, the governor of the northern Amhara region and his advisor were all killed. It has significant implications for the near future of Ethiopia’s federal system and peace in the country.

For almost three decades Ethiopia’s federal structure – enshrined in the country’s 1994 constitution – has been defended by the ruling coalition, the Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front.

It’s not surprising that the front has been the system’s prime advocate and defender. It oversaw the creation and implementation of the federal structure. Some of the country’s opposition elites also support the system. They believe it helps promote group rights, granting Ethiopians the right of self-administration.

But the federal structure has caused lots of problems for the country. This is primarily because it is constituted along ethnic lines. This is problematic because Ethiopia has a population of more than 108mand more than 90 ethnic groups. The biggest groups are the Amhara and Oromo. Together they comprise more than 65% of the population.

Before 1991, groups that took up arms against Ethiopia’s central government and its elites alleged rampant ethnic oppression and discrimination. But their claims were debunked for lack of concrete evidence. So when they had the fortune of leading a government and designing its structure they chose unique ethno-linguistic classifications for its creation.

Sadly, in a nation of more than 90 ethnic groups, the system created more animosity and competition for power and influence.

Now, Ethiopia’s government structure is a federation of nine regions.

Debates about the system have resurfaced since prime minister Abiy Ahmed took office in April last year. And the country’s parliament has set up commissions to look into some of the pressing issues facing the federal system. These include the need for national reconciliation and where domestic administrative borders should be drawn.

But the creation of regions as ethnic boxes resulted in fierce inter-ethnic competition. This has affected the safety of citizens as well as the freedom of movement.

Despite the willingness in debating it afresh, reaching a political consensus remains challenging.

There are also those who are deeply opposed to renegotiating the arrangement. Others believe the federal structure was imposed via a constitution that they weren’t consulted about in the first place.

The difficulty is that the federal design has created winners and losers. For instance, the Amhara elites believe that the design has negatively affected them because they were never consulted on its structure.

In my view, continued tension over the issue shows that the federal design never took into account the popular will when it was introduced. On top of this, it’s been used to protect the Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front.

Ethiopia isn’t alone in facing the conundrum of federalism. Even where it’s considered a success, as in the US, the system faces constant challenge. But disagreements about federal arrangements rarely result in political turmoil that could potentially threaten the national union. This is because of the relative strength and independence of the judicial system and a functioning system of checks and balances.

But the challenges Ethiopia faces due to its federal arrangement are substantial. Nor does the country have strong enough institutions such as independent judiciary and agreed conflict resolution mechanisms.

Dysfunction in Ethiopia

Ethiopia’s federal system was flawed from the beginning because it didn’t foresee potential sources of conflict or that regional states would make claims against one another.

Trust among regional states was never high, and has deteriorated over the last three decades. On top of this, the federal government’s ability and readiness to mitigate or solve domestic conflict has been open to question.

Currently, there are regions and regional leadership that are having difficulty working together. The federal government at the centre is too weak to impose its will on the regional administrations. The result is that there aren’t common political and economic national standards across the country.

This has led to a dysfunctional system that’s been the major cause of internal displacements. Ethiopia now has more internally displaced people than any other country in the world.

But possibly the biggest problem is the effect that the federal system has had on minorities. Ethiopia has nine regional states and two cities that fall under the administrative mandate of the federal government. Each region is administered by an ethnic political party. Thus, territorial and demographically larger regions such as Amhara, Oromia, Tigray and the southern region are administered by parties that are members of the ruling coalition.

The other five regions are made up mostly of minorities and are economically undeveloped. They are administered by ethnic parties that aren’t part of the ruling coalition. Yet they’re known as “partners”. Their ceremonial allegiance guarantees a false promise of national consensus.

These regions are referred to as “developing”, giving the impression that they aren’t quite up to scratch. At the same time the ruling coalition constantly interfere in their local affairs. This is justified on the grounds that its part of a fight against corruption, correcting administrative incompetence or as punishment for failure to comply with federal government’s regulations.

As a result, Ethiopia’s federal design has relegated most minority regions that aren’t directly administered by the ruling coalition into second class regions. In turn this meant that the citizens are second class.

All of this shows that there isn’t a level playing field when it comes to the constitutional rights of all Ethiopians.

