Monday, March 30, 2015

አሳዛኝ ዜና በየመን ጦርነት 45 ኢትዮጵያዊያን ሞቱ ከ60 በላይ ቆሰሉ

ሰሞኑን ያለማቋረጥ የመን ላይ እየተወሰደ ባለው የአየር ጥቃት ምክንያት ኢትዮጵያዊያን ስደተኞች በከፍተኛ ችግርና ጭንቀት ውስጥ ነበሩ፡፡ ዛሬ በተደረገ የአየር ድብደባ ምክንያት ካምፕ ውስጥ የነበሩ 45 ኢትዮጵያዊን ሲሞቱ ከ60 በላይ ቆስለዋል፡፡ በIOM ካምፕ ላይ በስህተት የተወሰደ እርምጃ ነው በተባለው በዚህ ጥቃት ላይ ካምፕ ውስጥ የነበሩት የምስራቅ አፍሪካ ስደተኞች ናቸው የሞቱት የሚል መግለጫ IOM ቢያወጣም በዛ ካምፕ ውስጥ የሚጠቀሙት ኢትዮጵያዊን መሆናቸው ግን የታወቀ ነው፡፡ በተደጋጋሚ ሄጄ ካምፑን እንዳየሁት እኔም የማውቀው በጅቡቲ በኩል ወደ የመን የሚገቡ ኢትዮጵያዊያን ስደተኞች ብቻ እንደሚያርፉበት ነው፡፡ የሞቱትን ነፍስ ይማር!!!! የተቀሩት ኢትዮጵያዊያንስ እጣ ፋንታ ምን ይሆን?
ግሩም ተ/ሀይማኖት

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Military officer assassinated in Ambo, Ethiopia.

 
One killed in an assassination plot targeting middle ranking officials in the military and other security forces.

The incident happened in Ambo town about 125KM west of Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia.

According to eyewitnesses, the victim named Darge Nuguse was gunned down by unknown gunmen in the early hours of the evening of March 23.

According to these reports, the victim was an officer in his late thirties serving under the special military unit stationed in the town.

The unit was deployed in May 2014 after widespread protests against the Addis Ababa-Oromia integrated master plan. During the protests, although no official enquiry was ever conducted, 70 students were shot dead by this military unit. This military unit is largely controlled and operated by the Tigrean ethnic group.

The victim belongs to the Tigrean ethnic minority. Despite their small number, the Tigreans have always controlled the military thereby the political power in this 90 million nation since the downfall of the military junta in 1991 amid increasing rebellion and resentment against them. Ambo town is among the most active flashpoint.

No one has claimed responsibility for the assassination of the military officer. However, according to social media reports, the victim was killed for his role in the May 2014 massacre in the town. Many believe he was targeted for the assassination because he killed more than 10 students during the riot.

Another officer was also gunned down in the northern town of Gonder by unknown gunmen. Apart from a possible vengeance motive, these two assassinations are not related.

Power and electricity has been cut in Ambo town and search is under way to locate those who assassinated the victim. The regime is blamed to be using such search operetions to intimidate and harass citizens. However, this is unlikely to terrorise the people of Ambo who have developed an immense resilience against dictatorship under the minority regime of Ethiopia.

Secretive Agreement on the Nile by Repressive Ethiopian Regime

March 25, 2015

Secretive Agreement on the Nile by Politically Repressive Ethiopian Regime Another TPLF Giveaway to what Belongs to Ethiopians!

