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IS IT NOT FALLACIOUS?

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July 26, 2019
Tegenaw Goshu

I am one of those genuinely concerned ordinary Ethiopians who closely follow any perspective that tries to deal with the very political challenges the people of Ethiopia continued to face. I have to say that intellectuals such as Professor Alemayehu G/Mariam who consistently and meaningfully have reflected their views and analyses for so many years deserve sincere acknowledgement and appreciation.

Well, as the majority of intellectuals, Professor A.G/Mariam has expressed his optimism and gratefulness when those EPRDF politicians assumed power or leadership for change by significantly undermining the hegemony of TPLF. I strongly believe this was the right way of thinking and moving forward.

However, as time went by, the very approach of Professor A.G/Mariam toward those politicians, particularly toward Prime Minister Dr. Abye Ahmed has become highly emotion -driven and uncritical and even kind of creating personality cult. He devoted most of his writings to this kind of very fallacious and unrealistic way of praising individuals and attacking those who are trying  to be reasonably critical of the way those politicians have tried to handle the challenges as  things moved forward . The critics argue that as   the very expectation of the people was for the realization of genuine democracy, not the reformist agenda of   EPRDF, it seems that those politicians seem vulnerable to failure.

I strongly believe that it is the right thing to mobilize Ethiopians wherever they may live to contribute any valuable contribution including money in order to support and strengthen the progress toward the realization genuine democracy. However, I strongly argue that any contribution should be with a real sense of critical way of thinking. It is   wrong if not foolish to do so without holding those politicians responsible and accountable for what could go terribly wrong as we have witnessed within a couple of months of the spark of change.   It goes without saying that the political reality in our country is unfortunately getting not only ugly but also horribly disturbing. The politics of hypocrisy, conspiracy,   scandal, cynicism, narcissism or self-aggrandizement is becoming the dominant elements of our politics.

I strongly argue that the very essence and purpose of “Trust Fund” now is terribly compromised by the very ugly if not deeply disturbing political reality in the country.

I read a very long and jargonized piece about the necessity of the continuation of financial contribution through the Trust Fund under title of “WE MADE HISTORY WITH THE ETHIOPIAN DIASPORA TRUST FUND “

Here is my direct and straight-forward comment on this issue of Trust Fund that does not take any basic precondition that must hold those politicians responsible and accountable for their horrible failure.

This is a notoriously stupid way of insistence of begging for money in a situation where there are extremely critical and time sensitive issues to be dealt with.

You sound terribly disoriented and delusional as far as the very question of how to bring about the very essence of survival, safety and security of the people as it is absolutely impossible to think about without the existence of a legitimate government both politically and morally. Talking about development projects in a situation where the very survival of the country and her citizens is at a very high risk is terribly nonsensical, especially when it comes from intellectuals like yourself.

You seem terribly a person of delusion and illusion as you talk about collecting money without questioning the very elementary conducive political and security factors which are of course democratic values and practices.   Talking and writing all kinds of highly jargonized and extremely mischievous talks and writings has nothing to do with what is happening on the ground. You are delusional in this respect as you totally try to ignore the very miserable situation people are facing because of those ethno-centric and hypocritical politicians of ODP/EPRDF.

You talk about doing this or that project in a situation where people are crying for their very survival as citizens. You talk about collecting money for those terribly and stupidly ruthless political groupings of EPRDF and its allies who are wasting peoples’ money in those areas of conflicts, displacement, killings, and all kinds of untold sufferings which are both late and ineffective. You are talking about this or that project in a situation where the people found themselves between life and death.

What kind of project you are talking about? To whom and for whom? Are you talking about schools for children? Don’t you know that millions are in a very horrible situation because their shelters (houses) have been bulldozed by those evil-minded and ill-guided ethno-centric politicians? Don’t you know that those kids are desperately begging for help just for mere survival, safety and security before anything else? Don’t you know that the very reasons for these miserable lives of children who were supposed to be at schools are those cynical, hypocritical, conspiratorial, disingenuous and ethno-centric politicians of OPD/EPRDF? Why you want to keep going with your very delusional and disordered way of political thinking?

Are you talking about road construction and development projects?  Don’t you know that those roads and other infrastructures are becoming playgrounds for anarchism, robbery, and politically motivated crimes? How collecting money in the name of development projects makes sense in a society totally facing the question of to be or not to be (survival) because of the very nonsensical and deadly political behavior of ODP/EPRDF?

Are you talking about Health facilities? As a matter of fact, peoples’ health is getting worse and worse both physically and mentally because of the absence of a political system that governs with the very basic principles of “from the people, by the people and for the people”. Do you really believe that there is such a political body of responsibility and accountability as far the very essence of taking care of peoples’ health is concerned?  From your highly jargonized and misleading writings, your answer for this question seems to be “yes’. But it is not only just wrong but stupidly ruthless!

Why you notoriously keep nagging Ethiopians in the diaspora to give money to those bunch of individuals who dance their tail wagging dances whenever and wherever they feel the emergence of some sort of change without taking time to digest basic elements of change and the very destination of change? How you see yourself as a genuine and reliable person whereas you miserably failed to see the reality on the ground and acknowledge the miserable failure of those politicians you keep praising and even worshiping? Don’t you feel that you are not only terribly disqualifying yourself but also insulting the very intelligence of the people? It is your right to worship the politicians who you fell in love with. But you definitely do not have the right to fool and mislead the people and make them the political slaves of those EPRDF politicians who horribly failed.

I have to tell you that genuinely concerned Ethiopians in the diaspora will make a miraculous socio-economic recovery and sustainable development within a very short period of time once the very ill-guided and evil-driven politicians of OPD/EPRDF are defeated and replaced with a genuinely democratic political system. And of course, there is a need to exert maximum effort to get this noble goal realized. 

So, do not worry about the projects you are dishonestly talking about. Believe or not, it is the so-called intellectuals like yourself who contribute to the very prolonging of the sufferings of the people. I wish I could express my comment in a very diplomatic or in a very manner of political correctness. But I did not believe and I do not believe because not calling a spade a spade is wrong.  If we have to make a real sense of difference and help the people to move forward and enjoy the very fruit of genuine democracy, we have to have an open and straight -forward minds and hearts. The people of Ethiopia cannot afford to lose the golden opportunity of bringing about a new and genuine democratic political system because of the horrible failure of intellectuals and the majority of educated citizens.

Intellect and intellectuality that do not serve the very objective of getting the people out of a politically motivated catastrophe and lead them toward a dignified and prosperous way of life is totally meaningless!

Fortunately,   in every generation,    there are few who are truly patriotic and capable of leading the people toward the making of history not only for the better but also for the best! I am reasonably optimistic that those few truly patriotic Ethiopians will prevail and help the people make a glorious history of a democratic system that should pave the way for sustainable peace and prosperity! To this end, there is an absolute need to clearly, openly, straight-forwardly and of course constructively challenge those intellectuals who behave and act contrary to the very essence and purpose of intellect and intellectuality.  I also hope that those failed intellectuals will use their power of intellect for good and help the people shorten the untold suffering they have gone through and still are going through, not the other way round!

The post IS IT NOT FALLACIOUS? appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.


Who is PM Abiy Ahmed?

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By: Achamyeleh Tamiru

(Independent writer, Commentator (Ethiopian Affairs), and Economic Researcher and Analyst) –  The Wikipedia post of the biography PM Abiy Ahmed is written by the PM himself. We know this 100% and have verified the story from a credible source, which is close to the PM office.  On the other hand, if a person wishes to remove the post or to correct it he or she has the right. But if the stories entered were wrong, the PM or his office would have removed or corrected it— Read More—–

 

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The post Who is PM Abiy Ahmed? appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

LET’S NOT TWIST THINGS AROUND UNNECESSARILY!

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July 27, 2019
Tegenaw Goshu

I am writing this comment which is a supplement to my previous piece titled “IS IT NOT FALLACIUOS?”   The purpose is neither simply to defend my view nor to provoke unnecessary dialogue. It is just to make my argument a straight-forwardly clear to those who seem trying to twist things around wittingly or otherwise. I strongly believe that it is through these types of conversations that it would be possible for us to gradually be able to engage in a real sense of civility and understanding regardless of the differences and disagreements we may have. The very political culture of arguing from the very extreme angle or perspective of the mentality of “touch not this honorable politician or intellectual” is one of the most harmful enemies of making our dream for a democratic society  a reality.

Well, twisting things around wittingly or otherwise cannot be avoided in its totality as it is part and parcel of human nature. But it can be controlled to a degree that should not cause serious chaos or crisis like the situation we are witnessing in our country.

Having said this, let me proceed to the points I want to make clear as far as what I wanted to raise in my previous piece is concerned. This is because it seems that some compatriots perceived my argument wrongly.

Let it be clear that nobody with his or her right mind argues that no need of   humanitarian help to any needy in general and his or her own compatriots in particular for the very reason that the ruling guys are operating badly. Not at all! Neither am I!

The problem is that our arguments and counter- arguments are unfortunately on the basis of the very mentality of liking  or disliking of politicians , not  on the very basis of acknowledging and dealing with the very hard realities  happening right on the ground where  we stand on .  These ugly happenings are the very consequences of a very ugly political game being played by ruling elites and good for nothing political opposition personalities. Needless to say, nowadays, almost all political opposition entities have become totally under dogs at this very critical time of looking for top dogs or political personalities resolutely patriotic and independently capable of making a democratic political history.  Sadly enough, the under dogs are losing not only the political but also the moral courage  to clearly and straight-forwardly call a spade a spade let alone to challenge those in power to get out of the dirty political game before it would be too late do so.

 

Extending one’s financial or any other form of assistance for non-humanitarian purposes  without  a real sense of  struggling against the very hypocritical, cynical, scandalous, narcissist ruling elites does not make sense at all! . It is not a matter of liking or disliking the incumbent ruling elites and their uncritical or submissive supporters! Absolutely not! It is rather a matter of making sure that our struggle for the emergence of fundamentally genuine democratic Ethiopia must be on the very solid and sustainable principle and action. Pretense and opportunism are prescriptions for dependency and dehumanization of citizens.

 

Why we cried hard for the last quarter of a century? Was it not the cry against providing TPLF/EPRDF with unconditional financial and other resources other than humanitarian help to the people who have been suffering from the absence of basic means of day-to-day survival?  Was it not because the evil-guided political elites were using all financial and other resources at their disposal to make their oppressive and killing machines stronger and ruthless while they asked the diaspora for more financial flow in the name of developmentSo, why it is wrong or anti –change to argue that the  current ruling elites who are trying hard to convince the people that replacing TPLF’s hegemony with that of ODP and its extremist elements is a democratic transformation are dead wrong  ? Why we try to deceive our own minds as if telling the truth is kind of taboo or kind of attempt that would bring Ethiopia to its non-existence? Is this not painfully stupid way of political thinking?

 

What is happening nowadays apart from delivering very wonderful political rhetoric which is unfortunately evaporating within a very short span of time? Shouldn’t we be worried that things are getting worse and worse and say enough is enough to the very ugly political game of replacing one ruthless ethno-centric circle of the same ruling front by another one and fooling the people as if it is a beautiful democratic change? We absolutely have to be worried and say that going back to square one (vicious cycle) is totally nonsensical!

I strongly argue that it is not only wrong but also a terrible political stupidity to argue in favor of unconditional supply of financial and other resources whereas our ruling elites are not only okay with those who robbed multiple of banks and used it to do much more criminal actions of displacing and killing of innocent citizens for the simple reason that they do not belong to their ethnic identity.

The people of Ethiopia cannot afford keep going with the very ridiculous political game of playing with both constructive and destructive forces side by side which at one point could cause mutual destruction (elimination).  It must be underlined that if we do not do what we are supposed to do in such a way that politicians must be responsible and accountable for not willing and able to pave the way for a genuine democratic system but keep messing with the very lives of the people, the money or any other resource we are talking about cannot escape to be the victim of disruption and destruction in one way or another.

Does asking the diaspora or any other community for  money in the name of doing this or that project whereas using tax payers’ money back home to finance those  endless politically motivated chaos  and crises  just like a fire fighting emergency make sense ?  Absolutely it does not!

So, if we have to end this horrible and deadly vicious cycle, we have to root out the very root cause, the rotten and poisonous political thinking and structure of EPRDF which may start from the deadly constitution itself and genuine conversation about the need to form a transitional governing body. I strongly believe that giving away money or any other valuable resource without seriously taking the necessity of all these and other political steps into consideration is just a terrible waste as it is very susceptible to the vicious cycle of destruction.

Whether you call it money for clinics, schools, clean water , etc., it does not make sense without holding the very  hypocritical, cynical, scandalous, conspiratorial and chronically  parochial political elites responsible and accountable for what is horribly going wrong .

Why we are stupidly shy of arguing to the extent of the question of abolishing the so-called constitution which is the very root cause for the continued political, socio-economic, moral and ethical crisis that keeps engulfing every corner of the country?

I do not think we have a good answer to this painfully challenging question as it demands a truly patriotic courage and devotion. It desperately requires   a very deep and serious way of thinking and action that goes beyond giving away money via a “trust fund” whereas is no trust in and around the palace politics in the real sense of the term.

I know the palace politics of ethno-centrism may not have direct control of the fund. But as long as those politicians keep spending the tax payers’ money on political motivated conflicts and crises that should be used for development purposes, the fund that is  said to be aimed at developing clinics, schools, roads,   etc. are  parts of the political voices cycle of construction and destruction which at the end of the day would become meaningless. That is why it is imperative to get rid of the very root cause of the illness which is a political madness of mutual destruction.

What is wrong with the argument and the courage to seriously consider the very idea of a transitional governing body that should be free from the very rotten and dangerously poisonous ideology and practice of EPRDF? Nothing wrong!

 

Believe or not ( agree or disagree),  supplying financial and other resources apart from humanitarian  help without exerting effective and efficient pressure on those ruling elites to behave and act toward the realization of  fundamental  democratic change will never take  us anywhere we want to be. A financial and other resource give away without making sure that the very spoilt and rotten former TPLF – dominated and the current OPD-led ideological and structural system is well-challenged and checked is self-evidently doomed to failure. It will take us back to square one (where we have gone through for a quarter of a century).

I quite understand that some of you are saying that it is okay or the right thing to give away money or any other resource from the very sentiment of doing good to our own compatriots who desperately in need of projects of betterment. I agree in principle! The very tough challenge is that giving away money or any other resource without creating and developing a conducive political environment by rooting out the rotten and poisonous way of doing politics will keep us victims or captives of vicious cycle.

I do not think that the people of Ethiopia can afford keep going with the very horrible political culture of construction and destruction which at the end of the day is meaningless. Was this not what we have witnessed for a quarter of a century and are witnessing at this very moment? That is why it is absolutely nonsensical to give away money or any other valuable resource apart from humanitarian help without making sure that the political machine is working for the betterment of peoples’ lives. Otherwise, there is no doubt that we will be allowing ourselves to remain not only in the same but also much more badly vicious cycle.

Let’s engage in a genuine, clear, straight-forward, not shy, tolerant, constructive conversation as focusing on who we do “hate” and “love” and twisting our arguments accordingly is just suicidal .

I am truly hopeful that we will be willing and able to move forward together with a real sense of courage, devotion and truthfulness that reflects the political reality of this 21st century!!!

 

++++++++++

The post LET’S NOT TWIST THINGS AROUND UNNECESSARILY! appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia Releases Israeli Businessman Imprisoned Since 2015

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Ethiopia has released Israeli businessman Menashe Levy from prison, according to a former staffer for U.S. Representative Chris Smith, who led a congressional delegation last August that pushed the Ethiopian government to drop charges against Levy.

The news was first reported Thursday by The Jerusalem Post, an English-language Israeli newspaper.

Levy was arrested in 2015 for financial crimes. He had been working in Ethiopia for about seven years before his arrest, managing the local branch of a major Israeli mining company.

Ethiopian authorities charged Levy with bribery, tax evasion and money laundering on financial dealings between 2010 and 2012 that involved millions of dollars, the Addis Fortune, an independent news organization in Ethiopia, reported shortly after Levy’s arrest.

Now in his mid-fifties, Levy denied the charges against him, but he was sentenced without a trial. During his four-year imprisonment, he was violently beaten by another inmate and suffered a heart attack.

FILE - U.S. Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., speaks at a hearing in Washington, April 22, 2015.
FILE – U.S. Rep. Chris Smith, R-N.J., speaks at a hearing in Washington, April 22, 2015.

He did not receive proper medical treatment and was denied due process, according to information provided by the office of Smith, a Republican from New Jersey.