Recently, the ruling coalition announced the possibility of including partner parties from five regions into the coalition. But, as long as the federal design isn’t rectified, the reality won’t change.

There are dangerous indications that regions want to secede. For example, groups in the southern region – once considered as little Ethiopia – such as ethnic Sidamas and Wolaytas, are demanding statehood. Two recent demonstrations show that even those traditionally considered supporters of Ethiopian unity are preferring to establish their own ethnic regions.

The inter-ethnic violence across Sidama and Wolayta areas suggest that ensuring peace and stability across these areas is going to be challenging.

Solving the dilemma

Ahmed’s government faces a difficult dilemma trying to reconcile the voices in support of the country’s federal arrangement versus those who perceive it as a threat to their group, and the nation.

Crucially, pushing through the necessary debates and emerging with corrective measures that both empower all groups while also strengthening weakened national unity is tied to Ethiopia’s survival.

Finding common ground remains a matter of urgency.

Yohannes Gedamu, Lecturer of Political Science, Georgia Gwinnett College

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

 

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Ethiopia police seek terrorism charges on suspects detained in connection with coup plot .

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Mahlet Fasil/ AS

Members of the “Addis Abeba Bale’adera Mikir Bet” (roughly, Addis Abeba caretaker council). Photo: Social Media

Addis Abeba, June 27/2019 – Six individuals arrested over the weekend have appeared yesterday at the federal first instance court Arada branch. The police accused the individuals of having connections with as well as involvement at various levels in Saturday’s failed coup attempt in Amhara regional state and the killing of the army chief of staff along with a retired general in Addis Abeba.

The police told judges that they were seeking to bring terrorism charges against the suspects.

The suspects who appeared at the court are Mastewal Arega, Berihun Adane, Sintayehu Chekol, Merkebu Haile, Gedion Wondwosen, and Hayelom Berhane. Sintayehu Chekol and Merkebu Haile are involved in a leadership positions with the recently organized “Addis Abeba Bale’adera Mikir Bet” (roughly, Addis Abeba caretaker council), a political movement organized and spearheaded by activist/journalist Eskinder Nega “to protect the interests of Addis Abeba residents.” Other than the two, Gedion Wondwosen is also a member of the council.

The police sought 28 days to further investigate the suspects, a request invoked by police to investigate suspects of terrorism related offenses. Accordingly, the judges have granted the police’s request to remand and investigate the six suspects and adjourned the next preliminary hearing on July 24 and ordered the police to present their preliminary findings of the investigation.

This is the first appearance of individuals detained suspected of having connections with Saturday’s killing in which three senior government officials from Amhatra regional state, including the president Ambachew Mekonnen (Phd), were shot dead in Bahir Dar. Army chief of staff General Seare Mekonnen and Major General Gezai Abera (retired) were also killed by the bodyguard of the former at his house in Addis Abeba. The government says the two incidents are connected.

Reports of more arrests have been emerging since Monday June 24 both from the capital Addis Abeba and Bahir Dar.

Addis Standard@addisstandard

Latest update: Migbaru Kebede the latest victim in wave of assassinations targeting Ethiopian high level officials; Gen. Asaminew killed https://addisstandard.com/latest-update-amhara-region-attorney-general-the-latest-victim-in-wave-of-assassinations-targeting-ethiopian-high-level-officials-alleged-coup-ringleader-killed-by-state-security/ 
Note: Our work is affected by the ongoing total shut down of the in . Updates will be intermittent.

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Addis Standard@addisstandard

Update: region police said Brig. Gen. Tefera Mamo, head of the region’s Special Force, was detained in connection with Saturday’s assassination of high level gov. officials. Brig. Gen. Tefera was serving prison convicted of a coup attempt before being released last year.

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The Amhara regional state police said on Monday that Brig. Gen. Tefera Mamo, former prisoner who became the head of the Amhara region’s Special Force, and Colonel Alebel Amare, head of the region’s peace-building and security bureau, were detained in connection with Saturday’s assassination of high level government officials.

And today, Christian Tadele, spokesman of the National Movement of Amhara (NaMA), a newly formed opposition political party challenging the regional government headed by Amhara Democratic Party (ADP), told media that 56 of its members were detained from various places in the country. AS

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Will Ethiopia withstand the setback or return to dictatorship? 