Press Release (SMNE)
(Geneva, Switzerland)– On March 23, 2015, a Tripartite Summit on the Nile was held in Khartoum, Sudan, hosted by Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir, and attended by Egyptian President Abdul Fattah Sisi, and Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn. As an outcome of that meeting, these three leaders will sign an agreement of Declaration of Principles on the Ethiopian Renaissance Dam, which will later be presented to the Ethiopian Parliament for final approval. This agreement will include an impact study on the effects of the Ethiopian Renaissance Dam—an electrical project located on the Blue Nile in Ethiopia—on countries downstream. The results of this study will further shape the outcome.Obang Metho, Executive Director SMNE
Ethiopians have reason to worry, as the details are vague and open to interpretation. What will be signed away before really knowing the impact? What will be the potential affect on generations to come, not only of Ethiopians, but also South Sudanese, Sudanese, and Egyptians? Other people in riparian countries upstream from the north-flowing river could also end up being involved in some of the impacts.
The Solidarity Movement for a New Ethiopia (SMNE), as an institution established for the wellbeing of Ethiopia, cannot remain silent on this important issue. The SMNE welcomes the change of rhetoric and politics on the part of the Egyptians and others and appreciates a principle-based approach, but much of it remains unclear. What will happen if the impact study shows a decrease in water flow to Egypt or other significant effects?
We call on the Ethiopian regime to make full disclosure to the Ethiopian public so we are not left in the dark about something of such great importance. Such a sensitive and critical issue should not only be debated by the parliament, but consultation with stakeholders and experts should be carried out before signing any deal that could sign away the future for generations to come. Advocacy groups and the media should enlighten the public; however, in Ethiopia, the public is denied information; the media is blocked; journalists are locked up in prison; there is no political space; the upcoming election has already been settled; and, all institutions—public and private—are under the control of the current regime. The people have a right to know; yet, this is a regime known for not being transparent, accountable or truthful.
People should not forget that this one-party regime, the Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), was not elected by the people—neither was the ethnic-based Tigrayan Peoples’ Liberation Front (TPLF), which is made up of a small number of elite Tigrayans that control the EPRDF and all sectors of Ethiopian society. The majority of Ethiopians are excluded from any participation, voice, or opportunity.
Even in the coming national election on May 24, 2015, every avenue to political participation has been blocked off from all bona fide opposition groups. Only fake, regime-manufactured opposition groups will pretend to be the voice of the opposition. Some like Mr. Lencho Lata are trying to test the blocked process.
The SMNE lauds Mr. Lencho Lata’s courage as someone who has changed his mind and politics to help launch the Oromo Democratic Front (ODF), a non-violent, democratic political group; however, when he attempted to enter Ethiopia this past week, he received a hostile response from the TPLF/EPRDF leadership.
Mr. Lencho had decided to return to his home country of Ethiopia to constitutionally engage in the political process. When he arrived, he was given 48 hours to leave the country. (Please see this link for more information.)
We in the SMNE condemn this action by the TPLF/EPRDF and see it as further evidence to Ethiopians as well as to donor countries that this regime is not willing to allow any political space to real opponents. Theoretically, should not Ethiopians be free to compete in the election? Democratic donor countries that are helping to finance the TPLF- run government should condemn this action and the political repression in general that makes Ethiopians so vulnerable to decisions like the current one on the Nile River. Since the 2005 election, each successive election has been increasingly controlled. It is obvious, once again, that the election is only playacting. This ethnic apartheid regime of the TPLF/PERDF has not been elected by the people and does not represent them. Whatever the TPLF/EPRDF does, it is in behalf of their own interests or in the interest of regime cronies—not the people.
Why should the TPLF-controlled regime be any different than they were from the beginning when they fought to liberate an ethnicity rather than a nation? When they succeeded in liberating their own region; they also claimed Ethiopia as their own despite being one of a number of liberation fronts fighting for power over Mengistu Hailemariam. The TPLF has a history of selling out on Ethiopia. For example, when they first overthrew the former government, they sensed a political threat from Eritrea so they pushed for Eritrea’s separation from Ethiopia. When in history has a country’s power holders—the TPLF—so strongly advocated for a region—Eritrea—to separate itself from the rest of the country, even presenting the case before the United Nations?
Secondly, why would a country give away its entire access to water, becoming completely landlocked, as part of the concession? Was it a payment for giving up any claim on the rest of Ethiopia?