Ongoing pressure

Levy’s release comes nearly a year after Smith’s delegation traveled to Addis Ababa, the capital, to meet with Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and other top officials.

Smith has pushed for reforms in Ethiopia since the mid-1990s and, last year, sponsored a U.S. House resolution outlining desired changes. His 2018 trip was designed, in part, to spur the release of Levy, along with other political prisoners.

“If somebody commits violence, that’s one thing,” Smith told VOA. “But when somebody is agitating for reform, is peacefully picketing, that person should not be rounded up and thrown into a hell hole.”

Although Smith’s visit did not lead to a breakthrough in Levy’s case, efforts to secure his release had been ongoing, The Jerusalem Post reported.

American attorney Alan Dershowitz met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu earlier this year, according to the newspaper. That led to conversations between Netanyahu and Prime Minister Abiy in June.

The government dropped criminal charges against Levy soon after, and released him June 22.

Prisoner releases

Abiy has implemented many reforms since taking office in April 2018, including the release of thousands of political prisoners.

But Levy is the first high-profile foreign national to be set free.

For Smith, the release of businesspeople like Levy, along with political prisoners, signifies Ethiopia’s strides toward a more democratic society.

“We want to be partners with Ethiopians. Again, the people are great people — historical — they deserve the best-possible government imaginable. They have not had it in years past, particularly under [previous Prime Minister] Meles [Zenawi], and hopefully they’ll get it now.”

The post Ethiopia Releases Israeli Businessman Imprisoned Since 2015 appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia:  Three Roadmaps for a Post-EPRDF Transition

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Berhanu Abegaz[*]
July 28, 2019

The prospect of Ethiopia falling apart has become disturbingly palpable for a couple of years now.  While there is a broad agreement that the system of ethnic separatism is the culprit, there is much confusion about what can be done to stem the tide.  We are obliged to raise three interconnected questions about shared vision, platform, and blueprint.  Is the latent pan-Ethiopian nationalism strong enough to keep the ethnic politicians at bay? Are there credible roadmaps to extricate the country from the current quagmire? What are the prospects for organizing an all-inclusive national stakeholders conference to articulate a shared vision and to select an appropriate roadmap for a successful post-EPRDF transition?

The vast majority of Ethiopians wish to live in a free society and under one flag—the pedigreed tricolor.  How best the country can extricate itself from the sinister web of self-perpetuating political ethnicism remains mostly unanswered. The signature achievement of a post-EPRDF political and economic transformation in Ethiopia, it should be clear by now, is nothing less than the unceremonious dismantling of the control structures imposed on the hapless population by the TPLF as victor’s justice.  Most notably, it means jettisoning the polarizing Constitution in favor of a liberal one that is also mindful of Ethiopia’s peculiarities. Process-wise, this dispensation entails a serious political bargain which must begin with the establishment of a transitional administration with full representation of all stakeholders in Ethiopian society.

A shared vision is necessary but certainly not sufficient for producing irreversible change. Three considerations are worth noting in this regard.  First, there has to be a recognition by the avaricious ODP-led coalition of state elites, under relentless citizen resistance, that replicating the TPLF dictatorship is politically untenable.  Second, restoring peace and order in a non-partisan manner is both a paramount and an elemental responsibility of a self-respecting government.  Third, the communist-like fusion of Party and State (albeit justified by primitive tribal struggle rather than post-agrarian class struggle) must be sufficiently loosened to kickstart the democratization and liberalization processes.   The tribalized Party-State has long outlived its usefulness, if it ever had any.

Assuming that influential elites will miraculously recognize their enlightened self-interest to support power-sharing, the next pressing question is how to proceed with a structural reform of no losers.  I can think of three credible political settlements to inform the country’s choice of roadmaps for a post-authoritarian transition.  A distillation of the  most salient features of the imponderable modalities involved is as follows:

 

Roadmap 1—A Caretaker Government (EPRDF-2)

A year ago, the high hope against hope was that the reformist wing of the EPRDF (EPRDF, version 2) would use its honeymoon period to build a formidable national coalition to terminate the exclusionary, corrupt, and inept system of ethnic apartheid.  A year later, this hope has been dashed with the ODP-dominated EPRDF dead-set on unwittingly witnessing the logical conclusion of polarizing identity politics.

The ODP and the TPLF are currently vying for supremacy within EPRDF, and ADP and SNNP seem to be imploding after failing to consolidate their regional bases.  The persistent demand for new regional states and the arms race among existing ones betrays existential angst about the central government. In a country without the rule of law or constitutional order, the gimmick of parliamentary elections in 2020 under the current toxic climate will inevitably produce horrendous electoral violence and even more ethnicist parliamentarians who will block constitutional reform.  Nor can this be peppered over with elaborate state propaganda, indiscriminate arrests, and suppression of the fledgling independent media.

This state of affairs leaves the Abiy Administration two options for ending the EPRDF as we have known it.  The first option is to try, albeit belatedly, to salvage what remains of the unprecedented goodwill it was prematurely granted by the majority of Ethiopians.  It would entail dismissing parliament and suspending the Constitution in favor of a transitional administration which will oversee structural reforms.  The second option is to acknowledge that parliamentary elections cannot take place under the current unstable environment and allow the term of the current parliament to expire without a replacement.  This strategy opens up a few months of vacuum, under the terms of the present Constitution, which can be judiciously exploited to make up for the missed opportunity by forging a national constituency for reform under a caretaker mandate.

 

Roadmap 2—A Government of National Unity (GNU)

An all-stakeholders conference (a series of broad-based consultations) produces a 2-3-year power-sharing arrangement between the ruling EPRDF and the leading  Opposition parties.   This option, by definition, excludes civic organizations and community leaders.  The GNU establishes an interim civilian administration, professionalizes or de-ethnicizes the security services, establishes several commissions (especially Constitutional and Reconciliation), and paves the way for free and fair elections under a liberal constitution.

The trouble with the GNU road is this:  Ethiopia lacks, by design and poverty, a robust multiparty party system with the capability to govern and mutually restrain powerholders–the essence of constitutional order.  The vast majority of the 130-plus political parties are ethnonational at both the national and regional levels.  The handful of pan-Ethiopian parties have neither a firm national constituency nor a long reach beyond the big cities.  So, a GNU will be little more than a version of the current ethnocentric system.  The Sudan, with a more vibrant history of political parties, has a better chance of succeeding with this model of transition.

 

Roadmap 3—A People’s Transitional Government (PTG)

In the PTG pathway, an all-stakeholders national conference arranges for quick elections of members of a 2-3-year Transitional Shengo (TS) from each Woreda (disqualifying the senior cadres of the ruling party for now) and selectees from other stakeholders (such as the Diaspora, major civic organization, and elders from the religious establishments).  The PTG establishes a caretaker government of technocrats, professionalizes the security services, oversees a number of commissions (constitutional, reconciliation, reclamation of stolen public assets, etc.), and dissolves itself following a constitutional referendum and clean national elections. A broad-based TG will by design have the legitimacy and the capability to oversee a transition process that is impartial, time-bound, and willing to destroy the networks of control and corruption nurtured by the nearly three decades of  TPLF/EPRDF of misrule.

The ruling party has yet to offer a comprehensive roadmap that affirms some version of option 1, but it has undoubtedly been carrying out an evidently exclusionary political agenda.  The Ethio-nationalist parties, busy forming and reforming, have yet to offer us coherent roadmaps although the Ethiopian Citizens for Social Justice Party (Ezema) claims to have an undisclosed one that addresses option 2.  The Citizens Charter Group, a rights-based movement, has publicly issued a thoroughgoing version of option 3.  It has been published in the International Journal of Ethiopian Studies (December 2018).

Sensible scenario analysis of the balance between power and ideas is hard to make given the fluidity of developments in the country.  We can, however, note that one political compromise is the formulation of two competing constitutions for a national referendum:  an amended ethnic-based constitution (supported by identity politicians) and a new citizen-based liberal constitution (supported by Ethiopian nationalists).  The freedom to choose the covenant most preferred by sovereign citizens will hopefully produce a legitimate authority fit for a country which boasts a long history of state-building as well as nation-building.  The modern project of state-nation building needs to be completed in a robust, irreversible fashion.

The vast majority of long-disenfranchised citizens desires to see a systemic overhaul.  The opportunity to do so has, however, been fleeting.  Before the next one passes by in vain, the shelf should be full of well-considered and implementable plans for the country to have a fighting chance to escape the trap of poverty and despotism.

The alternative is continued atrophy and disintegration. Politics imitates Nature in almost always winning over empty moralizing and wishful thinking. Got a better exit plan?

 

[*] Professor of Economics, William & Mary. His most recent book is A Tributary Model of State Formation:  Ethiopia, 1600-2015 (Springer, 2018).

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Open Letter to Ethiopians and to the International Community RE: Communique of “Concerned Ethiopians

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RE: Communique of “Concerned Ethiopians” Issued on July 19, 2019 July 28, 2019

On July 19, 2019, 145 individuals who called themselves “Concerned Ethiopians”, mostly who hail from Amhara ethnic group, issued an alarmist communique titled, “Communique Urging Prevention of Genocide and Balkanization of Ethiopia.

We, the undersigned individuals and national/ethnic based nonprofit and community organizations representing our members, found this Communique to be extremely disingenuous, doom-laden and reflecting a one-sided political narrative that does not represent the view of the vast majority of the peoples of Ethiopia. And hence this response.

Unlike most of the African countries, Ethiopia was not directly created by the European colonialists. The modern Ethiopia was created by Emperor Menilik the II in the 19th century when Abyssinia or the northern part of Ethiopia invaded and occupied the southern part of the current day Ethiopia. Ethiopia was an empire state governed by kings and emperors up to 1974. Since Menilik’s conquest, the peoples in southern Ethiopia comprising of many nations/ethnic groups lived as conquered peoples in their own country. Their lands were by and large expropriated and given mostly to Amharas and their agents during the occupation. The Ethiopian empire dismantled the conquered peoples’ governance systems and rendered them illegal and replaced them mostly by direct or indirect rule through its agents.

Amharic, the language of the Amhara people, became a “national” language. All students in southern Ethiopia were forced to abandon theirs and adopt Amharic as their native language. All government offices, including courts, conducted their services only in Amharic. In order to be real Ethiopian one is directly or indirectly compelled to learn Amharic and adopt the Amhara culture which was institutionalized and became synonymous with Ethiopian culture. The official overt and covert policy of the empire was to assimilate all the southern peoples to the Amhara culture. The languages, cultures and way of lives of the southerners were denigrated, and every policy was devised to homogenize all ethnic groups towards one Ethiopian culture, i.e., the Amhara culture. Due to prevalent discriminatory policies, most of the educated elites, bureaucrats, high and middle class individuals and city dwellers until few decades ago were Amharas.

Whenever such blatant discriminations and oppressions exist in any society, it’s natural that resistance ensues. Ethiopia was not an exception to this. From the very first time they were put under the Abyssinian occupation, the peoples in southern Ethiopia started revolting against it, or opposed it in one form or another. It is the accumulation of all these resistances and rejection of the imperial rule that finally culminated in the 1974 revolution. Even though the 1974 revolution was hijacked by the military, the southern people registered one of their first major victories against conquest during this period. The land proclamation of the 1975 was one of the major acts that liberated the southerners from individual Amhara landlords and their agents.

Even though the land proclamation ended landlordism and individual Amhara dominated rule, the military government continued to rule with an iron hand. It stifled democratic rights of all Ethiopians, specially suppressing the just demands of ethnic groups to exercise their culture, use their languages in schools and have the right to self-administration. While the military government was an equal opportunity killer, the out-and-out suppression against national/ethnic movements was particularly heinous. This resulted in the creation and proliferation of liberation organizations and in the strengthening of organizations that were created during the empire era to fight against feudalism and for liberation.

Contrary to the assertion of the Communique’s signatories, it is very clear and uncontroverted for any objective observer of Ethiopia, that neither Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) nor the 1995 Constitution created national/ethnic problems in Ethiopia. It is rather the existence and prevalence of severe inequalities and discrimination along ethnic lines that created these organizations. Even with all its limitations, especially in its application, the 1995 Constitution was also not a cause, but rather a mechanism or tool intended to deal with the prevalent serious ethnic problems to rectify historical injustices.

The signatories try to portray the past Ethiopia as a land of peace where all ethnic groups lived in harmony prior to the 1995 constitution. Little do they remember that Eritrea seceded prior to this constitution, and the biggest internal conflicts in the world were transpiring in Ethiopia before the constitution. From their vantage point, Ethiopia may have looked peaceful and a just country, but for the conquered people, Ethiopia had never been peaceful or a just country. The conquered people were suffering violence and inequities every single day.

It defies any logical thinking to assume with the signatories, that one obscure TPLF Manifesto instigated and unleashed ethnic hatred against the Amharas. It is rather the rank the Amhara ruling group held in the social hierarchy, that made them and their system to be a target during the revolution and thereafter. The signatories, with purposeful malice, present as if all Amharas were made a target, but this is a total fabrication. All oppressed nations and their organizations that were created to struggle against domination, have always made it clear that they have no issues with the larger Amhara population who were themselves oppressed by their own ruling group that also oppressed the others. The struggle of the Oromo and other people had always been against the system of domination which for historical reasons was mainly controlled by the Amhara ruling group.

It is mind boggling to imagine how some of these dignitaries felt comfortable affixing their signature to this communique that is full of malicious, exaggerated or unfounded allegations. It is also disingenuous how after meticulously listing what happened in the rest of the country, they conveniently omitted ethnic targeted killing that occurred in Amhara region or in Addis Ababa against others. As a case in point, nothing was mentioned about Oromos who were killed or whose businesses were stoned in Addis Ababa when they came to celebrate the return of the OLF. One of the most barbaric killing in the recent memory occurred, when more than 200 ethnic minorities including children and women were massacred in Metekel by the Amhara state militia. The communique, however, deliberately skipped over this. The killing of many Tigrayan in Gondar, the closing of boarder with Tigray by Amhara youth with the purpose of starving

them are also glossed over. The continuous killing and displacement of the Kimant people in Dembia and Chilga Woreda, Gondar, is disregarded as if they do not count. In the past the application of such double standard between the Amhara and other ethnic groups had been the hallmark of the Amhara elites, and it appears the current elites are also continuing in the same vein.

The hyperboles, exaggerations and misstatement in the Communique not only crosses the line, but it is also revealing how irrational and extreme the Amhara nationalists have become. For example, the preposterous claim that the Amhara population constitute 50 million out of the 110 million Ethiopian population is instructive of who they are. Even more detrimental and alarming is their effort to make an Amhara hero out of General Asaminew, the cold blooded killer. Asaminew is a murderer who tried to take over the regional state by force (by itself a coup d’état), and eventually control the federal government. The series of steps he took in the run up to his final evil act clearly show where he was heading. Within a short period of assuming power, he trained thousands of Amhara partisan paramilitary force and smuggled and amassed arms to Amhara region. Once that’s done, he unleashed his riffraff army on Berta minority group and massacred hundreds in Metekel. He also tried the same on Oromos in Kemise, Wollo, but was rebuffed. Furthermore, he made incendiary speeches all over the place inciting Amharas against Oromos and Tigrayans. His building of rogue militias, amassing arms and his inflammatory speeches were very indicative of what his end game was. It was stark clear that with his buddies in National Movement of Amhara (NaMA) their final goal was to take over the state power and reinstitute the Amhara domination. Herman Cohen, who served as United States Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, perfectly captured this in his Twit of June 24, 2019. Here is what he said;

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.

By attaching their names to this Communique, the signatories have confirmed their allegiance to the right wing Amhara supremacist NaMA. In fact, the dedication of so much space in the communique to the demised general, and the elaborate effort to rehabilitate him through ridiculous conspiracy theory makes one wonder how much extensive the general’s and NaMA’s influence was and how much it was expanding. And this is a great concern that all federalists in Ethiopia should take seriously.

Ethiopia is a multinational country that is coming out of ethnic subjugation and suppression. Most of the previously conquered nations want to belong to Ethiopia only if and when self-rule and shared rule are instituted through multinational democratic federation. Ethiopia that does not recognize the right of self-rule of its constituent nation and equitably represent them on the federal level will no more be acceptable. The choice for Ethiopia is no more between multinational federation and unitary form of government or other types of federation; the choice is between multinational federation and no Ethiopia. If not to bring back the pervious domination, it is not clear why of all the ethnic groups in Ethiopia, only the Amhara elites are vehemently opposed to multinational federation.