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By: Metta-Alem Sinishaw, Washington, DC

Summary: Based on shared grievance, ADP and ODP forged partnership, ended TPLF’s hegemony, and agreed to perfect their relationship within democratic Ethiopia. Despite improvement, ODP’s claim over Addis Ababa, its domination on federal power structure, and absence of transformative vision brought a disappointment. Increasing ethnic tension, lack of law and order, and failure to response to the plights of those who brought the change further divided critical allies on the objective and course of the reform. As mutual suspicion and militia buildups among dominant ethnic groups escalated, division among political and military figures intensified and eventually give birth to the tragic event. Abiy’s strategy in filling the leadership vacuum, identity and qualities of the Chief-of-Staff and ADP’s leadership replacements will largely determine Ethiopia’s journey towards democratization. Amidst the leadership vacuum, will Abiy build a team of reformers and continue democratization, or purge perceived rivals to consolidate his power and emerge as a King?

Masquerading under the name of “Ethiopian People Democratic Revolutionary Front” (EPRDF), the Tigray People Liberation Front (TPLF) has been dominating the Ethiopian power structure using handpicked representatives for Amhara (ADP-Amhara Democratic Party), Oromo (ODP- Oromo Democratic Party), and Southern people (SEPDM). For nearly three decades since 1991, TPLF reigned by pitting the ADP and ODP, against each another. It portrays itself as beacon of stability and a guarantor of the constitution in which the Amhara had never participated and the Oromos were pushed aside.

Based on common grievances, ADP and ODP forged the ephemeral Oro-Mara (Oromo- Amhara) formidable tactical partnership to end TPLF’s hegemony. The partnership lacked long-term shared vision, but ADP and ODP agreed to perfect their historical relation with in the largest and democratic Ethiopia. Aspiring for the occupied territories, constitutional revision, and genuine Census for better representation, ADP provided indispensable support to the ascendance of Abiy Ahmed both to the helm of EPRDF’s chairmanship and State power early in 2018.

The new administration demonstrated genuine commitment towards democratization, lifted media restrictions, brought exiled politicians and outlawed political parties to home, signed peace accord with Eritrea, promoted gender parity, promised free, fair, and credible elections, expanded political space, released thousands of prisoners and introduced legal reforms to address local ethnic conflicts. Ethiopians in general, and especially the Amhara, held mass demonstration of support in little and major towns alike. The Amhara diaspora flooded in thousands in western capitals to meet, greet, and praise Abiy for his initiatives in ways never seen before among Ethiopians.

The first sign of disappointment came when ODP openly claimed, contrary to historical facts and public knowledge, exclusive ownership over Addis Ababa, the Ethiopian capital city of more than a century old and whose population is predominantly non-Oromo. ODP allegedly engaged in shifting the demography for expanded dominance by bringing hundreds of thousands of ethnic Oromos to Addis Ababa. Eviction of non-Oromos from Addis Ababa led to the emergence of Addis Ababa city dwellers Council that demanded better conditions. The Council received strong condemnation from ODP and suffered from restricted freedom of assembly and speech that brought criticism from Amnesty international. Abiy’s open declaration to go to war against the Council not only caught the public by surprise but also considered as an endorsement of other Oromo radicals who are believed to have orchestrated the Addis Ababa ownership claim and mass eviction behind the scene. In addition, ODP’s increasing domination on the federal power structure, especially in the military and finance sectors, brought public dissatisfaction. A prominent Oromo politician was quoted to have said “Oromo will rule Ethiopia for the next 3000 years” while middle level ODP leadership espouse the radical’s motto of “This is our Time to rule.” The assignment of foreign minister position to ADP served as an appeasement but the lack of shared vision and marginalization of ADP on Addis Ababa affair led to resentment and division among ADP’s leadership.

Second, the lack of security, growing ethnic tension, and government’s continued inability to maintain law and order became critical concern. After 15 months in power, the new administration has neither transformational plan nor any road map to assure the public about the transition towards democracy. Increased instability and massive displacements led some even to question the purpose and direction of the reform. The security crisis in Amhara region was so intense that it brought profound dissent among ADP leadership and eventually forced the change of leadership at Governorship.