Thirdly, why would a country give its land away on the Sudanese border; land where Ethiopians were living? Was it a payoff to block armed opposition groups from having a base in that country?
The TPLF has a history of self-serving decisions so why would we trust their negotiations on such an issue as the Nile? Rumors allege that Egypt may have been thinking of supplying arms to opposition groups in Ethiopia. Is this another pay-off for their own narrow political security rather than the nation’s because they are afraid? The TPLF leaders do not care about the interests of the nation and could easily choose a political power play over the people, just like they have done in regards to the grabbing of land and resources where the people are seen as impediments to their economic goals.
It is further evidence that there is no opening for dialogue regarding either politics or regarding critical issues like the secret agreement between Egypt, the Sudan and Ethiopia on the Nile. As a result, we affirm that decisions made by an unelected government, which is not of the people, by the people, or for the people, are not binding. This case is an example of a decision where the people of Ethiopia, who have no voice, rights or information, will be the people to face the potential serious consequences of the decision on the Nile both now and in the future.
Many worry and wonder whether Ethiopians will reach a tipping point of frustration where they become willing to take their future into their own hands. If this were to be done in a violent way, Ethiopia could end up as a failed state like Syria, Libya, Iraq, Somalia, and now Yemen. Major donors to Ethiopia should take care that their continued aid to this repressive dictatorship will not hinder efforts for meaningful dialogue, reforms, and reconciliation that could prevent such a potential explosion of violence. Instability in Ethiopia could exert a very negative domino effect in this strategic, geo-political region in the Horn of Africa.
The highly sensitive issue over the use of the waters of the Nile River and its tributaries is not new. It has been a source of debate for years, particularly by riparian countries upstream from Egypt. We are not against the Egyptians having water, but we cannot settle for anything that does not take into account the interests of the Ethiopian people. Ethiopians were not even present when the Anglo-Egyptian treaty involving the Nile was made in both 1929 and 1959, even though Ethiopia is the source of most of the Nile water. Ethiopia was neither invited nor consulted at either time; but yet, Egypt was awarded veto power over any project in Ethiopia that would hamper the flow of water. The outcome of both treaties was unfair and should not stand.
Any new agreement should be a cooperative one where the interests of all parties are considered. It will require some give and take by all parties so the agreement is fair and supports the people of each country. If it is fair to all parties, it will lead to harmonious relations between neighbors. If that does not occur and autocratic governments sign away the rights of their people; it will not be sustainable. Therefore, all signers, leaders of the Sudan, Egypt and Ethiopia, should take care.
The SMNE is a principle-based organization of diverse Ethiopians, formed to bring a more democratic Ethiopia, but this also means we seek cooperative and supportive relationships with the people of neighboring countries. One of our primary missions is to bring people together; helping them to reconcile beyond their differences so as to work together to create an Ethiopia where there is opportunity for all—not only for one ethnic group or for a small group of regime cronies. We believe it starts by really engaging with others outside our own groups—by talking to each other rather than talking about each other. This can lead to building trust between previously estranged or alienated groups where difficult issues can be worked out.
The same is possible between nations if there is respect, fairness, inclusion, and trust. We should make sure that this water, which flows from many different places to finally converge into the Nile River, serves the interest of the millions of people along its journey from start to finish. Ethiopia, as a primary source of the water, should not allow a non-representative, unelected government to sign any agreement that leaves out its own people for its own short-sighted, tribal-based interests.
This same principle should apply to all countries involved. Secretive agreements concerning the Nile River and its tributaries by any politically repressive regimes that exclude the participation of the people should be suspect and may not be binding in future years. We understand that no agreement will give all parties exactly what each wants; but, in the interests of the people of these countries and the need to share, we call on all involved in this agreement to open up the process to the public.
Let us remember that the purpose of this God-given gift of the Nile River, which has continued to flow through our ancient lands from the beginning of time, was to give life and nurturance to its recipients along the way. Let us not be greedy, but let us find a way to share its benefits, caring about the well being of each other. Let fair treaties, agreements, and contracts protect the interests of all parties against potential violations by others, including ourselves.
May God protect the interests of the people who rely on this precious gift of water.
====================================
For more information, contact Mr. Obang Metho, Executive Director of the SMNE. Email: Obang@solidaritymovement.org