Ethiopia is currently facing multiple challenges and opportunities due to changes occurring in the country. All changes, especially transitional changes happening in a complex society like Ethiopia, could not occur without acute challenges and setbacks. In order to discredit the efforts of Prime Minster Abiy’s government, the signatories exaggerate the problems and setbacks and try to depict as if all is doom and gloom. If one listens to their wistful rumbling, one concludes that all is lost for Ethiopia. Even if there are some vulnerabilities and challenges, Ethiopia is not as they claim, on the precipice of civil conflict. In fact, Ethiopia has never come so close in its history to forming a just, peaceful and stable country as today. Except for some remnants remaining, all organizations that were previously engaged in armed conflict have now joined the peaceful march towards building a more perfect union. The no-peace, no-war situation with Eritrea, which could have descended to ugly conflict at any moment, is now more or less resolved. Even though recently there are some concerning developments, including in Sidama, human rights violations is by and large at its lowest ebb in recent memory. Freedom of speech and organization is flourishing at an unprecedented level. Where the Amhara elites who signed the Communique see half empty, we see half full. Where they propagate unfounded fear and despair, we preach hope.

The only potential for civil conflict comes from the mentality that wants to bring back the archaic, “one language”, “one culture”, and “one nation” assimilation project. It is unimaginable to think the oppressed nations of Ethiopia who through their relentless struggles have come so far and have unequivocally rejected rule by others will relinquish their autonomy and self-rule. In fact, the trend is in the other direction. Nations like Sidama are struggling to attain their statehood guaranteed in the constitution. No one is saying the current constitution is perfect and nothing should be changed. However, if change is needed, it’s for all Ethiopians to decide through extensive dialogue at a later time in parliament after the election, and not through unconstitutional way by those who are accustomed or think they are entitled to rule the country.

Ethiopia is on the verge of a new beginning where all its nations for the first time in its history will live together in democratic equality. We understand that there is a great divergence on the idea of what course of action the country should take going forward. We also understand that there is a great anxiety among many who are used to privilege to see that power is shifting. The change that is occurring is making the nations on the periphery to come into the center for the first time. This has the potential of bringing equality and equity between all nations in Ethiopia.

Of all the preposterous allegations and false narratives of the Amhara supremacists, nothing is far from the truth than the so-called Oromo domination by the current Administration. The government driven assimilationist and discriminatory policies of the last 150 years were not inconsequential. They have left behind drastic economic, political and social inequalities between the Amharic speakers on the one hand, and the rest of the excluded population. Just to cite one example, for instance, the Oromos, the population group that constitutes at least 40% of the Ethiopia population, is less than 10% in Amhara elites dominated Ethiopian federal workforce. The entitlement mentality these policies nurtured in the minds of the Amhara elites is even more astounding. The vicious attacks on handful Oromo politicians, activists, professionals and diplomates including the Prime Minister himself partly emanates from this mentality of

entitlement. The vicious attack by the supremacist Amhara elites on all and every Oromo person of power has an unintended consequence of a grave magnitude. By doing this they are not only pushing everyone to their ethnic enclave, but also creating a political environment where no one can dare to transcend such divides and come forward to resolve intricate country wide issues.

We hope the international community understands the communique issued by the signatories is an exceptionally one sided, extremist narrative that has no objective foundation, and does not reflect the sentiment of the vast majority of the Ethiopian peoples. Their recommendations are oblivious to the realities on the ground. They try to suggest solution based on biased and wrongly framed assessment of problems. Even though theirs is a view of the minority, their self-positioning as representing the interest of 110 million Ethiopian, is reprehensible and deeply rooted in imperial legacy of imposing a minority’s will on the majority. Their argument misrepresents or glosses over the imperatives of history and the lessons thereof. Theirs is a futile attempt to envision Ethiopia’s future while neglecting historical and contemporary questions.

Negotiated settlement of pending issues is very important for the future of Ethiopia. However, the signatories’ preposterous and inflated self-image, which is evident throughout the communique, does not provide any room for dialogue and negotiation. Advancing such a supremacist attitude, and calling for actions informed by it, is dangerous for contemporary Ethiopia. Many of their calls are morally bankrupt, politically sloppy, and hopelessly disconnected from prevalent realities. While most people of Ethiopia are calling for the realization of democratic multinational federation that effectively decentralizes decision-making power, the signatories call for further recentralization in pursuit of their reactionary dreams. To heed their call is to commit strategic mistake. To consider their unilateral voice as reasonable and representative, which they claim, is to neglect the voices of reason of the diverse Ethiopians who gave their lives and limbs to see the hope that is dawning in Ethiopia. To support their cause is to engage in swimming upstream, against the tide of the legitimate demands of the diverse peoples of Ethiopia, with potentially disastrous outcomes for Ethiopia, the Horn of Africa, and beyond.

Although the signatories lament about the impending civil conflict, they should be aware that it is their intransigent and out of touch thinking that is contributing towards the possibility of a conflict. Ethiopia is gone way beyond the empire era; and the old system of domination is buried not to be resurrected. It is high time that they come into terms with this fact and adjust their way of thinking. We encourage them to open up their eyes and hearts and discern the reality on the ground. We, in our part, wish the best for our country and work towards genuine federalism and peaceful coexistence of all nations where there is no domination of any type. With multinational democratic federation the future of Ethiopia is bright.

List of Signatories

  1. International Oromo Lawyers Association
  2. Oromo-American Citizens Council
  3. Oromo Community in San Diego
  4. Oromo Cultural Institution of Minnesota
  5. Abbaa Caalaa Lataa
  6. Abdusemed Youssouf, MD
  7. Abraham Dalu, PhD
  8. Alemayehu Bekele, PhD Candidate
  9. Aliye Hussen
  10. Asebe Regassa Debelo, PhD
  11. Asfaw Beyene, PhD
  12. Ayele Galan, PhD
  13. Baisa Wak-Woya
  14. Bayissa Didi
  15. Bekele Geleta
  16. Benti Geleta Buli
  17. Beyan Asoba, JD
  18. Daniel Ayana, PhD
  19. Daniel Degago
  20. Dessalegn Chamada, PhD
  21. Dune Silga
  22. Eshetu Beshada, PhD
  23. Endale Wakjira
  24. Gabisso Halaale
  25. Getachew Woyesa
  26. Girma Gebresenbet, PhD
  27. Girma Hassen
  28. Gutu Olana Wayessa, PhD
  29. Habtamu Awetu
  30. Hedeta Gudeta
  31. Hussien Hamda, PhD
  32. Ibsa Gutema
  33. Israel Gobena, JD
  34. Jamal Mohamed Gamta, MD
  35. Jenet Adem
  36. Mengistu Hika
  37. Mesfin Abdi, PhD
  38. Mesfin Abdisa, MD
  39. Mezgebu Efa, DVM
  40. Mohammed Hassen, PhD
  41. Nasir Kelil
  42. Nuro Dedefo, JD
  43. Qumbi Boro
  44. Redwan Hamza
  45. Solomon Ungashe, PhD
  46. Suffian Mohammed, PhD
  47. Taha Abdi
  48. Tashite Wako
  49. Teferi Margo, PhD
  50. Yadessa Dhaba, Rev.
  51. Yaya Beshir
  52. Zecharias Hailu
  53. Zelalem Abera Tesfa

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Ethiopia’s Policy Logjam and Unintended Consequences —-why willful ignorance should be combatted now–

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—-why willful ignorance should be combatted now—-

                 Part II of an III Part Series

 Aklog Birara, DR

“A good leader can engage in a debate frankly and thoroughly, knowing that at the end he and the other side must be closer, and thus emerge stronger. You don’t have that idea when you are arrogant, superficial, and uninformed.” Nelson Mandela 

Governing a complex, ethnically federated and polarized society is difficult but not impossible. It is vital to remember that polarization is initiated, created and propagated by elites. Elites who created the problem in the first place cannot therefore be the solution. At a federal level, authorities minted by the system cannot transform the institutional policies and structures of state and government unless and until they extricate themselves from ethnic politics.

History tells us that changing the most difficult policy and structural issues in any country takes morally and ethically courageous leaders. Mahatma Gandhi of India against British colonialism, Abraham Lincoln, Harry Truman and Dr. Martin Luther King of the United States against racism and Nelson Mandela against Apartheid come to mind. The common denominator that binds these courageous leaders is humanity, human worth and human dignity. Their ability to think and act beyond ethnicity, race, fame and income sets them apart from the rest.

I argue in this commentary that, at the federal level at least, each and every policy and decisionmaker including the Prime Minister must be appointed or selected on the sole criteria of unbridled loyalty to Ethiopia and impartial service to all Ethiopians. Seventy-one years ago, on July 26, 1948, President Harry Truman issued Executive Order 9981 to abolish exclusion and discrimination on the basis of “race, color, religion or national origin” in the U.S. armed forces.

Ethiopia has gone backwards and is allowing segregation of its institutions and lands. The governing party is on the verge of implosion because of tribal politics. It is not the disintegration of the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRF) that worries me. Rather, it is the implication on Ethiopia’s future as a country; and the wellbeing of 110 million people. This time, core institutions such as Defense, Federal Police, Intelligence and Security are no longer national. So, who defends Ethiopia and the Ethiopian people?

I recall that under the Dergue, leaders and members of the above-mentioned institutions were totally loyal to Ethiopia. They did not identify themselves by their tribe.

The vast majority identified themselves as Ethiopians. They trusted and supported one another. Loyalty to Ethiopia and national identity as Ethiopian are determinants in defending Ethiopia’s territorial integrity, sovereignty and national interests.

Failing this, it is inevitable those forced to disengage or those who are not part of the policy and decision-making process would have no incentive to “be closer” or to trust the government system. Dual loyalty or loyalty to tribe on the one hand; and seeming loyalty to country and the rest of the population on the other is a barrier to national security. In my view, the overriding loyalty of federal leadership and authority must be loyalty to Ethiopia and unfettered and nondiscriminatory services to all Ethiopians. This is how strong nations are defined.

It is this distinction that elites are unable or unwilling to admit and promote. I shall illustrate this failure with a concrete example that persists today. The Ethiopian left and ethnic-nationalists propagated Amhara “chauvinism, oppression of nations, nationalities and peoples,” exploitation and cruelty for half a century. This utterly absurd and false narrative was imposed on school children who have now reached the age of maturity hating, suspecting and denigrating, in some cases killing and of course arresting and jailing Amharas. Amharas are not the enemy.

The false narrative echoed even by Amhara intellectuals has consequences. The founding of the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) dominated by the Tigray People’s Liberation (TPLF) and its ally the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) in 1991; and the language and ethnic-based Constitution of 1994 were both established by excluding the Amhara. At the time, the Amhara population constituted a majority of the Ethiopian population. The exclusion of Amhara reflects the false ideological and political narrative of the left, external powers and ethnic fronts. Ethiopia lost its sea coast because of ethnic hatred and a false narrative.

Subsequently, horrendous crimes against humanity targeting Amhara took place without let up.

The current wholesale arrests, jailings and accusations of Amhara for “terrorism” under Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed mirrors the false narrative I underscored. You can’t mask or camouflage the onslaught singling-out the Amharas by deploying varying tools, for example, defending the Constitution, Federalism, Revolutionary Democracy or the reform process that begun more than one year ago. Amhara youth gave their lives and brought change. The Amhara demanded genuine democracy so that they can live and work in any part of Ethiopia that their forefathers defended with their lives. They have much to gain from the devolution of policy and decision-making, from freedom and genuine equality and from the protection of human rights.

They have nothing to gain from an alleged coup d’etat of a regional or a federal government for which they sacrificed untold numbers of young people before the Prime Minister took power.

After all, aren’t the majority of those assassinated by plotters Amhara?

The culprit is the false narrative accusing Amharas of “chauvinism,” neftegna, oppression and other abusive and marginalizing terms to describe Amhara culpability and guilt. Tragically not only for Amharas and others whose dedication to Ethiopia is irrefutable, the false narrative is deep, wide and corrosive. It will take decades of reeducation to erase the narrative due to ignorance and inability to change, especially among political elites, intellectuals and activists.

 

The Great Wall of Lies

Historical, political, socioeconomic and cultural ignorance among Ethiopia’s intellectuals, political and social “elites” is at its peak. It is guided by relentless misinformation, hatemongering and by identity politics that has no boundaries. Deliberate ignorance and misinformation concerning the historical and nation-building roles of the Amhara is amongst the most damming, unsettling, destabilizing and dangerous phenomenon in the world. The TPLF uses Cyber warfare as a primary tool of misinformation. So does Jawar and his club of admirers. Unfortunately for Ethiopia and its 110 million citizens, 85 percent of whom depend on agricultural economic activities to sustain their lives, destructive and misinformed elites drive and influence dysfunctional and corrosive public policy. Just think of what happened in Bahir Dar, Addis Ababa, Sidamo and earlier in Burayu and change yourself to change others.

Ignorance leads to deaths and massive incarcerations. Ignorance keeps Ethiopia poor, backward and vulnerable to external threats. Ignorance deters development. Ignorance leads to the destruction of investment properties.

The root source of Ethiopia’s problem is not its diversity. It certainly is not the Amhara. The Ethiopian people are among the most gentle, humane, spiritual and welcoming on the planet. In their deeds, they demonstrate to the rest of the globe that humanity originated in Ethiopia. Elites can learn from ordinary Ethiopians. They don’t. This is why they are the core problem.

Ethiopians harnessed their diversity and defeated Italian invasion at the Battle of Adwa.

Differences such as language, religion or economic status did not deter Amhara, Gurage, Oromo, Somali, Tigre, Wolayta or other ethnic group from contributing its part to unite and defeat colonialism. Ethiopia became a beacon of freedom. It paved the way for the rest of Black Africa and the rest to rise up against colonialism and imperialism. It is this narrative that distinguishes Ethiopian diversity and unity from the rest of the world. The Amharas are a core part of this splendid narrative. Yet, political elites are unable and unwilling to come out of their shell and speak this truth.

Ethiopia’s future prosperity depends on at least two assets: tapping into and harnessing its diverse population, especially its youth; and developing to the fullest its untapped land and water resources as well as its strategic location. The former is more critical than the later. Ethiopia can develop faster if it overcomes its politics of ethnic hatred, suspicion and division in order to defeat poverty and technological backwardness in the same way it mobilized itself to defeat external enemies over and over again.

Ethiopia’s diverse youth is a strategic asset. Sadly, this social capital is being wasted. The country’s youth bulge must be empowered and enabled to convert this immense capital into productive capital; its lands and water assets must be converted into increased incomes and to generate employment opportunities for 3 million people each year for decades. Peace and personal safety and security are essential prerequisites.

Dependence on foreign and migration out are not strategic options. It is when citizens; and not elites are empowered and encouraged that Ethiopia would establish a solid foundation to become a middle-income country.

Why make the abnormal normal?

Ethiopia’s abnormal behaviors should no longer be entertained as normal. Ethnic hatred, suspicion, unbridled identity and divisions counter social cohesion and deter Ethiopia’s capacity to produce goods and services in order to meet the basic demands of its growing population; and to modernize its economy.  This is especially true in a world where the opportunity to migrate out to earn a living is scarce and is restricted by growing xenophobia.

Xenophobes should not blame outsiders for xenophobia. I find it ironic and tragic for Ethiopians to resort to any form of tribalism and ethnic based xenophobia within when world reality compels us to do the exact opposite. Political elites and their intellectual allies must recognize the notion that man-made hurdles that revolve around ethnic identity, hatred, suspicion and division prevent Ethiopia from realizing its full potential. Regardless of ethnic affiliation, the heaviest burden will be borne by youth. Even if it modernizes, Addis Ababa will serve as a magnet for world capitalists and “good doers” instead of serving its own huge population.

A cursory review of our political past over the past 40 years alone shows that the human, economic and environmental costs of domestic political intrigue is incalculable.

We have to grow trees in order to replenish what we lost. Why not also replenish our minds and souls so that we can make Ethiopia desirable and livable?

External plots and intrigues sharpen our ethnic-differentiations and divisions. The combination of internal ethnic hatred, suspicion and division combined with external plots is lethal.

Animosity towards a unified Ethiopian society in which citizenship as an Ethiopian override ethnic identify is as old as Ethiopia itself. The country’s external enemies promote and finance ethnic and religious hatred and suspicion in order to pit one ethnic group against another. They do this solely to serve their own national interests at the expense of Ethiopians. This diminishes gains for Ethiopians.

African nations paid an enormous price because of the colonial system of divide and rule. The ramifications of divisions persist to this day. The Democratic Republic of the Congo (the DRC) is potentially one of the richest countries on the planet. Bedeviled with conflicts, the DRC remains poor. Ethiopia is a “water tower in Africa.” Yet; it is unable to feed itself. Most people live in huts and use wood or kerosene to cook and to light their homes.