Third, Abiy’s declaration “…the constitution will not be revised because one group of people has asked for,” has been considered not only as a slap on the face of his ardent supporter but also a sign of shattered partnership between ODP-ADP. It further marked ODP’s dominance over EPRDF and the replacement TPLF’s hegemony with that of ODP. Regional rivalry and militia buildup among dominant ethnic groups elevated ADP’s perceived threats. Overwhelmed by the security crisis, ADP recruited and trained local militia, albeit at minuscule scale relative to Tigray and Oromia, lately. The head of Amhara regional security Chief was seen very frustrated with increased instability, mounting public demand, and slow reaction of ADP’s leadership.

Be this at it may, on the weekend of June 22, 2019, intensely growing division among ADP’s key figures eventually give birth to the terrific event that took the lives of the ADP’s senior leadership in Bahir-Dar. In unclear but allegedly related event, the Chief-of-Staff and a retired senior army officer, in Addis Ababa, both from ethnic Tigray, were killed the same night. Since then, only government-controlled media insists that it was “unsuccessful Coup d’états” despite contradictory explanation from domestic and international sources. The loss of the finest civil and military leadership is a setback to Ethiopia’s reform and will undoubtedly have significant long-term implication on stability.

One of the first task should be appealing for calm and stability while explaining the true nature of the tragedy with credible information. Closure of internet only exacerbates public confusion and vulnerability to multiple explanation. Further delay will expose the inquisitive public for speculation based on conspiracy theories and increase instability.

Government’s conflicting statements raised transparency concerns and judiciary, law enforcement, and media are not yet fully independent. A neutral, independent, and credible investigation should be priority as pitting one group against the other could only intensify division, undermine social harmony, and aggravate instability. The impact of the calamity, irrespective of who committed what and where, is intensely profound that Ethiopians need to come-together and work closely with regional and federal governments, should they desire to foresee a stable and democratic Ethiopia, the failure of which could have severe consequences never seen before.

The loss of key political and military figures in murky circumstances left huge leadership void in Abiy’s key Stronghold State. For ADP, there is no way of going back to its past behavior but engage in serious reflection to assume its heavy and historical responsibility in the absence of key colleagues.  It is imperative that ADP swiftly stabilizes the increasing ethnic tension and respond to the outstanding public demand through the implementation of ADP’s 12th Congress Resolution. The control of the Amhara regional security apparatus by federal forces pose serious legitimacy and moral concern. Unless full control of regional security structure is restored immediately, maintaining law and order remains impossible. Therefore, securing full control of the regional government security and administrative operation ought to be an urgent prime task.

The Prime Minister is also facing critical testing times: The wisdom with which Abiy would fill the leadership vacuum would be indicative of Ethiopia’s journey towards democratization. Restoring public confidence in his administration and reassurance of the military’s neutrality, especially maintaining its exclusive dedication to the constitution is paramount. The identity and quality of the Chief-of-Staff replacement is already on the public lookout as leadership in the military is heavily dominated by ODP. The veritable dilemma that Ethiopians and the international community astutely observing is that amidst vacant field “whether Abiy will continue reforming without his key allies or use the incident to purge perceived rivals, consolidate his power, and emerge as the next king?

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Ordo Ab Chao = Order out of Chaos

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June 27th2019

by Belay Zelek 

When we look at what happened in Bahir Dar and Addis Abeba on Saturday June 22ndwe have to ask ourselves some very serious and important questions, think critically & not give in to fear

1)  Is the EPRDF a government that can be trusted?

2)  How are the events being framed?

3)  Who or what groups benefits from the situation?

4)  Who or what groups will not benefit?

5)  How could such a so-called organized action take place?

6)  What are the characteristics of the group/individual that have been scape-goated?

7)  What events happened prior to the tragedy that might be clues to help answer some of the key questions?