አንድ ከፍተኛ የሕወሓት ወታደራዊ ባለስልጣን አምቦ ላይ ተገደለ::





Minilik Salsawi ትላንትና ከምሽቱ 2 ሰአት ላይ በኦሮሚያ ክልል አምቦ አከባቢ አንድ ከፍተኛ የወያኔ 
ወታደራዊ ባለስልጣን መገደሉ ታወቀ::አምቦ በከፍተኛ የጸጥታ ቁጥጥር ስር መውደቋ ተረጋግጧል:
:በአከባቢው የመብራት እና የስልክ አገልጎት ተቋርጦ ያደረ ሲሆን ይህንን የአከባቢው ነዋሪዎች ለሰይፈ 
ነበልባል ራዲዮ ጣቢያ ጋዜጠኛ እዮብ ባይሳ በሰጡት ቃለመጠይቅ አረጋግጠዋል::
በቀበሌ 2 በተባለ አከባቢ ሲያልፍ የነበረውንየወያኔ ከፍተኛ ወታደራዊ ባለስልጣን የገደለው ማንነቱ ያልታወቀ
 ሲሆን አምቦ በከፍተኛ የደህንነት ቁጥጥር ስር ነች ያሉት ነዋሪዎቹ በጊዜው ጉዳዩን ያልተረዱና ከፍተኛ 
መደናገጥ እንደደረሰባቸው የተናገሩ ሲሆን ፖሊሶች እና ማንነታቸው የማይታወቁ የጸጥታ ሃይሎች ነዋሪዎችን እያስቆሙ 
እና እየፈተሹ እንደነበር ታውቋል::
ከአስረ አንድ ወራት በፊት ወያኔ የነደፈውን እና ገበሬዎችን የሚያፈናቅለውን የአዲስ አበባን ማስተር ፕላን 
በመቃወም ከ27 00 በላይ የአምቦ ነዋሪዎች ሰላማዊ ሰልፍ ወተው የነበረ መሆኑ ሲታወስ የሕወሓት አግአዚ
 ሰራዊት ከ30 በላይ ያልታጠቁ ተማሪዎችን እና ነዋሪዎችን የገደለ እና የቤተሰባቸውን ደህንነት ለማረጋገጥ
 በቦታው የነበሩ ዜጎች ሳይቀር ለሞት እና ለቁስለት መዳረጋቸው የታወቀ ሲሆን የዘጠኝ አመት ሕጻን ታዳጊ
 ሳይቀር በሕወሓቶች መገደሉ ይታወሳል : ‪#‎ምንሊክሳልሳዊ‬

Monday, March 23, 2015

የመከላከያ ሰራዊት አባላት በተጠንቀቅ እንዲቆሙ ታዘዙ


የኢሳት ምንጮች እንደገለጹት ሰሞኑን በሰሜን ጎንደር አካባቢ የታየውን የጸጥታ መደፍረስ ተከትሎ የአገሪቱ የመከላከያ ሰራዊት አባላት ካለፈው ሃሙስ ቀን ጀምሮ በተጠንቀቅ እንዲቆሙ ታዛዋል።

የኢሳት ምንጮች እንደገለጹት የአየር ሃይል
 አባላት ካለፈው ሃሙስ ጀምሮ ከግቢ 
እንዳይወጡ ሲታዘዙ የተወሰኑት ደግሞ
 ከደብረዘይት እና ድሬዳዋ አየር ሃይል ወደ መቀሌ አምርተዋል።
 ብዛት ያለው የእግረኛ ሰራዊትም ወደ ኤርትራና
 ሱዳን ድንበሮች አቅንቷል ወታደራዊ ልምምዶችና አዳዳስ ምልመላዎችም እየተካሄዱ መሆኑንም ምንጮች ገልጸዋል።

ማንነታቸው በውል ያልታወቀ የተቃዋሚ ሃይሎች ጎንደር ከተማ ውስጥ የሚሊሺያ አዛዥ የሆነውን
 ኮማንደር ተፈራን ገድለው ካመለጡ በሁዋላ፣ እነሱን ለመያዝ መጋቢት 12 አርማጭ ልዩ ቦታው
 እንኮይ ተራራ ላይ በተደረገ ጦርነት ፣ ከተቃዋሚዎች በኩል ሻምበል ይርዳውና አዲሱ የተባሉ
 ሲገደሉ፣ ከመንግስት ታጣቂዎች በኩል ደግሞ የልዩ ሃይል አባልየሆነው እባበይ እንዲሁም አንድ
 ስሙ በውል ያልታወቀና ሁለት የሚሊሺያ አባላት ተገድለዋል። 