Today, Ethiopia and Ethiopian identity are cherished, coveted and celebrated more by Jamaicans and other blacks in the Caribbean, in some parts of Latin America and in the United States where Rastafarians live and work than among most Ethiopian young people born under the EPRDF.

The TPLF and the OLF and other ethnic fronts have done an extraordinary job degrading Ethiopia and Ethiopian national identity as an Ethiopian deliberately and systematically over a period of more than 40 years.

The TPLF will long be remembered as the front that:

  1. Issued a political Manifesto in 1968 declaring that the Amhara are the mortal “enemies” of the Tigrean people;
  2. Conducted systematic ethnic cleansing of the Amhara; and persuaded and encouraged other ethnic parties to do the same in Arab Gugu, Dire Dawa, Arusi, Kaffa, Jimma, SNNP, Gambella, Beni-Shangul Gumuz, Northern Shoa, Wolkait-Tegede, Armachiho, Setit Humera, Wollo and other localities;
  3. Imposed ethnic federalism with the intent of divide and rule;
  4. Abandoned Ethiopia’s sea coast;
  5. Stretched Tigrean boundaries far and wide by incorporating huge tracts of land annexed from the Amhara region;
  6. Captured state power, plundered Ethiopia and committed atrocities for 27 years;
  7. Cordoned itself off in Mekele and provided shelter and immunity to those who committed crimes against humanity and those who siphoned off billions of dollars from the Ethiopian people;
  8. Uses the billions of dollars it stole from the public purse to finance lawlessness and terrorism throughout Ethiopia;
  9. Rejects peaceful democratic change; and
  10. Issues a narrative accusing the Amhara Democratic Party (ADP) and the Amhara of “chauvinism” reinforcing its 1968 Manifesto and calling for the dismantlement of Amhara institutions and exposing the Amhara to genocide.

A party that does these and more does not demonstrate empathy to Ethiopia and Ethiopians. It has no qualms about the long-term adverse consequences of its narrative and actions on the people it claims to represent let alone on what it considers to be “others.”

For almost three decades, Ethiopia was and still is governed by an ethnic coalition of four super ethnic parties: Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), Amhara Democratic Party (ADP), Oromo Democratic Party (ODP) and Southern Ethiopian People’s Democratic Movement (SEPDM). This ethnic coalition known as the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) is part of the problem. The expectation that the EPRDF will transform itself in fundamental ways is flawed. This is the reason why the Ethiopian people should be relentless in pushing for fundamental and not cosmetic policy and structural changes.

The dominant party that ruled Ethiopia with an iron fist before Dr. Abiy Ahmed became Prime Minister in April 2018 is the TPLF. It literally commanded all policy and decision-making bodies. For example, Ethiopian Defense, Security, Judiciary, Federal Police, Election Board, Media, Ethiopian Airlines and Ethiopian embassies across the globe were staffed by Tigreans.

The ODP has now taken its turn and begun replacing policy and decision-making personnel with Oromo nationals. Embassies are among the beneficiaries of this dangerous principle of “my turn to eat and or my turn to rule.”  Taking turns to eat and rule is not the way to manage Ethiopia.

This is the reason for my argument that federal authorities must be selected on merit rather than on the basis of tribal and party loyalty. Twenty-seven years of ethnic hegemony is enough.

The most recent TPLF narrative of “Amhara chauvinism” is especially chilling and sinister. It comes at a trying time when the Amharas and the rest of Ethiopia are grieving the loss of innocent lives following the assassinations of irreplaceable leaders in Bahir Dar and Addis Ababa on June 22, 2019.  This huge loss shadowed a wholesale onslaught of arrests and incarcerations of hundreds and hundreds of Amhara civil, political and intellectual leaders, members and activists of Amhara organizations. No matter the severity of punishment, the Amharas will no longer allow their subjugation and oppression.

Subjecting the Amharas to wholesale jailing and incarceration following the assassinations is an excuse. It is intended to diminish Amhara resurgence for freedom, the rule of law, genuine equality, democracy and the protection of human rights from which everyone would benefit.

 

Wholesale and targeted arrests and incarcerations of Amharas, accusing victims for crimes they never committed in the first place, especially Amhara youth, by the federal authorities in collusion with regional authorities are unwarranted, unjust and unfair. They reinforce divisions, diminish trust and degrade Ethiopia’s capacity and capability to defend its interests.

 

I do not assess Amhara arrests and incarcerations in isolation from other unintended consequences for Ethiopia and its 110 million people. It is vital to recall the impacts of draconian state and non-state measures including the burnings of churches on Ethiopian society. I do not see the degradation of Amharas in isolation from others. What happens to Amhara today will happen to others tomorrow. In fact, it is happening already. Ethnic hatred is a virus.

What happens to Amhara or any other ethnic group today strengthens the resolve of external forces to harm Ethiopia and the Ethiopian people. However difficult it might be for intellectuals, political elites and the EPRDF to contemplate, inability to draw lessons from past mistakes is a strategic and callosal mistake. I draw your attention to the notion that the TPLF degraded Ethiopia’s national security and economic prosperity by abandoning its sea coast. This national betrayal became a boon for Ethiopia’s adversaries. Egypt is among the beneficiaries.

I suggest that Ethiopia’s traditional adversaries welcome the current onslaught singling out and targeting the Amharas. Why? Because of the Abbay River as a primary driver. Because of Amhara dedication to Ethiopia and Ethiopiawinnet.

From time immemorial, Egyptians manifested a “love and hate” relationship with Ethiopia. In his classical book, The Cross and the River: Ethiopia, Egypt and the Nile, Haggai Erlich provided us with a rich dose of historical facts that show a constant struggle between Ethiopia and Egypt over the Nile. Egypt depends entirely on the Nile in general and the Abbay or Blue Nile in particular.

“At the heart of the matter is the fact that 86 percent of the water irrigating Egypt comes from

Ethiopia and that Ethiopia itself intends to use a part of it.” The new flare up begun when Ethiopia begun constructing the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) in April, 2011. This massive Ethiopian icon is one of the largest projects in the world. Financed by Ethiopia, it is a source of national pride for Ethiopians; and a “threat for Egyptians.” Successive Egyptian governments claim “historical and natural rights” over the Nile. This Egyptian claim does not take into account substantial changes that have taken place since the collapse of colonialism and imperialism; and since the emergence of Black African states as competitors.

Ethiopia and other Sub-Saharan Africa riparian countries offer a compelling argument that they have a legitimate right to harness water resources within their own borders to feed their growing populations and to modernize their economies. Accordingly, the most plausible and workable solution is to come up with a win-win solution for all parties.

Egypt and its allies feel strongly that the GERD poses an existential threat for Egypt. It is true that “Egypt was not only born of the Nile, it also lives by it, and its dependence increases in accordance with the pace of its modernization and population growth.” The counter argument I suggest is that Ethiopia must harness waters within its borders in order to achieve food security through irrigated farming, to provide electricity to tens of millions of its citizens who live “in darkness” and power its fledging industries. Ethiopia must defend its huge investment.

It is vital to remember that the GERD or its equivalent was conceived under Emperor Haile

Selassie, one of the most insightful and forward-looking leaders in Ethiopian history. “In 1964, the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation published the results of a five-year study, Land and Water

Resources of the Blue Nile Basin: Ethiopia” commissioned by the Emperor.  The study

envisioned twenty-six projects in Ethiopia, including four dams designed to turn Lake Tana and the Abbay’s gorge into the primary all-Nile reservoir and to supply electricity and irrigation for Ethiopia while significantly enlarging and regulating the amount of water flowing to Sudan and Egypt.” So, what is the harm of storing and regulating the waters of the Abbay River?

This ambitious project did not materialize for a number of reasons, including the unfavorable global environment, lack of capacity, the conflict in Eritrea and Egyptian dismissal of Ethiopia’s rights. “Gamal Abdul Nasser’s Nile strategy” was based exclusively on a “blunt dismissal of Ethiopia’s relevance to the river’s waters, and his decision to erect the Aswan Dam.” Ethiopia’s determination to reassert its rights occurred under the Dergue during the period 1987-1988.

Ethiopia’s decision to build the GERD is therefore a legitimate national policy. However, realization of this principled national objective depends on national consensus, inclusion, peace and reconciliation. Wholesale arrests and incarceration of Amharas is an exclusionary public policy. It counters the national determination and resolve to defend Ethiopia and all Ethiopians from foreign adversaries and internal plotters. It is antidemocratic and anti-human rights.

The Amhara population resides near, uses and harnesses the tributaries of the Abbay and Lake Tana. Its wellbeing is therefore paramount to the implementation and defense of the GERD. Wholesale arrests and incarcerations of Amhara, especially, ex-military officers, thought leaders, political, civic activists and journalists and relentless harassment of business people sends the worst signal possible to Ethiopia’s adversaries. The signal is the chronic disease of ethnic divide and rule that makes Ethiopia and the Ethiopian people weak.

Never forget achievements of the Amhara

The Amharas are in better shape today than at any time since the Dergue. Internally, the ADP, the Amhara National Movement, Fano, Amhara academics and civil society; and externally Amhara Diaspora by themselves and wherever they reside; and in cooperation with others have done a superb job by organizing themselves and by raising awareness. Brotherhood, solidarity and cooperation among Amhara and Oromo, the two largest ethnic groups in Ethiopia, shows a marked improvement. However, in terms of overall representation, for example, federal budget allocation, the Amhara region does not receive its proper share. As a result, unemployment among Amhara youth remains dangerously high. Other social and infrastructural services are inadequate. This requires a policy remedy.

In the foreign relations front, U.S Congress H.R 128 would not have been possible without Amhara and Oromo activism and advocacy. This effort needs to be sustained.

Domestically, it is critical to remember that Amhara youth sacrificed their lives and played a vital role in dislodging the TPLF. የኦሮሞው ደም ደማችን ነው፤ The blood shed by the Oromo is our blood too” is not an empty rhetoric and should always guide our beliefs and actions. I genuinely believe that tomorrow’s Ethiopia will never be the same as the Ethiopia the TPLF and its ethnic allies wanted to create. Tomorrow’s Ethiopia will be inclusive, democratic and prosperous if we act wisely.

For the Amharas, the key path going forward is to consolidate and institutionalize existing organizations; support one another; speak with one voice; create solidarity with non-Amhara organizations at home and abroad; change the political narrative; and create new tools to protect Amhara interests everywhere and anywhere. I underscore inclusivity.

Amhara institutions must expand their reach in order to protect all Amharas wherever they live, building on the outreach and embrace that begun over the past five years. In this regard, I commend the ADP, Fano, the ANM and the Addis Ababa Trustee’s Council (የአዲስ አበባ የባለአደራ ምክር ቤት) for their resolve and dedication in changing the Amhara and the Ethiopian narrative and urge each and every one of us to pull in the same direction. The Amhara struggle is a just struggle for survival and for a just and democratic society.

Addis Ababa defines and represents Ethiopia’s diversity. It projects the country’s future. For this reason, I consider the Addis Ababa Trustee’s Council (የአዲስ አበባ የባለአደራ ምክር ቤት) as a civic organization that defends and promotes the electoral, economic and residentail rights of the city’s residents. The un-democratic norm established by the EPRDF to dictate appointments of the city’s administration is unprecedented in any country. The EPRDF cannot advance democracy while subverting basic rights.

At a country level, I urge Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed to use a different lens in assessing

Ethiopia’s multiple policy and structural problems. It certainly is not the Amharas who pose a threat. It is time for the Prime Minister and for the EPRDF leadership without exception to change their paradigm of thinking and narrative. Among other things, they need to provide national narratives that represent historical and political facts as they occurred and evolved; and a promising future that is empowering. They need to dispel or counter the misrepresentation of history regardless of political correctness. Equally, the so-called opposition (ተፎካካሪ ፓርቲዎች) needs to rise up and play a different role that mirrors unfettered inclusion.

The harm of repeating a false narrative

When falsehoods are repeated over and over again, they become facts in the minds of millions.

This is the case in Ethiopia today. The TPLF wrote its own “Bible” in the form of a Manifesto in 1968. It singled out the Amharas as a “mortal enemy of the people of Tigray.” It propagated ethnic hatred, vitriol, suspicion and division and spread its virus during its 27 years of hegemony.

It invited and cajoled other ethnic groups including the Oromo to distrust and to dislodge the

“chauvinist and neftegna” Amhara wherever they live and work. It reduced Ethiopia’s 6,0007,000-year history to 100 years. What leadership allows or encourages such a narrative?

By demonizing the Amharas and by reducing Ethiopia’s distinguished history, the TPLF and its ethnic allies reduced Ethiopia’s status in the world. The Amhara narrative of history is inseparable from Ethiopia’s history. The distinguished thought leader, Ato Taye Bogale put the problem succinctly when he uttered the following eternal words in front of a packed audience.

ያልተማሩ ምሁራን ያቆዩዋትን ሃገር፤ የተማሩ መሃይማን አያፈርሷትም 

“A country whose uneducated citizens defended and passed on to us cannot be Balkanized by the deeds of ‘educated’ illiterates.”

In summary, I recommend that Amharas and others within Ethiopia and in the Diaspora:

  1. Recognize and celebrate Amhara achievements and victories; use the current onslaught on Amhara institutions and especially their youth as an opportunity to solidify their resolve and determination to protect their survival in unison; and desist the temptation to fall into the TPLF the disinformation trap of regionalism—Gondar, Gojjam, Wollo, Shoa etc.

 

  1. Always recognize that Amhara survival depends on ironclad unity.

 

  1. Acknowledge publicly that the current leaderships of the Amhara Democratic Party, the

Amhara National Movement, Fano, the Addis Ababa Trustee’s Council (የአዲስ አበባ የባለአደራ ምክር ቤት), other civil society organizations, academics, business people and others are important; they must strengthen their organizations and pull resources together, support one another and work in sync.

 

  1. Accept the notion that Amharas are essential for Ethiopia’s durability; and Amharas and others can no longer afford to disengage; and must operate as a unified voice in numerus fronts in support of the struggle for humanity, justice, the rule of law, genuine equality, inclusion, ultimately democracy, Ethiopia and the prosperity of all Ethiopians.

 

  1. Focus energies, creativity and resources to fight digital TPLF and its disinformation arsenal.

 

  1. Set the tone and change the narrative by distinguishing between parties and authorities that run them on the one hand; and Ethiopia and the Ethiopian people on the other.

 

  1. Dispel the allegation of direct linkages between the assassinations in Bahir Dar and Addis Ababa as well as the alleged coup d’etat on the one hand; and wholesale arrests and incarcerations of Amharas, especially more than 500 members of the Amhara National Movement on the other.

 

  1. Demand the immediate and unconditional release of all political prisoners of conscience; defend the restoration of human rights, media freedom and political pluralism.

 

  1. Meet our collective moral obligations and campaign against Apartheid in any form; dismiss the ethnic-elite narrative of Amhara “chauvinism, oppression, neftegna” that trigger attacks of Amharas and other ethnic groups; and petition against ethnic federalism; and offer a better federal alternative that preserves the good while changing the bad, for example, Article 39.

 

  1. Demand that Ethiopian authorities at the federal and regional levels implement the core constitutional principle of the right of any Ethiopian to live, own property, vote and be recognized in any part of the country.

 

  1. Urge the government of Ethiopia to recognize that the current Constitution is a barrier to citizenship rights; and should soon consider establishing a National Constitution Commission of global and Ethiopian experts and empower it to come-up with a new Constitution that will be presented to the Ethiopian people for consideration.

 

  1. Urge the government of Ethiopia to delay the next election by a reasonable period of time; and to focus instead on the restoration of peace, stability and national consensus.

 

  1. Urge the government of Ethiopia to craft and issue a medium-term roadmap focusing on critical political, socioeconomic and other strategic priorities, including a specific time table concerning the transition.

 

Part III of III will diagnose the question of whether or not Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed’s government is everting to the TPLF model. This commentary will also provide a set of recommendations for change in Ethiopian government policy as well as public discourse.

 

7/2019   

    

   

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ESAT Ethiopia nege with Dr Messay Kebede


Ethiopia-Eritrea relations hampered by closed borders, stalled trade deals

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A little over a year after Ethiopia and Eritrea restored diplomatic relations, residents and traders in the border towns are worried by the stalled progress.

While the Ethiopian prime minister, Abiy Ahmed was in Eritrea last week, borders remain closed, with little communication from both sides on what is holding up implementation of a peace deal signed last year.

The Zalambessa border crossing closed at the end of last year without explanation as leaders have remained silent. Others crossings followed suit.

“When they shut the border so soon after opening it, that was the saddest moment,” said Teklit Amare.