 

Trust & the so-called Coup

It can be said that the EPRDF from it’s inception some 28 years ago is an organization that has time and time shown the Ethiopian people that it cannot govern the country fairly nor can it be trusted. No matter who is at the helm the system and the organization is Revolutionary Democracy where all other political group are seen as enemies. The people who are in charge of the security apparatus were the same evil people that tortured and maimed our citizens over the past 28 years. I emphasize again who is at the helm. The leader of the EPRDF is a well-trained and sophisticated spy. He was an intelligence officer and founder of INSA. INSA the organization that spies, jails, helped the conviction and disappearances of thousands of Ethiopians.  Here is a link to an article from the intercept about what the NSA did in Ethiopia, which was also during Abiy’s time in the Ethiopian Army Signals Corp and at INSA.  https://theintercept.com/2017/09/13/nsa-ethiopia-surveillance-human-rights/

I have great doubt and suspicion that an event that happened in one small part of a city in a country of 105 million can be considered a coup. Why would the government call it a coup? Calling it a coup helps frame the situation in such a way that will then allow the government forces to take draconian actions. It also helps provide cover from the international community when they start scape-goating other groups. The cover from the international community includes sympathy and support or at least looking the other way when rights are being violated in the name of so-called terror prevention. “war against terror” sound familiar to anyone….

Recent Events

The recent events in Addis Abeba especially with human rights activist and journalist Eskinder Nega have shown that the EPRDF/OPDO were not willing to entertain free speech. Time and time again they violated his rights and the rights of his civic organization Balderas. Moreover the prime minister literally declared war. The direct quote from the prime minister was “…If this so-called Balderas continues it will mean that we are in a clear war”. On the other hand Balderas was going to be welcomed in the city of Bahir Dar and ADP (Amhara Democratic Party) strong hold on Saturday June 22nd. It is not a coincidence that the concocted coup occurred the day before the Balderas event in Bahir Dar.

In addition the recent shameful and non Ethiopian press release by the OPDO (Oromo People Democratic Party)  that Addis Abeba belongs to Oromos only indicates that they will not tolerate any other people. The OPDO, which by the way is lead by the prime minister, has not said one word opposing that view specifically.

 

Scape-goats

Would an experienced military leader like Brigader General Asamenew Tsige even contemplate taking over his own region by force and then coordinate an attack on the chief of staff in Addis. I find this extremely far fetched in terms of planning and logistics not to mention common sense. There would be no benefit for him to take any such action. A transcript from a phone interview the night-of the incident with Fasika Tadesse of Addis Fortune shows that he was unaware of any coup situation, that he had heard gun fire and that the information coming from the federal government about a coup was false unless the federal government was looking for an excuse to forcefully come into the region. He even indicated that they would provide a press conference in the morning. When you couple that with the killing of the chief of staff who would have been the person to give permission to the federal forces, it leads you to a plausible scenario of certain forces within the government and security services coordinating this heinous action. Knowing who the EPRDF are and who runs the security service (Demelash Gebre-Michael a close confidant to Abiy)this scenario is well within their means and capabilities.

Benefits and Why would EPRDF/OPDO do this

It was becoming very clear that the war of ideas was not going to be won by the EPRDF especially the current main ruling party (OPDO) and other ethnic based organizations who have joined forces with them. On the other hand the main rival within the 4 ruling parties is the ADP. Indications were that the ADP were not necessarily on the same page and could potentially form coalitions with other parties such as ANM (Amhara National Movement) and even perhaps potentially with other groups that promote citizen based politics as opposed to ethnic like ECNJ (Ethiopian Citizens for National Justice). The Amhara region being one of the more progressive regions, a potential coalition with other political groups would have meant that the OPDO and TPLF would have a strong rival. So the rival had to be weakened. In addition to being weakened making ADP seem like an enemy would ensure a future free from political competition.

 

Aftermath

In the days following the incident the government security forces are en-masse arresting people who they feel could ask the critical questions. What an unelected government like EPRDF wants at this time is for the citizens to look to them for all the answers. In the name of security they want the citizens to give up their rights willingly. How long will this last and what are the long term consequences are not really a matter of concern for them. The nature of the EPRDF is to crush any opponent leaving it as the Vanguard party. Those in power will stay in power by any means necessary because if came down to elections they would likely lose. They are devoid of creative ideas to help lift Ethiopia from this ethnic federal system, which they created. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.