ከቀኑ ዘጠኝ ሰአት ጀምሮ እስከ ምሽት በቀጠለው የተኩስ ልውውጥ፣ አንድ ተማሪ በመንግስት ሃይሎች ተገድሏል የመንግስት የጸጥታ ሃይሎች ምሽት ላይ  አካባቢውን ጥለው 
መውጣታቸውን የአይን እማኞች ገልጸዋል በጉዳዩ ዙሪያ የመንግስትን አስተያየት ለማካተት የተደረገው
 ጥረት አልተሳካም ። 

http://satenaw.com/amharic/archives/5502

ኢዴፓና ሰማያዊ ለጥያቄዎችዎ መልስ ይሰጣሉ

ኢዴፓና ሰማያዊ ለጥያቄዎችዎ መልስ ይሰጣሉ

vvvvv
የሰማያዊ ፓርቲ ሊቀመንበር ኢንጂነር ይልቃል ጌትነትና የኢትዮጵያዊያን ዴሞክራሲያዊ ፓርቲ – ኢዴፓ ፕሬዚደንት ዶክተር ጫኔ ከበደ ለጥያቄዎችዎ መልስ ይሰጣሉ፡፡
ኢዴፓ የብሔራዊ ምክር ቤቱ አባልና የምርጫ ሥነ-ምግባር ደንብ የፈረመ ፓርቲ ሲሆን ሰማያዊ ፓርቲ ደግሞ አባልም አይደለም፤ የሥነምግባር ደንቡንም አልፈረመም።
ሁለቱ መሪዎች ለወሰዷቸው እርምጃዎች የፓርቲዎቻቸውን ምክንያቶች እና ሌሎችም ጉዳዮችን ያብራራሉ፡፡

272 days and counting for Andargachew Tsege on death row

March 23, 2015

In June 2014, political activist Andargachew Tsege was captured in Yemen and sent to a secret prison in Ethiopia.

by Keila Guimaraes | Lslington Now
The wife of a British national on death row has been fighting a long legal battle to free her husband after he was rendered by Ethiopian forces last year.Andargachew Tsege on death row
Islington resident Yemi Hailemariam has been petitioning Downing Street in order to put pressure on the Foreign Commonwealth Office, but says she has seen little improvement.
The political activist Andargachew Tsege was flying from Yemen to Dubai on 23 June 2014 when he was captured in a Yemenese airport and sent to Ethiopia against his will. His family found out his whereabouts a week later when the Yemen government confirmed the operation.
Hailemariam said:
When I knew the truth, it was heart-breaking to say the least. It was the day that changed our lives.
Tsege has a long history of animosity with Ethiopian politicians. He flew out of the country in 1979 at the age of 24 as a political refugee and found shelter in England, where he gained British citizenship status. He settled in Islington, but continued campaigning and visiting Ethiopia.
He joined the movement GINBOT 7, which was formed in 2008 by politicians and activists in exile. The party, whose agenda is to overthrow the ruling party, was labelled as a terrorist group by Ethiopia in 2011. Tsege has been charged with terrorism and sentenced to death in absentia twice, in 2009 and 2012.

The legal battle

Since her husband’s imprisonment, Hailemariam has started a legal battle to free Tsege. Her campaign eventually gained the attention of Prime Minister David Cameron, who wrote to the Ethiopian Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn last October asking for consular access to Tsege and for the death penalty not to be imposed. Tsege was granted only two visits with the British ambassador, on 11 August 2014 and 19 December 2014, but has had no access to lawyers.
Ethiopia has also vetoed a visit from Tsege’s MP, Jeremy Corbyn, who was scheduled to travel to the country on 13 February.
Hailemariam argues that the Ethiopian government has breached international law. She says:
It was an illegal procedure. Citizens have legal rights; they can’t be removed from a country against their will without informing their embassy. That’s kidnapping.
In its 2015 report, advocacy group Human Rights Watch called attention to Tsege’s case: “The transfer violated international law prohibitions against sending someone to a country where they are likely to face torture or other mistreatment.”
A Foreign Commonwealth Office (FCO) spokesperson has also declared that Tsege’s rights have not been respected. “We remain deeply concerned that Andargachew Tsege is being detained in Ethiopia without being granted his rights to regular consular visits or access to a lawyer. We have repeatedly raised this with the Ethiopian authorities and will continue to do so.”