Amare says he now struggles to pay his rent at the Peace and Love Cafe near the newly-opened border which overflowed with customers just after the peace deal was signed.

Roller coaster of emotions
The feeling is widely shared in Zalambessa, a town where battered buildings highlight the damage wrought by the Ethiopia-Eritrea border war, which erupted in 1998 and left tens of thousands dead.

During the stalemate that followed the end of active hostilities in 2000, Zalambessa was all but abandoned, deprived of infrastructure and other investments.

“After the opening it was very obvious that everybody was happy. They want to trade, to have these connections,” said Hadush Desta, Zalambessa’s top municipal official.

“But now, because of no reason, it’s closed. People are emotional about it. They say, ‘Why is this happening to us?’”

What went wrong?
The border opening was just one breakthrough in the whip-fast rapprochement between Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed and Eritrean President Isaias Afwerki that began just over a year ago.

Following Abiy’s initial overtures, the two sides embarked on a rapid mending of ties that caught even close observers by surprise, re-opening embassies, resuming flights and taking meetings across the region.

But enthusiasm for the deal has given way to frustration, and not just near the border.

On other goals too, from inking new trade deals to granting Ethiopia access to Eritrea’s ports, high initial hopes have gone unmet.

The lack of communication from both governments makes it difficult to pinpoint why the peace process appears stuck.

“As they say, the devil is in the details. We are not so clear what is going on,” said Abebe Aynete, an Addis Ababa-based senior researcher with the Ethiopian Foreign Relations and Strategic Studies think tank.

Is Eritrea dragging?
Many analysts and diplomats suspect Eritrea is guilty of foot-dragging.

Opening up to Ethiopia would force Isaias to surrender a measure of control, something his critics say he is unlikely to do.

“I personally believe that as long as the current group in Asmara stays in power, I don’t think the border will open and the two countries will not proceed to normal relations,” said Mehari Tesfamichael, chairperson of the opposition Eritrean Bright Future Movement.

Isaias’ notoriously iron-fisted government has long cited the standoff with Ethiopia in justifying harsh policies like compulsory national service, which forces citizens into specific jobs at low pay and bans them from travelling abroad.

Last October, the UN refugee agency noted a seven-fold increase in refugees fleeing Eritrea after the borders opened, with around 10,000 refugees registered in one month.

The peace deal “provided some hope that restrictions on national service would be lifted, but so far there has been little change” in Eritrea, said Human Rights Watch.

Abiy’s domestic problems
Ethiopia’s domestic politics could also be part of the problem.

Abiy’s ambitious reform agenda has run into roadblocks, a fact underscored by the assassination last month of five government and military officials.

The changing landscape has inflamed tensions between Abiy and the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), the party that dominates the northern Tigray region and was the strongest political force in the country before Abiy came to power.

Tigray’s administration of Ethiopian border areas means the TPLF should be a major player in normalising ties with Eritrea, provided it plays along.

“Solving issues related to the border ideally needs the full cooperation of Tigray and the TPLF. That isn’t what we have right now,” said William Davison, senior analyst at the International Crisis Group think tank.

“We have significant rifts between TPLF and its ruling coalition partners and also disputes between the Tigray region and the federal government in Addis.”

However observers say it’s important not to lose sight of the progress that’s been made.

“Up front we have to acknowledge that we’re in a much better place than we were before the rapprochement, when the possibility of state-on-state conflict was quite high,” said Michael Woldemariam, an expert on the Horn of Africa at Boston University.

AFP – African News

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Ode to 4 Billion Tree Saplings by the River Ghion (Ethiopia)

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By Alemayehu G. Mariam
And out of the ground made the LORD God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
And a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it was parted, and became into four heads.
The name of the first [river] is Pison: that is it which compasseth the whole land of Havilah, where there is gold;
And the name of the second river is Gihon: the same is it that compasseth the whole land of Ethiopia. — Book of Genesis 9-13
“I think that I shall never see / A poem lovely as a tree.”—Alfred Joyce Kilmer
Author’s Note:
Today, I celebrate two momentous occasions.
The first is the national turnout in Ethiopia to plant 200 million trees in a single day. I am rooting for them (pun intended) to set a world record. Where there is a will, there is a way to plant 200M trees.
The second is the celebration of “ETHIOPIA DAY” (7/28/19) in Los Angeles with music and festivities at MacArthur Park.
When H.E. Prime Minister Dr. Abiy Ahmed came to Los Angeles on July 26, 2018, the City Council of Los Angeles issued an Ethiopia Day Proclamation. An American reporterdescribed the occasion as follows:
At 6 a.m. on Sunday morning, July 29, thousands of Ethiopians from the western region of the U.S.—from Seattle, Wash., to Denver, Colo., and beyond—lined up to get their tickets to come together and see and hear the words of the forward-thinking, young leader who represents change for Ethiopia.
The throngs that assembled at the Galen Center, celebrated the unity, peace and a new beginning for Ethiopia; many wore the country’s colors, enthusiastically waved flags, danced with joy, and sang songs while awaiting the appearance of their leader.
Our support of PM Abiy is rock solid.
We believe in his vision and leadership.
We support his reforms in Ethiopia fully.
We stand by and with him in the vanguard in the battle of ideas.
We CONGRATULATE PM Abiy on an outstanding first year!
=========================== ======================
4 billion trees by River Ghion
In February 2019, I shared a dream about the rise of a youth environmental movement in Ethiopia in my commentary, “Generation Abiy and the Greening of Ethiopia”.
As an environmentalist and proud tree-hugger, I have always had deep concern for environmental conservation in Ethiopia. I am proud of the fact that Ethiopia is home to many species of plants and animals that cannot be found anywhere else on Earth. But many of them are endangered. It is my dream to see the day when an Ethiopian youth environmental movement shall rise and plant 110 million trees (one for every Ethiopian) and join hands to save our endangered species!!!
In July 2019, “the day” I dreamed about arrived to deliver not 110 million trees but 200 million in a single day and 4 billion overall!
In my February commentary, I talked about environmental degradation, tree cover loss, the need for an official arbor day, the necessity for an Ethiopian environmental movement, and my life as a tree-hugger, among other things.
On July 29, 2019, Ethiopia will have its national tree planting day, with a plan to plant 200 million trees in one day!
In February, I called on “Generation Abiy” to take the lead in planting 4 billion trees and assured them to look out for me: “Hold on, I’m coming! With 40 trees and a shovel in hand!”
I put out a challenge to Diaspora Ethiopians to top what I plan to do.
I declared I will plant 40 trees for myself, 50 more for each state in the United States, 195 trees for every country in the world.
I wish I could be there to join the millions of Ethiopians in this magnificent campaign on July 29. But the stars did not align.
So, I have assembled a few of the most beautiful odes to trees in the English language to celebrate the event and mark my symbolic and poetic presence among the million-strong Ethiopian tree planters.
Book of Genesis, 9-13
And out of the ground made the LORD God to grow every tree that is pleasant to the sight, and good for food; the tree of life also in the midst of the garden, and the tree of knowledge of good and evil.
And a river went out of Eden to water the garden; and from thence it was parted, and became into four heads.
The name of the first [river] is Pison: that is it which compasseth the whole land of Havilah, where there is gold;
And the name of the second river is Gihon: the same is it that compasseth the whole land of Ethiopia.
The Old Testament teaches when God created the world, he gave special attention to trees. Beautiful trees pleasing to His eyes. A tree of life, of vitality, that keeps growing and multiplying from new seeds and saplings. A tree of knowledge and the penalties for disobedience.
American Forestry Association — “Planting a Tree”
What does he plant who plants a tree?
A scion full of potency,/ He plants his faith, a prophecy
Of bloom, and fruitfulness to be;/ He plans a shade where robins sing,
Where orioles their nestlings swing;/ A burning bush – a miracle!
Who plants a tree, – he doeth well!
What does he plant who plants a tree?/ An emblem of the men to be;
Who lightly tough terrestrial clay,/But far above the earth, away
From sordid things and base,/Incarnate ideals for their race­
Who plants a tree, he doeth well,–/Performs with God, a miracle!
Joyce Kilmer — “Trees”
I think that I shall never see/ A poem lovely as a tree.
A tree whose hungry mouth is prest/Against the earth’s sweet flowing breast;
A tree that looks at God all day,/And lifts her leafy arms to pray;
A tree that may in Summer wear/A nest of robins in her hair;
Upon whose bosom snow has lain;/Who intimately lives with rain.
Poems are made by fools like me,/ But only God can make a tree.
Robert Burns—“Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening”
…The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep…
Burns talks about stopping by some woods on a snowy evening and absorbs the grand scene in mystical silence. He wants to stay longer but can’t because he has a long way to travel. I have used this verse in my commentaries from time to time.
Philip Larkin – “The Trees”
The trees are coming into leaf / Like something almost being said;
The recent buds relax and spread, /Their greenness is a kind of grief.
Is it that they are born again /And we grow old? No, they die too,
Their yearly trick of looking new /Is written down in rings of grain.
Yet still the unresting castles thresh /In full grown thickness every May.
Last year is dead, they seem to say, /Begin afresh, afresh, afresh.
The cycle of life, death and rebirth takes place among trees as they flower and shed. Like humans, trees live and die but they are reborn every year and start afresh. In other words, trees reinvent themselves every year as must we humans. I say the last 27 years of oppression are dead, dead, dead. Let’s begin afresh, afresh, afresh!
William Blake, “The Poison Tree”
I was angry with my friend:/I told my wrath, my wrath did end.
I was angry with my foe:/I told it not, my wrath did grow.
And I watered it in fears./Night and morning with my tears:
And I sunned it with smiles./And with soft deceitful wiles.
And it grew both day and night./ Till it bore an apple bright.
And my foe beheld it shine./And he knew that it was mine.
And into my garden stole./When the night had veild the pole;
In the morning glad I see;/My foe outstretchd beneath the tree.
Blake’s poison tree refers to anger and hatred which turn into acts of self-destruction. The bright apple of anger on the poison tree entices his enemy, who under cover of night steals into the garden and eats it. In the morning, he finds his foe lying dead under  the poison tree. Mandela said, “Resentment is like drinking poison and then hoping it will kill your enemies.”
A. E. Housman, “Loveliest of Trees, the Cherry Now”
Loveliest of trees, the cherry now/ Is hung with bloom along the bough,
And stands about the woodland ride/ Wearing white for Eastertide.
Now, of my threescore years and ten,/ Twenty will not come again,
And take from seventy springs a score,/ It only leaves me fifty more.
And since to look at things in bloom/Fifty springs are little room,
About the woodlands I will go/To see the cherry hung with snow.
In other poetic words of Algernon Charles Swinburne:
From too much love of living/ From hope and fear set free,
We thank with brief thanksgiving/ Whatever gods may be
That no life lives for ever;/That dead men rise up never;
That even the weariest river/Winds somewhere safe to sea.
Rudyard Kipling, “The Way through the Woods”
There was once a road through the woods / Before they planted the trees.
It is underneath the coppice and heath, / And the thin anemones.
Only the keeper sees / That, where the ring-dove broods,
And the badgers roll at ease, / There was once a road through the woods.
Man made roads before the animals called the trees home. Man planted trees and his signature was deleted under the rooted feet of trees.
Douglas Woodsum“Ode: To Trees”
You giants, you dwarves; you leaners, you poles;/you gnarled fists,
you saplings with two leaves;/You earth holders, you soil protectors;
you bird sanctuaries, you/ shelters for the deer;/ I sing your praise.
You crow perches, you squirrel parapets;/ You stream cloggers, you ground
matters, you liners of nests; you woodpecker feeders, you air purifiers, you sap
yielders;  you shade givers . . . I sing your praise.
Trees, trees, trees… glorious trees/ Home to billions of animals.
Trees, the givers of life.
Behold, trees, trees, 4 billion trees… towering over the River Ghion…
Let’s make Ethiopia a garden of love with splendorous trees large and small in all varieties.
A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.” ― Greek Proverb
If we are Ethiopians when we are alive and become Ethiopia (soil) when we die, we should at least be buried under a shade tree. H.E. P.M. Dr. Abiy Ahmed, Commencement Speech, Addis Ababa University.

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Ethiopia plants more than 350 million trees in 12 hours

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By Sharif Paget and Helen Regan, CNN

(CNN)Ethiopia planted more than 353 million trees in 12 hours on Monday, which officials believe is a world record.

The burst of tree planting was part of a wider reforestation campaign named “Green Legacy,” spearheaded by the country’s Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. Millions of Ethiopians across the country were invited to take part in the challenge and within the first six hours, Ahmed tweeted that around 150 million trees had been planted.
“We’re halfway to our goal,” he said and encouraged Ethiopians to “build on the momentum in the remaining hours.” After the 12-hour period ended, the Prime Minister took to Twitter again to announce that Ethiopia not only met its “collective #GreenLegacy goal,” but exceeded it.
A total of 353,633,660 tree seedlings had been planted, the country’s minster for innovation and technology, Getahun Mekuria, tweeted.
Monday’s challenge had encouraged citizens in Africa’s second most populous nation to plant 200 million trees in one day. In 2017, India set the world record when around 1.5 million volunteers planted 66 million in 12 hours.
Ethiopia’s goal for the whole season is even bigger than that; the national tree planting campaign aims to plant 4 billion trees during “the rainy season” — between May and October — according to a May tweet by Ahmed.
According to Farm Africa, an organization working on reforestation efforts in East Africa and helping farmers out of poverty, less than 4% of Ethiopia’s land is forested, compared to around 30% at the end of the 19th century.
The landlocked country is also suffering from the effects of climate crisis, with land degradation, soil erosion, deforestation, and recurrent droughts and flooding exacerbated by agriculture. Eighty percent of Ethiopia’s population depends on agriculture as a livelihood.
In 2017, Ethiopia joined more than 20 other African nations in pledging to restore 100 million hectares of land as part of the African Forest Landscape Restoration Initiative.
A recent study estimated that restoring the world’s lost forests could remove two thirds of all the planet-warming carbon that is in the atmosphere because of human activity.
The study, carried out by researchers at Swiss university ETH Zurich, calculated that restoring degraded forests all over the world could capture about 205 billion tons of carbon in total. Global carbon emissions are around 10 billion tons per year.

 

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2019 Ethiopia Population 112,313,000

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Ethiopia Population  112,313,000- 
World Population Prospects (2019 Revision)
With one of the highest poverty levels in the world, Ethiopia is considered by many to be one of the most under-developed nations in the world. But within its African boundaries lies a nation filled with a rich culture and heritage. Bordered by Kenya, South Sudan, Sudan, Djibouti, Eritrea, and Somalia, Ethiopia has an estimated 2019 population of 112.08 million, which ranks 12th in the world.

With a 2019 population of approximately 112.08 million, up from 2015’s estimate of 98.9 million, Ethiopia is the most populous landlocked country in the continent of Africa and the second-most populous country of Africa after Nigeria. This estimate of how many people live in Ethiopia is based on the most recent United Nations projections, and makes Ethiopia the 14th most populous country in the world. The most recent census in 2007 found an official population of 73.7 million.

Ethiopia Area and Population Density

The surface area in Ethiopia is currently at 1,104,300 km² (or 426,372.6137 miles square). Ethiopia has a population density of 83 people per square mile (214/square mile), which ranks 123rd in the world.

Largest Cities in Ethiopia

The largest city and capital of Ethiopia is Addis Ababa, or Addis Abeba, which has an estimated population of 3.6 million in the city proper and a metro population of more than 4.6 million. Being as old as two millenniums, its cultures and traditions hold family as a significant part of Ethiopian life, sometimes even surpassing the significance their careers or businesses might have.

Other major cities include Adama (324,000), Gondar (324,000), Mek’ele (324,000), Hawassa (302,000), Nazret 213,995,  Bahir Dar 168,899, Gondar 153,914 and Dese 136,056

Ethiopia Demographics

Ethiopia is home to various ethnicities, predominantly the Oromo at 34.4% of the country’s population and the Amhara, who account for 27% of the population. Other major ethnic groups include the Somali (6.2%), Tigray (6.1%), Sidama (4%), Gurage (2.5%), Welayta (2.3%), Afar (1.7%), Hadiya (1.7%), and Gamo (1.5%).

In 2009, Ethiopia had an estimated 135,000 asylum seekers and refugees, mostly from Somalia (64,000), Eritrea (42,000) and Sudan (23,000). The government requires refugees to live in designated refugee camps. According to a 2013 report, the number of refugees hosted by Ethiopia has grown to 680,000.