Conclusion

There is typically a very wicked and evil agenda behind political assassinations and events that lead to conflict. Governments lie to their people to gain support even if it means sending their own citizens to war or killing a number of key individuals. Let alone the EPRDF and opaque, shifty organization known for it’s cruel history of killings, disappearances and tortures, larger governments that see themselves as transparent like the US have lied to it’s own people time and time again. The following are not secret documents and can easily be found by searching. I present this to show those Ethiopians who have somehow put their faith perhaps blindly on one person that even in the countries and systems who are so-called beacons of freedomwhat really happens behind the curtains. These events have been proven demonstrably to be false operations also known as false flag operations. It doesn’t happen randomly or by a few people. We can point to world events in near past as examples:

 

1)  A few weeks ago the US claimed Iran bombed some oil tankers. Clearly to go to war with Iran.

a.   Obviously the world did not buy that for obvious reasons (see #2, #3, #4)

b.  The benefits would have been for the US military & intelligence industrial complex. Constant war mean constant money.

2)   Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD) that lead to the invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the false connection with Alqueda.

3)  The first Gulf war where the US claimed Iraq was an expansionist nation and was going to invade Saudi Arabia. The US claimed to have satellite images of up to 250000 troops on the Saudi border

a.   This was shown to be false and was coordinated by CIA and the US government to invade Iraq.

b.  Moreover the babies being thrown out of incubators story was masterminded by a firm whose COO and president was the former chief of staff for George Bush.

4)  The Gulf of Tonkin incident that led the US to involve itself more directly in Vietnam.

a.   Once again this was proven to be false. It was coordinated by the NSA and Robert McNamara the US secretary of defense.

5)  We can even go as far back as the USS Maine incident in 1898, which was the catalyst for the Spanish American war.

a.   The New York Journal and New York World, owned respectively by William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer, gave Maineintense press coverage, employing tactics that would later be labeled “yellow journalism.” Both papers exaggerated and distorted any information they could obtain, sometimes even fabricating news when none that fitted their agenda was available.

What these incidents have in common is clearly fabricated and made up event to purposely create fear and confusion amongst citizens. In that dis-order certain powers take advantage and consolidate their stronghold on power.

The Ethiopian people as a whole typically remain calm and pray during times of crisis. The chaos that the EPRDF forces especially ruling party OPDO and it’s helpers want may not be induced so easily. I have heard one of the Prime Ministers main advisors Mr. Lencho Bati say that they will need to deconstruct and rebuild Ethiopia. I fear that what we are seeing is the execution of Ordo Ab Chao that Mr. Lencho Bati has envisioned. The cost doesn’t matter to these people because the ends- justifies the means.

Let’s not forget that the OPDO/EPRDFs motto for is “the New Ethiopia”. Perhaps in Mr. Batti’s and Mr. Ahmed’s image.

“ኢትዮጵያታበጽሕእደዊሃኀበእግዚአብሔር”
“ኢትዮጵያእጆቿንወደእግዚአብሔርታደርሳለች”
Ethiopias hand shall stretch forth and be presented unto God

The writer can be reached at belayzeleke@protonmail.com

The post Ordo Ab Chao = Order out of Chaos appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

One cannot be a criminal because of his Ignorance but will go to hell because of his negligence

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By Gebre Kirstos Abbay

30 June 2019

The golden times are over and nowadays as technology is at its climax, human values have been evaporated for personal gain and political pass over. When people got some fame either for their charity or evil-driven deeds they consider themselves as saints or experts. Then they become the cause of chaos and confusion. They say whatever they think or what is loaded to them as a memory stick. Instead as human beings, they should try to analyse or double check the reality from different source themselves.

The reason I am writing this is the so-called African politics expert Ambassador Herman J Cohen has made a grave mistake earlier in 1991 when he was pretending to mediate the Ethiopian Government with the TPLF, OLF and ELF rebel groups in London. At the time there was no negotiation process done between the parties instead Mr. Herman J Cohen authorized the rebels to take control of Ethiopia without any precondition and proper discussion. As a result, Eritrea was separated, and Ethiopia the second populous country in Africa, was forced to be landlocked deliberately by the purposeful negligence of the so-called mediator which is Herman J Cohen.

This mistake gradually fermented for the following seven years and in 1998 war broke out between the two brothers Eritrea and Ethiopia, which claimed over one hundred thousand innocent lives. This was completely a satanic act but not an expert diplomatic act. In spite of the fact that this happened two decades ago, Global society should know his devilish performances and condemn this for he doesn’t stop misleading The United States of America President Trump’s Government. Needless to say, any human right activist or genuine organization may do their research and come to a conclusion.