70,000 strong petition

In February, Hailemariam handed a petition with more than 70,000 signatures to Downing Street to ask the British government to put pressure on Ethiopia. But she said that she is in the battlefield alone and that the FCO has been too lenient.
“The FCO is driven by pressure, not by principles. And it infuriates me.”
But lenience might not be the only element in this diplomatic puzzle.
Ethiopia is an important economic partner for the UK and a strong ally on counter-terrorism activities in the region. In the next two years, the UK is investing £303 million in the country.
“Ethiopia lies at the heart of an unstable region that has experienced almost continuous conflict and environmental shocks in recent decades”, detailed the Department for International Development (DFID) in a document about investment in Ethiopia.
It concluded that “a stable, secure and prosperous Ethiopia is critical to UK interests”.

“Ethiopian security forces are responsible for the kidnap, torture and death sentence of British national Andargachew Tsege”

For legal charity Reprieve, the British government is putting economic and security reasons above international law.
Maya Foa, director of Reprieve’s death penalty team, said:
Ethiopian security forces are responsible for the kidnap, torture and death sentence of British national, Andargachew Tsege. Instead of dodging questions and then secretly shelving embarrassing programmes, DFID [Department for International Development] should be explaining why it was using taxpayers’ money to fund these forces in the first place – and what safeguards, if any, it put in place to ensure this ‘high risk’ funding did not enable abuses of the kind suffered by Mr Tsege.
Despite the complexity of Tsege’s case, Hailemariam says she has not given up hope.
“The only thing I see is that we cannot stop. I believe something will work out because we live in a society where I understand civil rights matter. That is very important. Even if the government doesn’t believe so, society believes this kind of thing is unacceptable. I believe we can make progress.”
The movement “Free Andargachew” is organising a protest in front of the FCO office this Friday to demand his immediate release. On Friday, Tsege will have spent 276 days in prison.

Sunday, March 22, 2015

ማንኛውም ተቃዋሚ ድርጅት ስርዓት ከሌለው ከርቸሌ እንከተዋለን የሚል ማስፈራርያ ኃይለማርያም ደሳለኝ አሰሙ

March 22,2015
ማንኛውም ተቃዋሚ ድርጅት ስርዓት ከሌለው  ከርቸሌ እንከተዋለን ይህንንም ለማድረግ አቅም አለን የሚል ማስፈራርያ አቶ ኃይለማርያም ደሳለኝ አሰምተዋል

ጠቅላይ ሚኒስትር ኃይለማርያም ደሳለኝ ትናንትና በጅማ ከተማ ተገኝተው ይህን አድርገን ነጻነት አመጣን ዲሞክራሲን እየቀዳን ለህዝቡ አከፋፈልን አሉ። የጅማ ዩኒቨርስቲ ተማሪወች እንዳደረሱኝ መረጃ ከሆነ ሚኒ ኃይለማርያም ኔትወርክ አዘግተው በጅማ ዩኒቨርስቲ ውስጥ አድረዋል ።

ከንግግራቸው ውስጥ ፈገግ ካሰኘኝ ልለፍ ፣ሚኒ ኃይሌ እንዲህ አሉ ማንኛውም ተቃዋሚ ድርጅት ስርዓት ከለለው አቅም አለን ከርቸሌ እንከተዋለን አቤት አቤት ወግ መዓረጉ እንዳይቀር እኮ ነው የትኛው አቅም ነው ? ትልቅ መስኮት የሌለው ቤት ሰርቶ እስረኛ ማጠራቀሜውን ነው ፣ሠላማዊ ሰልፍ ሲወጣ ንጹህን ህዝብ በፖሊስ ማስደብደቡን ነው ?? ድንቄም አቅም አያ!!!!! ባዶ እጁን ከሚታገል ህዝብ ጋር መሳሪያ ታጥቆ አቅም አለን ሲል ከአንድ መሪ ተብሎ ከተወከለ አሻንጉሊት የማይጠብቅ የቂል ንግግር ።
የዩኒቨርስቲ ተማሪወችን ስብሠባ እንዳይካፈሉ አግደዋቸዋል ።