Ethiopia Religion, Economy and Politics

Ethiopia has close ties with all three major Abrahamic religions, and it was the first in the region to officially adopt Christianity in the 4th century. Christians account for 63% of the country’s population,with 44% belonging to the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. Ethiopia has the first Hijra in Islamic history and the oldest Muslim settlement on the continent. Muslims account for 34% of the population.

Despite its wealth in culture, Ethiopia, unfortunately, does not suffer the same fate economically. With a significantly agriculture-based economy, it is not surprising that in today’s technologically thriving world, Ethiopia has one of the lowest incomes per capita. Its reliance on domestic investment restricts foreign investment, which could otherwise account for a comparatively successful economy. However, improvement in agricultural practices has shown a decrease in the level of starvation that the country had been previously accustomed to. The GDP is also increasing, showing a 7% increase in 2014. The composition of the labor force is almost 40%, accounting for another step toward progress. However, only if the conditions of the average Ethiopian get better will the country be able to witness a better tomorrow.

The median age in Ethiopia is approximately 17.9 years of age. 60% of the population in Ethiopia is under the age of 25.

In terms of access to clean drinking water and sanitation, the numbers are still quite grim in this country. According to the World Factbook, only 57% of the country has improved access to clean drinking water, while 42% still struggle to find clean water. Only 28% of the population has access to improved sanitation services, while 72% struggle to maintain sanitation. This likely contributes greatly to the very high degree of risk with transmittable diseases and illnesses in the area.

Only 49% of the population over 15 years of age is literate and many children only attend school for 8 or 9 years.

Ethiopia Population History

The conditions of poverty entail deterioration in health for many of Ethiopia’s inhabitants. The most common diseases that cause mortality among many Ethiopians are AIDS, tuberculosis, malaria, and various communicable diseases that occur due to improper sanitation and malnutrition. Most women give birth to children outside of the vicinity of hospitals. Often the mothers are only attended to by an elderly midwife. The mortality rate of mothers while giving birth is high. Various organizations, governmental and non-governmental, seek to improve the deplorable health conditions in Ethiopia. The World Health Organization is working to initiate a healthy Ethiopia. Low literacy levels also support the inferior health conditions. Therefore, it is important to provide the Ethiopians with adequate knowledge regarding common diseases and their appropriate medication and cure. The empowerment of women could also help achieve improvements in the circumstances pertaining to the well-being of Ethiopians.

Ethiopia is a nation that has been beset by hunger and poverty for most of its long history. A land where child starvation and subsequent death have been prevalent for such a long time requires assistance from the more privileged and prosperous nations of the world. It is the responsibility of all members of the peaceful international community to step in with more rigor and determination to empower the Ethiopians. This population has proven to be one of the strongest on the face of the earth, having endured massive hardships. If it is given a little assistance, Ethiopia will be able to build on the strength of its inhabitants in order to increase the strength of the nation itself.

Ethiopia Population Projections

Ethiopia is currently one of the fastest growing countries in the world, with a growth rate of 3.02% per year. If Ethiopia follows its current rate of growth, its population will double in the next 30 years, hitting 210 million by 2060. Most of the world’s population growth in the next 40-50 years is expected to come from Africa, and Ethiopia will be a large part of the growth.

Components of Population Change

One birth every 9 seconds
One death every 44 seconds
One net migrant every 24 minutes
Net gain of one person every 11 seconds

Ethiopia Population in 2018Source: By Nani senay at en.wikipedia [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

Ethiopia Population Pyramid 2019

500,0001,000,0001,500,000 Ethiopia Male Population 500,0001,000,0001,500,000 Ethiopia Female Population10095908580757065605550454035302520151050

Ethiopia Population by Age

There are 59,062,752 adults in Ethiopia.

Census Years

Year Date
2017 November 2017
2007 7 June 2007
1994 11 October 1994
Year195019601970198019902000201020202030204020502060207020802090Population50,000,000100,000,000150,000,000200,000,000250,000,000300,000,000
Ethiopia Population Growth

If Ethiopia follows its current rate of growth (3.02%), its population will double in the next 20 years and cross 188 million by 2050. Most of the world’s population growth in the next 40-50 years is expected to come from Africa, and Ethiopia will be a large part of the growth.

Ethiopia Population Growth

Source: World Population Prospects (2019 Revision)
Official Name Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia
Languages Spoken Amharic
Is Landlocked Yes
Latitude/Longitude 838
Currencies Used Ethiopia Birr
Demonym Ethiopian

About Ethiopia / Countries Bordering Ethiopia

Djibouti
Eritrea
Kenya
Somalia
South Sudan
Sudan
Countries Bordering Ethiopia

Ethiopia Population Density Map

Name Population  Location
Addis Ababa 2,757,729 Map
Dire Dawa 252,279 Map
Mek’ele 215,546 Map
Nazret 213,995 Map
Bahir Dar 168,899 Map
Gondar 153,914 Map
Dese 136,056 Map
Hawassa 133,097 Map
Jimma 128,306 Map
Bishoftu 104,215 Map
Kombolcha 93,605 Map
Harar 90,218 Map
Sodo 86,050 Map
Shashemene 85,871 Map
Hosa’ina 75,963 Map
Arba Minch 69,622 Map
Adigrat 65,000 Map
Debre Mark’os 59,920 Map
Debre Birhan 57,787 Map
Jijiga 56,821 Map

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The ‘Bantustanization’ of Ethiopia and Its Looming Dangers 

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Dawit W Giorgis

By Dawit W Giorgis

The term Balkanization has frequently been used in reference to Ethiopia’s ethnic federalism, which has been codified in the country’s dysfunctional constitution that curiously defines politics, citizenship, rights and privileges on ethnic grounds.  However, the use of the term Balkanization in reference to the current situation in Ethiopia is inaccurate, since it does not fully capture the toxic agenda of the architects of the country’s constitution or the misguided policies of the current government.

Strictly speaking, there are no political or administrative terms in history that can fully and adequately explain the bizarre experiment that we see unraveling in Ethiopia. Nonetheless, a term, which comes close to describing the policies of the current government and the unfolding ethnic violence and repression, is ‘bantustanization,’ which has its origin in apartheid South Africa.

“The 1959 Promotion of Bantu Self-Government Act relabeled the reserves as “homelands,” or Bantustans, in which only specific ethnic groups were to have residence rights. Later, the Bantu Homelands Citizenship Act of 1970 defined blacks living throughout South Africa as legal citizens of the homelands designated for their particular ethnic groups—thereby stripping them of their South African citizenship and their few remaining civil and political rights. Between the 1960s and 1980s, the white-dominated South African government continuously removed black people still living in “white areas”—even those settled on property that had been in their families for generations—and forcibly relocated them relocated them to the Bantustans.”

https://www.britannica.com/topic/Bantustan

Bantustanization dehumanizes a population and makes one race superior to others. It confines people to homelands with restricted access to other parts of the country, as was the case in apartheid South Africa. The Bantustans were administrative regions designed to exclude blacks from the South African political system, which was dominated by the white minority under the policy of apartheid — an institutionalized form of segregation and racism.

The idea behind the apartheid ideology was to allow the whites to own the larger proportion of the country with enormous natural resources and to establish  small and weak enclaves, separated and dependent on the racist government. The ultimate objective was to convert these Bantustans into independent satellite states, with full recognition by the international community. However, the apartheid ideology was completely rejected by the international community and the apartheid regime and its cruel policy eventually collapsed. Bantustans were subsequently incorporated with South Africa.

Bantustanization in Ethiopia 

As the Ethiopian leaders responsible for the chaos in the country very well know, it is virtually impossible to carve out any part or region of the country and create a viable state.  Ethiopian ethnic groups can only exist within a united Ethiopia, and the existence of Ethiopia is sine qua non to the survival of allThe history, the geography, the demographic distribution and the shared culture and heritage of the people are so intertwined, they do not allow for either ‘bantustanization’ or complete secession. Despite this fact, the ruling regime seems to be determined to create Bantustans under the subjugation of the dominant and ruling ethnic group.

Tragically, the US did not take firm actions on apartheid or the policy of Bantustans in racist South Africa at the time. Instead, it stood by the segregationist nation, and even allied with it in declaring a costly war on the legitimate government of Angola and in delaying the independence of Namibia. President Reagan, who served as US President from 1981 to 1989, used the phrase “constructive engagement” as a euphemism for dialogue with South Africa:

“His rhetoric of constructive engagement was a cover for doing nothing, actually doing more than doing nothing, really providing American support for a retrograde regime” (1). Reagan staunchly opposed economic sanctions around 1985, while stating publicly that he condemned the inequity in South Africa, revealing “the historical US tendency to rhetorically denounce South Africa’s racial policies while simultaneously doing little to change the established status quo” https://prospectjournal.org/2011/10/21/americas-role-in-the-end-of-south-african-apartheid/

It was the civil rights movement that eventually forced the administration to take a stand against apartheid.  The anti apartheid movement:  “culminated in congressional passage of the Comprehensive Anti-Apartheid of 1986, which mandated a variety of sanctions designed to force the dismantling of apartheid” (IBID) overriding President Reagan’s veto.

“When Nelson Mandela was freed from jail in 1988, Republicans tried to sweep their support for his erstwhile jailers under the rug. President George H.W. Bush hosted Mandela at the White House and praised him as  “a man who embodies the hopes of millions.” Mandela gave a speech to Congress at which the assembled legislators, including many who had once voted against economic sanctions, interrupted him with three standing ovations and 12 rounds of applause. Today, leaders of both parties have once again cheered for Mandela. What he really could have used was their help when he was imprisoned on Robben Island, trying to end apartheid.”

https://foreignpolicy.com/2013/07/19/apartheid-amnesia/

However the liberation movement, the African National Congress (ANC), and its leader, Nelson Mandela, remained to be listed as terrorists until 2008.

Herman Cohen’s Sinister Ploy

Ironically, certain individuals in the US appear to be inclined to repeat the sad history of apartheid now in Ethiopia. A case in point is the recent diatribe by Mr. Herman Cohen, former Assistant Secretary of Sate in the US department of state, ambassador, senior diplomat and author, in which he insinuated the idea of taking Ethiopia back to those shameful years of apartheid and ‘bantustanization’ in South Africa.  Mr. Herman Cohen was an active member of the administration when the US refused to take a firm action on apartheid and ‘bantustanization.’

He tweeted on June 24:

“Failed coup in #Ethiopia’s 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.”

And on July 19:

“Violence in #Ethiopia‘s Sidama, after similar events in Oromia, Amhara and Somali states, tells us the Ethiopian people will never again allow return to all-powerful authoritarian central govts as under the Emperors, the Derg and the EPRDF/TPLF. The future is true federalism.”

Ethiopians to date do not know what really happened in Bahr Dar, the day of the so-called coup, which is by the way a misnomer. I am curious to know how Mr. Cohen came to know that the killings in Bahr Dar were: “an attempt by ethnic nationalist to restore Amhara hegemony over all of Ethiopia”? Mr. Cohen further asserts: “ that dream is now permanently dead”. Even those very close to power do not yet know what really happened in Bahr Dar. It leads one to assume that Mr. Cohen has exclusive access to the Prime Minister who is the only one that has the complete information regarding this ‘coup’ and the killings of so many people including top officials, information which the PM has yet to share with the Ethiopian People.

Mr. Herman Cohen is once again on the wrong side of history.  His assertion of Amhara’s hegemony in Ethiopia for centuries, which he took out from the propaganda leaflets of the TPLF, has shocked many. He exposed his utter ignorance. The responses to his twit have adequately addressed this.  It is however troubling to realize that it was this man with such ignorance of Ethiopian history, who   decided on the fate of Ethiopia in 1991, at the London conference, which he convened and chaired.  It was supposed to be a negotiation with the interested parties including the Ethiopian government. The Ethiopian government walked out because Mr. Cohen had already decided on the take over of Ethiopia by TPLF.  As a result of this ill-fated decision Ethiopians suffered for 28 years and the country is now near collapse.

The people of Ethiopia forgave Herman Cohen, but never forgot his crimes, when he eventually acknowledged his blunders and regretted his decision, after hundreds of thousands had perished, millions were subjected to Zenawi’s atrocious rule and the country was brought to the brink of disintegration.

Now Mr. Cohen reappears and once again meddles in the affairs of Ethiopia by advocating the break up of Ethiopia.  He suggests that “true federalism” is having   more ‘killils’  (ethnic homelands).  Ethiopia has 90 nationalities and establishing homelands for all is the ultimate definition of democracy for Mr. Cohen.  How does ‘bantustanization’ prevent “ the return to all-powerful authoritarian central governments as under the Emperors, the Derg and the EPRDF/TPLF.”?

The policy that he is irresponsibly propagating is one that would potentially lead to civil war and genocide within Ethiopia, cause considerably devastating instability in neighboring countries, and trigger proxy wars. In the scenario he is promoting, there is a high probability that the Horn of Africa would literally be on fire in the truest sense, with the Arab World and the US scrambling to secure their interests in the Red Sea and in the region. If a civil war starts in Ethiopia the world would also have to brace itself for an unprecedented flow of refugees in all directions, with most destined to Europe across the Sahara. North African coasts would be inundated with Ethiopian and other refugees from the affected neighboring countries in numbers that would pale the recent migrations from that part of Africa in comparison.

Regrettably, it is such senseless arguments as put forth by Mr. Cohen, with a narrow and myopic agenda, that have often put the US on the wrong side of history, as evidenced by recent events in Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Egypt and Libya. The failure of the US to respond in the face of the unfolding genocide in Rwanda should have been a bitter lesson. President Clinton and the late United Nations Secretary General, Kofi Annan, despite their belated apologies and acceptances of a degree of responsibility, failed humanity by not responding to the clear early warnings. As a consequence, a million people were massacred and 800,000 people fled the country. The tragedy did not need to happen, but it did; and the US and the international community today live with the indelible scar of guilt and infamy.

 

Looming Dangers

People have been warning the international community for the last decade about the build up in Ethiopia. We now see genocide unfolding in the country and the silence of the US and the international community is stunning.  It seems as if no lessons have been taken away from Rwanda’s experience. People can only hope that there are seasoned people within the State Department who can understand and mitigate the implications of the irresponsible statements and proposals of discredited individuals like Mr. Herman Cohen.

Those who know Ethiopia do understand that the country cannot break up and an attempt to do so will only introduce an endless civil war, with implications that go far beyond the region. To create a Bantustan, one only needs to apply brute force and military power; however, to dream of ruling over a nation of Bantustans and living in peace is an impossible proposition.

Sadly, the Ethiopian government is giving the finishing touch for the creation of a Bantu-style administrative structure with extremists monopolizing political and economic power. The process of ‘bantustanization’, which  is underway

will ensure that all the other ethnic regions (Kilils or Bantustans) become weak and incapable to challenge the dominant group at the helm of power. The Ethiopian constitution allows the ethnic-based regions (Bantustans) to secede if they wish to. The attempt by some Ethiopian ethnic groups to exercise their rights to secede will not be successful but will lead to conflicts. Like the Bantustans of South Arica they will not be able to get any recognition.

Since each ethnic group does not have a clearly defined boundary accepted by all parties, it will also be one more reason for conflict, as is evident now throughout the country. Unlike the Bantustans, the demography does not allow one region of Ethiopia to be exclusively of one ethnic group, since millions of people of different ethnic backgrounds live scattered in many parts of the country. Like the Bantustans they cannot be viable independent states.

The policy of this government is primitive and those elites who are behind these polices should be tried for crimes against humanity and for deliberately and intentionally creating the conditions for civil war and possible genocide. Bantustanzation is inhumane and should be recognized as a crime under international law.

The regime in Ethiopia is accelerating the fragmentation of Ethiopia into several more weak ‘killis’ to ensure that the regime would be unchallenged. There is even an attempt to further fragment some of the major ethnic groups, as is the case with the Amahras, which seem to pose the greatest challenge to the hegemony of one ethnic group. The shortsighted strategy of this regime is to divide the Amharas along regional lines. This exercise has been launched in subtle ways and there are signs of some cracks in the Amhara community. Currently there are nine ‘killis’; but with the recent movement in the south to create more ‘killils’, the door seems to be open now for more than 80 to claim their own ‘killis.’

Seriously concerned that it might be a prelude to genocide and civil war, the people of Ethiopia are resisting the government’s dangerous policy of ‘batustanization’. It also behooves the international community to condemn the unsound policy, as it did condemn decades ago the establishment  of the Bantustans in South Africa as an integral component of its apartheid policy. In particular, the people of Ethiopia once again call upon the international community to put pressure on the government so that the worst scenario can be prevented.