Mr. Herman J Cohen has the right to say or support what he wanted but cannot act as a false Messiah to preach others. He has conceived negative feelings about the history of Ethiopia. If I were him I wouldn’t utter a word unless otherwise, I get diverse information. I truly say World Leading democrat country The USA does not deserve a one-sided diplomat like him. Maybe he has developed Alzheimer’s and should be advised to reserve himself from making infidel comments.

Ethiopians say “when the mouth opens brain will be visible” on June 24 the same person wrote on his Twitter page.

“Failed coup in #Ethiopia’s Amhara state was an attempt by ethnic nationalists to restore Amhara hegemony over all of Ethiopia that existed for several centuries prior to 1991. That dream is now permanently dead.”

Not only had this but also, the same day he has also commented biased information fetched from one side source on BBC interview which is not credible. The incident happened in Bahir Dar which is 570 km away from Addis Ababa then, how could this be a coup d’état? Despite the plot had been designed by the loser Dr. Abiy Ahmed who overlooked the case when he attempted to arrest the Amhara Security General Asaminew Tsige who protested against surrender.

If you have any other mission to destroy Ethiopia that fine, we always rely upon God, but if you think you are genuine please read and refer several documents and try to seek information from the other party as well, before you comment anything, because it costs innocent human lives. As for me, an Ethiopian Mr. Herman J Cohen has no moral background to say anything on Ethiopian Political Affairs. Please leave us alone for God’s sake!

 

By the way who are the Amharas?

They are the descendants of Abraham, the great-grandsons of King Solomon. The Amharas fear God and respect every human being. They are hardworking people and never take advantage of anyone. Because of their firm belief, they never make themselves inferior or even superior to another. Whatever they do whether it is secret or disclosed they are always aware of the presence of the Almighty. Due to this fact they don’t want to commit grave mistakes.

Voluntary ignorance will not understand what is going on in Ethiopia at the moment. Dr. Abiy is a very sly person, he is talking something that satisfies the audience but practically he is completely different. He is a Muslim and running into several Arab countries to get support and recognition. He wanted to establish Oromo dominated Islamic government, to shrink and if possible to vanish the Amharas because they are the majority, and Semitic as well. He considers himself as Cushitic and suffers from inferiority complex. Now all the highest positions in his government are given to the Oromo. For the Amharas this situation is like the Holocaust Jews in Germany and Europe in 1945. Global powers and International Human right activists should give attention and divert the pre-designed systematic genocide against the Amhara ethnic groups. Here I shall explain one important thing to make the European Union and UNHCR aware of the influx high wave of refugees in the near future.

OLF (Oromo Liberation Front) leader Mr. Dawd Ibsa is also a Muslim that is known as the terrorist group welcomed by Dr. Abiy on purpose. They seem different during the day but work together at night. They have robbed 19 banks and The Prime Minister didn’t say anything. No legal action has been taken. The Manager of OMN (Oromo Media Network) Jawar Mohamed again a fundamentalist Muslim who used to work clandestinely is now accommodated in the capital Addis Ababa and instigates the Oromos’ to use their machete against Amhara Ethnic genocide who are scattered all over the country. Amharas who used to live in Addis Ababa and metropolitan areas are forced to leave their livelihood for their homes have been bulldozed by the city deputy Mayor Takele Umma (Oromo) illegally. Knowing all this Dr. Abiy didn’t take any relevant action to alleviate the situation because it is part of his plan.

Eskindir Nega a well-known journalist and human right activist is trying to voice the victims who are atrociously displaced from their residence is under strict supervision by secret forces and over two hundred his supporters have been arrested. The Amhara National Movement leaders and supporters are randomly searched for and jailed without proper jurisdiction. At the moment the Amhara region is governed and patrolled by the Federal Army and the people live under intense tension.

Mr. Herman J Cohen should regret of what he had committed earlier that destroyed a big nation Ethiopia, and again bogged in the same cycle recently is a great shame. I am confident that President Trumps Government will say something about it. Should you want to know more about the lurking paces of Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed’s movement dig further, or contact the well-known African Crisis Expert, Major Dawit Wolde Giorgis for detailed material? I believe the Ethiopians need a sincere apology that cannot cost anything but gives dignity and nourishes humility

The post One cannot be a criminal because of his Ignorance but will go to hell because of his negligence appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopian Sports Federation in North America (ESFNA) Opening 2019 Opening

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