አቅማችሁን ለኤርትራ መንግስት አሳዩ እንጅ ከእኛ ላይ ቦተሊካችሁን አትንፉብን ።

ለማንኛውም በተያየዘ ዜና ላይ በኤርትራ የጦር ማካማች ሎጀስቲካ ላይ ያአደረሱት የአየር ጥቃት መግለጫው ጅማ ላይ ሳይሆን ቢቢሲ ወይም አልጀዚራ ላይ ቢሆን አሸናፊነትን አልያ ውድቀትን ሊያመጣ ይችላል እንላለን።

የኢትዮጵያ ተዋጊ ጄቶች፤ የኤርትራን የወርቅ ማዕድን ማውጫ፤ ሚሻን በቦንብ ደበደቡ

ኢ.ኤም.ኤፍ) የኤርትራ ኢኮኖሚ ዋልታ እንደሆነ የሚነገርለት፣ በማይ እዳጋ የሚገኘው የሚሻዕ ወርቅ ማዕድን ካምፓኒ በአየር ተደብድቧል። ተያይዞ የደረሰን ዘገባ እንዳመለከተው ከሆነ፤ የአየር ጥቃቱን ያደረሰው በወያኔ የሚመራው ወታደራዊ ኃይል ሲሆን፤ በጥቃቱም የወርቅ ማውጫው ክፉኛ መጎዳቱን ለማወቅ ችለናል። ከአስመራ 65 ማይል ርቀት ላይ የሚገኘው የወርቅ ማዕድን በአየር መመታቱ ከተሰማ በኋላ፤ በተለይ የአስመራ ነዋሪ ስጋት ላይ ወድቋል። የሰሞኑ የአስመራ ነዋሪዎችም መነጋገሪያ፤ “በመጀመሪያ ደረጃ የአየር ክልላችን ሲጣስ በራዳር ታይቶ፤ በጄቶቹ ላይ ቅጽበታዊ ምላሽ ለምን አልተሰጠም?” የሚል ጥያቄ አስነስቷል። ይህንንም ጥያቄ ተከትሎ “እኛስ ምን ዋስትና አለን?” የሚሉ ይገኙበታል።
የኤርትራ ወርቅ ማዕድን የአየር ጥቃት ደረሰበት
ከአንድ ቀን በፊት በኤርትራ እንደሚንቀሳቀስ ይፋ ያደረገ ኃይል፤ በዚሁ የወርቅ ማዕድን ላይ ጥቃት ማድረሱን ገልጾ፤ በትግርኛ የተጻፈ ወረቀት በከተማው ማሰራጨቱ ይታወሳል። በዚህ በራሪ ወረቀት ላይ ጥቃቱን የፈጸሙት የኤርትራን አስተዳደር በመቃወም መሆኑን ገልጾ ነበር። የአሁኑም ጥቃት ይህንኑ ተከትሎ የተሰነዘረ ይመስላል።
በአሁኑ ሰአት በማዕድን ማውጫው ላይ የደረሰው አደጋ ለህዝብ ይፋ አልሆነም። ነገር ግን በቃጠሎው ምክንያት ከርቀት የሚታየው ጭስ በሚስጥር የተያዘውን ጥቃት እያሳበቀ ነው።
ኤርትራ ከዚህ የማዕድን ማውጫ በአመት እስከ 400 ሚሊዮን ዶላር ታገኛለች። የዚህ ማዕድን ስፍራ መመታት፤ የአገሪቱን የኢኮኖሚ ኃይል በእጅጉ ይጎዳዋል። በሌላ በኩል ደግሞ በወያኔ የሚመራው መንግስት ጠብ አጫሪነት እንደዚሁ አነጋጋሪ ሆኗል። ጥቃቱን የሚደግፉ እና የሚቃወሙ በሁለት የተለያዩ ጎራ ሆነው፤ የሃሳብ ፍጭት በማድረግ ላይ ናቸው። በዚህ ሁሉ መሃል ግን የሚሻዕ ወርቅ ማዕድን ማውጫ ግቢ አሁንም በእሳተየነደደ ነው።
http://www.zehabesha.com/amharic/archives/39931

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Is violent change inevitable in Ethiopia?