Statement like that of Mr. Cohen only enflame the already tense and charged political atmosphere. Responsible and eminent people should do everything possible to use their influence to deescalate the tense situation, advise and support the government to establish a national conference of genuinely elected representatives of the people to have an open  dialogue  amongst themselves and design a road map for the country.  Let such an internationally sponsored conference of the people determine the fate of this country, not a handful of extremists.

Dawit W Giorgis

Visiting Scholar, Boston University

African Studies Center

 

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AMERICAN NOVEL ABOUT ETHIOPIA’S HUMAN RIGHTS CRISIS RELEASED Controversial Book Exposes TPLF’s Evils

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WASHINGTON (JULY 31) – A novel about Ethiopia’s democracy movement has ignited a firestorm of controversy on two continents. Titled Money, Blood and Conscience, it
tells the story of an American television producer’s love affair with a TPLF guerrilla fighter during the Meles era.
The long-anticipated book aims to educate Westerners about Ethiopia’s struggle for freedom with an entertaining political thriller and love story that portrays an Ethiopian dictatorship at war with its own people.
The world’s leading human rights authority, former Amnesty International USA director Jack Healey, calls it, “The most searing account of contemporary evil since Uncle Tom’s
Cabin,” comparing it to the 19th century novel which turned American public opinion against slavery.
The author, David Steinman, is an international revolutionary who was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his behind-the-scenes role in the overthrow of the TPLF.
Steinman was instrumental in ending foreign support for the Meles regime, exposed its corruption and mass murder in western media and co-planned the 2004-2005 Kinijit civil
resistance and election campaign which began the TPLF’s decline.
The novel’s hard-hitting critique of the international community’s support for Meles combines investigative journalism and fiction and includes intriguing speculation about Meles’ death.
“I need the diaspora’s help to reach the Western audience,” the author said. “Please tell your farang friends about the book and ask them to read it.”
Money, Blood and Conscience is currently available on Kindle. Paperback and hardcover editions will be released this December.
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For more information, contact: freeplanetpublishing@gmail.com

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Ethiopia to Open Banking Sector to its Diaspora

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Reuters

Ethiopia’s parliament passed a bill on Wednesday July 31st to open up the country’s financial sector to an estimated five million of its citizens who have taken other nationalities, Reuters has reported.

A client uses an automated teller machine (ATM) at the Commercial Bank of Ethiopia in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, July 31, 2019. REUTERS/Maheder Haileselassie Tadese

The changes, which will allow members of the Ethiopian diaspora to buy shares in local banks and start lending businesses, are part of a raft of economic reforms initiated by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed when he came to power last year. The reforms are partly aimed at boosting the country’s foreign exchange reserves, which had dropped precariously low.

“The law will enable the Ethiopian born diaspora to take part in the economic growth of the country,” said Lemlem Hadgo, chair of the Revenues, Budget and Finance Committee of parliament.

Ethiopia’s banking sector, which is closed to foreign investment and is still one of the most tightly state-controlled in Africa, is dominated by the two oldest and most profitable institutions, Awash Bank and Dashen.

Ethiopians who had emigrated but returned in recent years to live in the capital Addis Ababa welcomed the reforms.

“We can finally invest in the financial sector,” said Addis Alemayehou, a businessman who returned to Addis years ago but has been restricted in the sectors where he can invest.

Abiy’s government also plans to open up other key sectors of the economy to foreign investment. It intends to offer two telecoms licences to foreign firms, which have been jostling to start operating in one of the world’s last major closed telecom markets.

Ethiopia’s population is young and growing rapidly and the economy has been expanding at a near double-digit annual rate for more than a decade.

However, Abiy’s reformist drive has been threatened by long-simmering ethnic rivalries that have burst into the open in recent weeks, through sporadic acts of violence that have left dozens of people dead.

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Death on the Nile Haunts Ethiopia’s Rebirth

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Bloomberg

The day Simegnew Bekele was found dying at the wheel of his Toyota Land Cruiser in central Addis Ababa—doors locked, engine running and a bullet wound to his head—he had left home holding a plane ticket and a packed bag.

The plan on that July afternoon a year ago was to return to the construction site of the vast hydroelectric dam that Simegnew had been overseeing since 2011, according to his mother-in-law, Membere Mekonnen. The project on the Nile had made its chief engineer a national hero. His was the public face of plans for a new Ethiopia that would no longer be known for famines and war, but as Africa’s powerhouse—literally.

Membere, like many Ethiopians, still doesn’t believe the police finding of suicide. “Why do you buy a ticket and pack your bag to go, if you are going to shoot yourself?” the 72-year-old said in an interview at her home in the capital, where she now cares for the youngest two of the three children he left behind.

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Simegnew Bekele at the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam construction site. Photographer: Gioia Forster/Picture Alliance via Getty Images

Whoever pulled the trigger, Simegnew found himself in the eye of multiple political storms that are still today battering one of Africa’s largest infrastructure projects: the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD). A year after his death, a symbol of Ethiopia’s prosperous future risks becoming a reminder of the country’s struggles to shake its turbulent past.

Egypt has vigorously opposed the dam’s construction, due to concerns the project could reduce the supply of water downstream, at one point even threatening war. More than 80% of Egypt’s Nile water supply originates in the highlands of Ethiopia. But unprecedented access to officials and engineers running the dam project suggest the greatest risks to Ethiopia’s hydro-powered transformation come not from Egypt, but from internal disputes surrounding a leadership change in Addis Ababa just three months before Simegnew’s death.

The country’s prime minister, Abiy Ahmed, has ushered in new, more market-based ideas on how to run the economy. The previous government’s use of the dam as a training project for Ethiopia’s state-owned military industrial champion caused delays, and its removal over alleged quality failures and incompetence could cause more. Just days before Simegnew’s death, Abiy warned that on current progress it could take another decade to finish the dam, according to Ethiopian media reports.

Heightened tensions between the country’s complex patchwork of ethnic groups also threaten the project, pulling at the seams of a nation stitched from the fertile highlands and arid lowlands of a former empire. Abiy is from the country’s largest (but historically subordinate) Oromo ethnic group. His arrival displaced 27 years of ascendancy for Tigrayans, who in turn ended centuries of preeminence for Amharas.

Tale of Highlands and Lowlands

Almost three million Ethiopians were driven from their homes by conflict last year, according to the Internal Displacement Monitoring Center, the highest number worldwide. In June, an alleged coup attempt in the northern Amhara province left its president and Ethiopia’s top general dead. Amhara nationalists lay claim to the territory on which the Renaissance dam sits, in neighboring Benishangul-Gumuz, and where Abiy told parliament another coup had been planned to follow the one in Amhara.

Ethiopia’s “nationalities have been fighting against central governments for over 80 years,” said Sebhat Nega, a founder of the Tigray People’s Liberation Front that led a rebel takeover in 1991 and has now been marginalized under Abiy. If constitutional order isn’t restored, he added, “the Balkanization of Ethiopia is inevitable.”

The dam will be completed eventually, and there’s nothing inevitable about Ethiopia’s fragmentation. Yet Simegnew’s death brought public frustrations to a head. Thousands turned out to his funeral to demand answers on how he died, clashing with police. Conspiracy theories still swirl as to who might have killed the engineer.

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Top: Cement trucks stand idle just downstream from the dam, where the Blue Nile flows toward Sudan. Bottom: The still to be completed center section of the dam, and its spillway. Photographer: Zacharias Abubeker/Bloomberg

As the grand name suggests, it’s hard to overstate the importance of the “Renaissance” dam to Ethiopia—Africa’s most populous nation after Nigeria—or the burden that rode on the 54-year-old engineer’s shoulders. When the government ran short of funds to pay construction costs that are certain to exceed the dam’s original 3.4 billion-euro ($3.8 billion) price tag, ordinary Ethiopians stepped in with donations. Civil servants were volunteered to give a month’s salary.

Despite a decade of annual growth rates as high as 10%, and a pipeline of major Chinese investments, Ethiopia remains a desperately poor country with a GDP per capita below $1,000. Once the dam’s 16 turbines are switched on, the 6,000-megawatt facility will increase the country’s supply of electricity by as much as 150% at a stroke. That will bring power to many among the two thirds of Ethiopia’s roughly 100 million population who have none, according to Minister for Water, Irrigation and Electricity Seleshi Bekele.

Ethiopia GDP

Sources: World Bank and Bloomberg

Then there’s the wider effect on the mainly agrarian economy and the region. China has agreed to build a $1.8 billion power grid to support a Chinese-built and funded high speed railway, currently plagued by power cuts, as well as to 16 special industrial zones. Electricity exports to Ethiopia’s neighbors will earn desperately needed hard currency.

Those interconnections could in turn help tame the seemingly perpetual cycle of poverty, famine and violence that has long blighted the Horn of Africa, from Somalia, to Eritrea, to Sudan and South Sudan.

“This is more than a dam, more than a job,” said Yared Girma, one of Semegnew’s deputies. “It’s the pride of Ethiopia.”

The Nile Network

Nile basin Nile river and tributaries Major dam Alexandria Suez Cairo

The dam sits between the last two shoulders of mountain where the Nile sweeps down from the highlands of Ethiopia, about 20 kilometers (12 miles) from the border with Sudan. Behind it, thousands have been displaced to make way for a reservoir 246 km long. The bone-white cement wall, up to 170 meters high and 1.8 km long, is complete but for the center section.

By now, the project is five years behind schedule and counting. At least 60 trucks from Salini Impregilo SpA, the contractor for the civil engineering part of the project, stand idle. The Italian company is demanding compensation and says it paused work on the concrete structure in October. On a recent day, a Nile crocodile swam slowly upstream toward the relative quiet of the construction site.

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Workmen’s overalls hung out to dry at one of the dam’s two powerhouses. Photographer: Zacharias Abubeker/Bloomberg

Simegnew had been due to fly back here the day he died, together with a team from Metals and Engineering Corp., or Metec, the military-run Ethiopian conglomerate that was in charge of the power generation side of the dam’s construction. Within months, Metec had been removed from the project and broken up. Fourteen of the retired and serving officers in its senior management are now either in jail or fugitives, accused of corruption in different parts of the business.

New Metec management installed by the government has accused the company of failing to meet any of its contractual obligations at the dam, despite receiving almost two thirds of the money due. Seleshi, the water minister, declined to comment on the company’s removal, but said he expected the dam to be complete and the reservoir full no more than seven years after filling begins in 2020.

Metec’s work has been redistributed to foreign sub-contractors, including China Composites Group Corp., Sinohydro Corp. Ltd. and GE France SASU. Standing next to a faded sign that reads “Metec means dynamism,” GE France site supervisor Philippe Robard rolled his eyes when asked about the company’s contribution to the project. “The first two units should have been working by now,” he said, speaking of the turbines.

Italian contractor Salini said in an emailed response to questions that delays caused by Metec were mainly due to “their total lack of experience in the execution of works of this nature and magnitude.”

Down in the powerhouse at the dam’s base, Indian welders are assembling the 7 meter diameter pipes that will direct water onto those two turbines. Once complete, they’ll be drowned in concrete to prevent vibration, a rod fixed to the center of each, and a pair of 800 ton rotors lowered onto those. The same procedure will then follow for the other 14 turbines.

A welder joins the pipe assembly for one of two “early generation” turbines at the dam

The new chief engineer, Kifle Horo, shared the job with Simegnew back in 2011 when the project started. He says he was removed after clashing with Metec over its proposal to change the dam’s design to increase the headline generating capacity.

The generals, Kifle said, weren’t engineers and didn’t understand that this would simply add unused capacity and cost. The dam’s potential for producing energy over a year is fixed by the volume and depth of water in its reservoir. Extra megawattage just allows the same quantity of electricity to be produced in shorter bursts.

“It’s meaningless,” Kifle said of Metec’s design change. The aim is now to start filling the reservoir next June and complete construction in 2022, though some of the previous work needs to be undone first. “There are a lot of uncertainties, because Metec erected two bottom outlets and, due to quality reasons, we have already started to remove these.”

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Top: The spillway that allows water to flow out of the reservoir when it overfills. Bottom: Part of piping that will direct water into the turbines. Photographer: Zacharias Abubeker/Bloomberg

The man responsible for Kifle losing his tussle with Metec—and to whom Simegnew reported—was among the most powerful officials in Ethiopia’s former government, Debretsion Gebremichael. An electrical engineer by training, he said he persuaded the rest of the government to approve the design change, arguing the addition of a turbine would reduce operating costs.

Sidelined in Addis Ababa by the political changes that culminated in Abiy’s appointment as prime minister, Debretsion is now acting head of the local government in his native Tigray province, as well as chairman of the TPLF. In an interview at his office in Mekele, the regional capital, he described Simegnew as “a victim.”

Metec was added to the project for three reasons, according to Debretsion. The first was to build the company into a state-led equivalent of South Korean chaebols such as Samsung and Hyundai. Ethiopia aims to become a giant of hydropower exports and the idea was to train up local engineers who would be able to take the lead in building future dams. It was always understood that using a domestic company would take longer and that gaps in expertise would have to be filled, the Tigrayan leader said.

A second goal was to reduce the dam’s financial burden, which is being paid for without the help of international lenders. The government decided to hive off roughly 1 billion euros from the bill, giving that work to Metec to execute in local currency with (dramatically cheaper) local labor. The final motivation, according to Debretsion, was to reduce the number of foreign companies that might pull out under Egyptian pressure.

teekay
teekay

Welders working on the turbine assemblies. Soldiers at Metec’s open air cafe on the construction site. Photographer: Zacharias Abubeker/Bloomberg

“Stripping Metec out is completely against the original strategy,” and against Ethiopia’s long-term economic interests, said Debretsion. Simegnew, he added, believed in the approach. “He said we have to support these guys, so that they will finish this.”

Metec scoured Ethiopia’s universities for engineering graduates to work at the dam. Among them were eight interviewed for this article, all now aged 30 or younger. Until they were let go last year, they were on salaries of $163 per month or less. Now they are jobless, their resumes poisoned by association with Metec’s damaged brand.

Taye Shiferaw was 23 and fresh out of college with a degree in manufacturing when he started work at the dam four years ago. He was made team leader for quality control on the linings Kifle is concerned about, some of the dam’s most sensitive parts. If they were to leak, the immense pressure of the water and sediment rushing through the voids could erode concrete at the base of the dam and cause its collapse.

According to Taye, the military officers in charge—his boss was a major-general—couldn’t understand what the engineers reporting to them were talking about. Handed a technical report, they would just reply “Go on! No problem!” he said. Anyone who insisted on a quality control issue risked being accused of membership in the Oromo Liberation Front, at the time listed as a terrorist organization.

Many of those officers—and of the military’s top brass in general—were Tigrayans. By now, Mekele feels like a fortress for a government in exile, with Tigrayan ex-government officials and Metec executives frequenting the local Planet Hotel, and some spending evenings at the Mountain Lounge bar downtown.

At the hotel, an army major describing himself as one of Metec’s founders fiercely disputed accusations of incompetence and waste. He cited the dam’s expanded hydro-power design as proof of the company’s technical abilities. His friend, a Metec colonel with a baseball cap pulled low over his face, had just stopped in. He said he was wanted by police in Addis Ababa and was hiding in the bush outside Mekele. He came to the hotel to shower and brush his teeth.

Delays and technical difficulties arise in large infrastructure projects all over the world, said the colonel. “In my view, it was a blindly political decision” to remove Metec, and one designed to discredit Tigrayans in the former government and military, he said. Neither officer wanted to be named, for fear of repercussions from the capital.

Getachew Reda, a Planet Hotel resident and politburo member in the fragmenting coalition of ethnically based parties that has ruled Ethiopia since 1991, was to be found at the Mountain Lounge. A huge bottle of Johnny Walker Black Label whisky was draining fast on the shared table. At one point he was pulled away to dance to the Tigrayan fighting song and anthem, “We Shall Overcome.”

The break-up of Metec was also about ethnic politics, according to Getachew. Of the 14 Metec officers charged with corruption, a majority are Tigrayan. “An ethnic purge is taking place, that much I can tell you,” he said.

photo of mother sitting on the bed (not sure why this image isn't showing up consistently

Membere Mekonnen, at her home in Addis Ababa. Above her, a photograph shows Simegnew with his family. Photographer: Zacharias Abubeker/Bloomberg

Membere Mekonnen doesn’t concern herself with such high politics. She just remembers how Simegnew’s cell phone rang without pause the day before he died, leaving him without a moment to talk to his younger son, 16, and daughter, 9. He was depressed and clearly under immense pressure that night, but he didn’t kill himself, she insists, dismissing a police statement that he had left behind a note. Police also said he called his secretary before he died, asking her to “take care of my children.”

According to the police, Simegnew shot himself with his own gun because of pressure over delays in the dam’s construction and the emerging fact that Metec had spent more of the nation’s money than its progress could justify. He didn’t die immediately. The police said they broke a window in the attempt to get him out. In his note, according to police, Simegnew said he wanted to leave the country, but was worried he couldn’t explain himself to the Ethiopian people.

Membere is waiting for her daughter, Simegnew’s estranged wife, to secure asylum in Canada, after which the children will be sent to join her. Theirs hasn’t been an easy story. Their mother left home and, before he died, their father was so busy with dam business he sometimes left them waiting in vain after promising to visit.

“He loved that dam more than his children, because he thought it would change Ethiopia,” Membere said. Like so many others, she never questions the value or necessity of the dam itself. “We lost a hero.”

The post Death on the Nile Haunts Ethiopia’s Rebirth appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Twitter backlash after Ethiopia PM’s internet ‘not water or air’ threat

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by Abdur Rahman Alfa Shaban

“Internet is not water, internet is not air. Internet is a very important. However, if we use it as a revolution tool to incite others to kill and burn, it will be shut down not only for a week, but longer than that.

“For sake of national security, internet and social media could be blocked any time necessary.

“As long as it is deemed necessary to save lives and prevent property damages, the internet would be closed permanently, let alone for a week,” these are pronouncements of Ethiopia Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed during an August 1 press conference.

Abiy was for the first time reacting in person to assassination incidents of June 22 during which internet was cut across the East African country. Internet was also recently cut for national exams in the country.

Abiy stressed that if deadly unrest in the country continues with online incitement, internet in the country could be cut off “forever.” He adds that even though Ethiopia wants the internet to help drive development, it is “neither water nor air,” underlining its dispensability.

But his comments have received strong backlash from a large cross-section of Twitter users. Opponents underline the need for government to protect the rights of online users and not find justifications to infringe on digital rights.

Amnesty International’s East Africa region also waded in joining calls for a rethink of the PM’s position. One of Ethiopia’s famed bloggers accused the PM of outsourcing blame.

“(The Prime Minister) blames the neutral communication platform for violence in his administrative territory. To respect liberty of citizens and protect law and order for majority’s safety is your job, Mr. Prime Minister. Don’t outsource the blame,” Befeqadu Hailu tweeted.

𝔹𝕖𝕗𝕖ℚ𝕒𝕕𝕦 ℤ. ℍ𝕒𝕚𝕝𝕦@befeqe

“The first people who would be happy, if the social media suddenly disappears, are authoritarian states” ~ Stephen Stedman at . Authoritarians want to monopolize information flow and want to define fate of their people in stead of serving the latter’s will. https://twitter.com/Rozen_J/status/1157268982514290688 

Jonathan Rozen

✔@Rozen_J

“The internet for journalism is now like the air you breathe,” said @befeqe. “Without the internet, modern journalism means nothing.” #KeepItOn https://www.africaportal.org/features/journalists-under-duress-internet-shutdowns-africa-are-stifling-press-freedom/ https://twitter.com/emmanueligunza/status/1157144823259734016 

15 people are talking about this

For a person with an IT background what PM Abiy said about Internet is bewildering. It is sad that we have to point out the importance of internet in this day and age but just an FYI in the year 2014 Internet contributed 1 Trillion dollars to GDP & 3 million jobs just in the USA https://twitter.com/AmnestyEARO/status/1157308970920566786 

AmnestyEasternAfrica

✔@AmnestyEARO

Replying to @AmnestyEARO

.@PMEthiopia Abiy shutting down the internet is not acceptable. The people have the right to #AccessToInformation to know what’s happening around them including thru the Internet. Restrictions must only be according to clear & precise public laws that pursue legitimate objectives

See Meron Dumo’s other Tweets

Edao Dawano@EdaoDawano

HAPPY Friday… meanwhile-
Internet might not be WATER nor AIR in Ethiopia, but surely is Economic fuel driving communication & commerce in the developed world,-… https://www.africanews.com/2019/08/02/ethiopia-will-cut-internet-as-and-when-it-s-neither-water-nor-air-pm-abiy/ 

Ethiopia will cut internet as and when, ‘it’s neither water nor air’ – PM Abiy

Abiy said Ethiopia wants the internet to help drive development but warned that it is “neither water nor air.”

africanews.com

See Edao Dawano’s other Tweets

AmnestyEasternAfrica

✔@AmnestyEARO

‘s @PMEthiopia Abiy would have people believe that it is fine to shut down the Internet saying it “is not bread or air” & if necessary his govt could shut it for good, let alone for a week. But he’s wrong, as the Internet clampdown denies people the right to information.

AmnestyEasternAfrica

✔@AmnestyEARO

.@PMEthiopia Abiy shutting down the internet is not acceptable. The people have the right to to know what’s happening around them including thru the Internet. Restrictions must only be according to clear & precise public laws that pursue legitimate objectives

31 people are talking about this

Abel Wabella 🐯@Abelpoly

The warning of the PM Abiy Ahmed @PMEthiopia to shut down the internet once and for all puts the civil liberties of Ethiopian in the digital world at stake. This is not something tolerable for rational, merit-based and responsible citizens of .

36 people are talking about this

mmatigari@matigary

Quote of the day🔥🔥🔥

“Internet is not water!”: Ethiopia PM Abiy Ahmed Ali

Embedded video

See mmatigari’s other Tweets

A number of people, however, agreed with the PM’s pronouncements stressing that security was paramount in the national discourse and needed not be compromised in any way.

The prime minister has been praised for reforms that include freeing political prisoners and ending a state of emergency, but internet shutdowns amid the unrest have worried many Ethiopians. One came during national exams.

The country is one of Africa’s fastest-growing economies and has the continent’s second-largest population.

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The Intellectual Bankruptcy of Hizkiel  Gebissa

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Part I: Peddling Ethnic Hatred

By

Gemechu Aba Biya

In  an interview on August 1 with Semeneh Biafers of Walta TV, Hizkiel  Gebissa  makes many deceitful statements, as he has done in the past. It’s time to take him to task.  He describes himself as a public intellectual dedicated to defending human rights in Ethiopia. But a glimpse of his interviews, speeches, and writings reveal that the man is neither an intellectual nor a human rights advocate; rather, he is an intellectually bankrupt and dishonest imposter.  To fully expose his bankruptcy and dishonesty requires several pages, probably a book.  Instead, I’ll choose a few examples to illustrate my point.

Officially, Hizkiel is described as a professor of Liberal Studies (whatever that means) at Kettering University in the US but he calls himself a professor of history. He published his PhD dissertation as a book in 2004, Leaf of Allah: Khat and the Transformation of Agriculture in Harerge Ethiopia, 1875–1991. I suppose, this makes him an expert in the production, distribution, and consumption of khat in Harerghe.  I am not interested in reviewing his scholarly contribution on khat; I would leave that to the experts in the field.  My concern here is his consistently divisive, offensive, and untruthful statements about the political situation in Ethiopia, currently and in the past.

Although his academic expertise is limited to khat, he presents himself as an expert on Ethiopian history and the political economy of countries in the Horn of Africa.  Unsurprisingly, his knowledge of Ethiopian history and political economy is demonstrably superficial.  In a rare display of honesty, when asked by Semeneh about the ethnic background of emperor Menelik, Hizkiel responded that he does not know.  Yes, it is true he knows little about Menelik or the history of Ethiopia.

Since Ethiopia’s history is outside his academic field, he can be forgiven for his scant understanding of Ethiopia’s rich history.  The issue is not the deficiency of his knowledge—that is a given; rather, it is his ostentatious pretensions, his deliberate distortion of facts, his fabrications of stories, and his fallacious arguments to advance his extremist nationalist agenda.

In all of his interviews, he describes himself as a public intellectual dedicated to defending human rights in Ethiopia. Is he?  A public intellectual is an individual who is distinguished for his or her scholarly work and is engaged in advancing a just cause, whether it is economic, environmental, political, or social.  In the US, there are some well-known public intellectuals; for example, Noam Chomsky, Naomi Klein, Edward Said, and  Cornell West.

We may disagree with their politics, but we all admire their dedication, consistency, and scholarly work.  It will be unfair to compare him with them.  But it’s understandable how in the la la land of extremist nationalism, an intellectually mediocre imposter can become a star.  In the country of the blind, the one-eyed man is king, as the saying goes.

A human rights activist consistently and meaningfully defends and promotes the human rights of all individuals in Ethiopia, irrespective of their ethnicity.  Human rights activists often pay personal sacrifices for defending human rights violations; for example, being imprisoned.  Talk is cheap.  It is difficult to call Hizkiel a human rights activist.  First, there is no evidence that he has contributed anything substantial to promote and protect human rights in Ethiopia. Second, he has paid no personal sacrifice for defending human rights in Ethiopia. He was teaching at Kettering while many human rights activists in Ethiopia were being tortured in jail.

Third, his activism was at best limited to producing pamphlets or making speeches that denounced the TPLF government, selectively. Whenever the TPLF government violated the human rights of the Oromo people, he was quick to denounce the government, but when the human rights of non-Oromos were violated he was conspicuously silent.  Human rights activists don’t discriminate between victims of human rights abuses.

Fourth, under the Abiy government, his stand on human rights abuses are appalling.  When the mob that came out to welcome his boss Jawar Mohammad to Shashemene hanged an innocent young man upside down on August 13, 2018, Hizkiel  chose to keep quiet.  The victim was a non-Oromo.  When followers the OLF and Little Ayatollah massacred close to 60 non-Oromos in Bourayou on September 17, 2018, once again Hizkiel  chose to be silent.  Instead of denouncing the massacre, he condemned the coverage of the news as an anti-Oromo propaganda campaign.

Following the massacre, when the authorities in Addis Ababa arrested thousands of innocent youth and put them in a military camp, again he chose to keep quiet.  When 800,000 Gideons were displaced at the instigation of extremist Oromo nationalists in June 2018, Hizkiel  kept quiet.  Once again, he characteristically denounced the efforts to raise funds for the victims as a propaganda ploy to discredit the Oromo people.  He has yet to denounce the perpetrators of ethnic cleansing.  Can such an individual be called a human rights activist?  No way, not even by a khat addict.

His selective denunciation reflects his ethnicist division of the Ethiopian people between “us”, the Oromos, and “them”, the non-Oromos.  A prejudiced activist cannot claim to be a human rights activist, even if we take his denunciation as activism.  He is an ethnicist charlatan.

A human rights activist, even a self-proclaimed one at that, who by his silence indirectly sanctions massacres, mob hanging, mass incarceration, and ethnic cleansing acquiesces to the crime.  He is an enabler of crimes against humanity.

A human rights activist works with the other fellow activists to advance a common cause, but Hizkiel  attacks other human rights activists in Ethiopia who disagree with him politically.  He disparages non-Oromo activists who defend the rights of the citizens of Addis Ababa to elect their own mayor directly. He calls them hoodlums who engage in political terrorism.  His condemnation demonstrates that he is a political operative masquerading as a human rights activist.

Not only does he engage in selective denunciation, he spreads ethnic hatred.  In most of his political discussions, interviews, speeches, and writings he instigates conflict between Amharas and Oromos.  In an essay that appeared on  Ethiomedia on October 20, 2016, he lists (by quoting another author) ethnic slurs directed at the Oromo more people supposedly by Amhara people, as an example of how the Amharas have oppressed, marginalized, and dehumanized the Oromo people for more than hundred years.

In the eyes of many Ethiopians, as Donald Donham keenly observed, the “Galla were pagans. They were uncivilized. Ye Galla chewa ye gomen choma yellem (it is impossible to find a Galla gentleman as it is to find fat in greens) or again Galla inna shinfilla biyatbutim aytera (even if you wash them, stomach lining and a Galla will never come clean).” In one Amharic expression, Oromos were equated with human feces: “Gallana sagara eyadar yegamal” (Galla and human feces stink more every passing day). In another, even Oromo humanity was questioned: “Saw naw Galla?” (Is it human or Galla?).

What was the purpose of listing these ethnic slurs?  Why stoop so low?  The khat expert knows the purpose well: it is to create resentment, animosity, and hostility among Oromos against the Amhara people. But what he should have realized is that ethnic, racial, or regional slurs are not unique to Ethiopia.  They are ubiquitous elsewhere as well.  Still, intellectuals don’t resort to using slurs to bolster their arguments.

I can list many Oromo ethnic slurs directed at Amharas, Keffas, Sidamas, or Somalis, but that will not strengthen whatever argument I am making other than fuel hatred.  Individuals like him who resort to using ethnic insults lack the intellectual capability to provide evidence-based arguments to support their dubious claims.

A sound argument based on verifiable premise, supporting evidence, and logical conclusion requires no emotional embellishment to convince its listeners or readers.  The appeal to emotion indicates once inability to produce sound arguments.  An individual who claims to defend human rights does not repeat offensive ethnic slurs.  The use of ethnic slurs to advance a political agenda is unconscionable, objectionable, and deplorable.  A sane individual will not use ethnic slurs in any argument, unless one is under the influence of khat.

Human rights activists don’t incite ethnic violence, but Hizkiel ’s stock-in trade is inciting conflict, particularly between Amharas and Oromos, as I have shown above.  Here is a more recent example.  In September 2018, appearing as a prop for Jawar as usual on OMN TV, he announced that there is a political party that is dedicated to exterminating the Oromo people.  The message was loud and clear: The Oromo people should be ready to fight against the impending onslaught.  This story was fabricated to incite violence between the Amhara and Oromo people.

The shameless Bekele Gerba repeated the fabricated story.  To his credit, Marara Gudina repudiated the story.  A man who fabricates such a story cannot be human rights activist. He is a fraud. He is a criminal.  Had he told a similarly manufactured story in the U.S, he would have been prosecuted for hate speech and put in jail. The khat expert has less integrity than that of a khat (drug) dealer.  The sooner people realize his duplicity, particularly journalists, the lower the chances of people being duped by his deceptive, divisive, and conflict-inducing statements.  May Allah help the author of the Leaf of Allah to come to his senses.

The post The Intellectual Bankruptcy of Hizkiel  Gebissa appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Authorities in Ethiopia’s Amhara regional state intercepts trafficking of over 880 nationals

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ADDIS ABABA, Aug. 5 (Xinhua) — Authorities in Ethiopia’s Amhara regional state, located in the northern part of Ethiopia, on Monday said that they have intercepted some 882 individuals as the country works to curb human trafficking.

In a press statement, Amhara region Employment and Social Affairs Office, said 882 individuals were intercepted during the last Ethiopian Fiscal Year 2018/19, which ended on July 7, reported state media outlet Ethiopia News Agency.

The statement further said authorities have separately arrested and brought before court 32 Ethiopians suspected of masterminding human trafficking activities.

Out of the 882 Ethiopians intercepted during the 2018/19 fiscal year, 440 were women with the rest being men.

Despite a growing economy and public awareness campaigns on the dangers of human trafficking by the Ethiopian government, it is estimated that thousands of Ethiopians are trafficked to foreign countries every year.

The Ethiopian migrants are trafficked through three main routes to reach their final destinations in the Arabian Peninsula, the European mainland or South Africa.

The post Authorities in Ethiopia’s Amhara regional state intercepts trafficking of over 880 nationals appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

Ethiopia: Two policemen killed, shooter arrested

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An altercation between Ethiopian federal police officers has led to a shooting incident at the premises of the Central Statistics Agency.

Aaron Maasho, a Reuters journalist covering Ethiopia and the African Union said the officers were guarding tablets expected to be deployed for census.

A journalist with the Ethiopian Reporter said the federal police had confirmed that two officers were killed in the incident. “The shooter is now under arrest,” Dawit Endeshaw said in a tweet.

Dawit Endeshaw@dendeshaw

As per official, @Fed police commission and an eye witness, two fed polices including a commander were shoot and killed by their fellow policeman in today, around12pm.
The incident happened inside . The shooter is now under arrest

See Dawit Endeshaw’s other Tweets

Ethiopia’s parliament in June this year postponed a national census for a second time, citing security concerns.

Analysts, however, stressed that the move potentially undermined logistics for 2020 polls – the first election under Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed.

Ethiopia is due to hold a national vote some time next year, and the census – already postponed once from 2017 – is a crucial step towards demarcating constituencies.

But parliamentarians in both houses voted overwhelmingly to delay the census again by a year, due to an upsurge in ethnic conflicts.

Local level elections for the capital Addis Ababa and another chartered city Dire Dawa were postponed last week.

Source-  Afric News

The post Ethiopia: Two policemen killed, shooter arrested appeared first on Satenaw: Ethiopian News & Breaking News: Your right to know!.

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