March 19, 2015
by Graham Peebles
As the Ethiopian government intensifies its violent suppression of the populace in the lead up to the illusion of national elections in May, there are many within the country and the diaspora who believe a popular armed uprising is the only way to bring about change in the country. The people’s frustration and anger towards the government is understandable as is their bewilderment at the neglect and complicity of Ethiopia’s major donors. America, the European Union and Britain collectively give almost half of Ethiopia’s federal budget in various aid packages, are well aware of the regime’s brutal form of governance and shamefully do and say nothing.
SMNE Calls on Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn To Lead Ethiopia towards Change
Peaceful demonstration in Addis Ababa organized by Semayawi or Blue Party | June 2, 2013
The ruling regime, the Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF) came to power in 1992 when they overthrew the People’s Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (PDRE). The ideologically driven group of freedom fighters led by Meles Zenawi ousted the Derg dictatorship and drew up a new liberal constitution based on democratic principles of freedom and human rights. Once enthroned in Addis Ababa, however, they swiftly followed in their predecessor’s repressive footsteps and all democratic ideals where neatly filed away to be forgotten about.
The government has imprisoned almost all major opposition leaders, as well as large numbers of troublesome journalists. An array of repressive laws has been passed to suffocate dissent and virtually criminalise freedom of expression and assembly – all contrary to their own constitution and in violation of a plethora of international conventions which they have dutifully signed up to.
With the major opposition party leaders behind bars and the regime maintaining total control of the electoral process the result of the forthcoming May election is a forgone conclusion. It is a hollow piece of democratic theatre, which the European Union has refused to legitimise with a team of observers, a mistake in my view, but understandable given the distorted result of the past two elections which the EU observed but did not validate.
Unite and act
Given the repressive picture in the country and the regime’s total intransigence, the frustration of huge numbers of people inside and outside the country is unsurprising. But is an armed uprising the way forward, would it be successful in ousting the ruling regime, or would there be a tightening of repressive legislation – the ‘rebel group’ branded as terrorists, large numbers of deaths and arrests and perhaps a long drawn out civil war igniting conflicts between one ethnic group and another?
Is violence and hate ever the way to counter violence and hate? Not according to Martin Luther King, who presided over a largely peaceful civil rights movement in America, against an extremely violent, not to say ignorant adversary; “darkness”, he said “cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.”
That other giant of non-violence, Mohandas Gandhi’s civil disobedience movement undermined the British, united the population and was crucial in bringing about independence in India. His legacy is vital, the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki Moon has said, “in today’s world where the rights of too many people are still violated,” so is his means of achieving his goal.
Like all repressive regimes the EPRDF follows a systematic methodology of divide and rule; the answer to such crude means of control is unity.
We are living in unprecedented times, times of tremendous opportunity and potential change; out of step with the times the days are numbered for regimes like the EPRDF – it is a question of when they collapse – not if.
The people of Ethiopia, and those who make up the diaspora in Europe, America and elsewhere need to come together, and overcome their apathy and fear, organize themselves and take responsibility for their own destiny, be creative, be heartened and learn from movements in Tunisia, Hong Kong, Egypt, Turkey, Brazil and elsewhere.
They need to be inspired by the strategic actions successfully employed in the non-violent struggle led by Gandhi, and find the courage to act peacefully, to unite against what is a brutal group of men who are despised by the people and have no legitimacy to govern Ethiopia, and act with love not hate, to bring lasting change to their country.
 source http://ecadforum.com/2015/03/19/is-violent-change-inevitable-in-ethiopia/