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Friday, June 29, 2007

ETP Editorial: On the Prime Minister’s speech to Parliament

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

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Court finds Siye Abraha GUILTY on one CHARGE, NOT GUILTY on THREE - sentencing July 4


- EPRDF LED PARLIAMENT TO REPLACE SEATS OF MISSING MPs(making sure there is no possibility of CUD leaders in Kality taking seats in parliament)
- Ethiopian Premier Admits Errors on Somalia
(Good morning Mr. Prime Minister, you’re finally waking up. Admirable. Now, Before you go back to sleep, would you like to face up to any errors on Ethiopia?)
- Ethiopian Soldiers Killed in Roadside Bomb Blast in Mogadishu
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ETP EDITORIAL - The Prime Minister in his latest speech to the house of Peoples' Representatives devoted a significant amount of time portraying his government as being tough on Eritrea. Naturally, this was an attempt to put out the fire Sebhat Nega (Aboy Sebhat) ignited after his controversial radio interview in which he unwittingly exposed the objectionable principle in which TPLF has been operating under for years.

Several foreign news agencies bought into the story, some intentionally and others inadvertently. But there were few who got it right. Agence France presse (AFP) for instance, rather than echoing the "Ethiopia ready for Eritrea war" story - hit the nail on the head by going with "Ethiopia accepts border ruling"

Hidden in-between a clutter of words and phrases is the key point of the Prime Minister’s speech;

“despite flaws in the decision of the Boundary Commission, we have repeatedly and unequivocally declared our acceptance because it is the Commission's verdict.”
Two weeks ago Foreign Minister Seyoum Mesfin expressed his shock and indignation when the Associated Press ran a story which said Ethiopia, as stipulated by the ruling of the boundary commission, is prepared to give Badme to Eritrea. Now here, just a few days later, the Prime Minister is publicly testifying that AP’s story was spot on.

Badme is a thorn on the side of this administration because it is an unambiguous and constant reminder of how lightly it takes the lives of its citizens. Tens of thousands have died in the fight for Badme; people from all walks of lives answered the government’s call believing their country was in trouble; from East to west, south to north - they came. After all the sacrifice, the government with one stroke of a pen undid what they had done. Many were left wondering what the point of it all was.

No sane Ethiopian wants conflict with Eritrea. The people of Eritrea have endured decades of war and are now under the rule of a tyrannical government which arguably is as oppressive as the Taliban. They too don't want war; they want freedom, democracy and respect for human rights, just like we do. These two nations are family; sharing history and culture. The majority of Ethiopians as well as Eritreans want to live in peace, putting into practice mutually beneficial policies.

That being said however, when the leadership of a country constantly and openly advocates in favor of another, at a disadvantage to its own national interests, as TPLF’s core directorate has been doing for decades, then it is easy to understand the suspicion of some that maybe Ethiopia has clandestinely been colonized.

Also:
-[Video] Dr, Berhanu Nega on National Security
(Must see)
-EthioMedia asks, Who is in power in Ethiopia?

Thursday, June 28, 2007

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-[AUDIO] - Meles speaking about Kality prisoners
-Ethiopia calls West's appeals for CUD prisoners "shameful"
-OPEN LETTER TO THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS AND THE COALITION FOR H.R 2003 (Keif Schleifer, Executive Director of the Empowerment Initiative)
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Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Decline in Rule of Law Seen in New Data Released by Freedom House, Ethiopian govt. major offender

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

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Also:
- Washington Update
- Today's Top HEADLINES

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Washington, D.C - A global decline in the rule of law, particularly in Africa and Asia, was a major political development, data released today by Freedom House indicated.

According to the subcategory findings from Freedom in the World 2007, the most notable change in freedom in 2006 was global deterioration in judicial independence, due process rights, protection from torture, and freedom from war and insurgencies. These declines occurred in geographically and culturally diverse countries such as Chad, South Africa, Somalia and Ethiopia, as well as Afghanistan, Philippines, Sri Lanka and Thailand.(More...)
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Today's Top HEADLINES

- DIRECTION FOREIGN POLICY SHOULD TAKE UNDER NEW BRITISH PM - by Tom Porteous, director of Human Rights Watch

...The UK and the United States should stop working hand in glove with repressive dictatorships which are responsible for torture, arbitrary detention and suppression of non-violent opposition. This policy is playing into the hands of exactly those radical groups it is designed to contain, bolstering the popularity of forces that advocate political violence......it should also acknowledge and criticize the serious abuses carried out by governments that are recipients of UK development assistance such as Ethiopia, Uganda, Rwanda, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.(More...)

- Lewit - No Court Session
- A Millennium Resolution: Never Take Wrong Historical Turns Again!
(Network of Ethiopian Scholars, NES)
- The Constitutional Rights of the Accused must be Respected!
(Ethiopian Human Rights Council, EHRCO)
- International Rally to Free Ethiopian Civil Society Leaders on Thursday (Join activists around the world on 28 June 2007 in calling for the acquital of anti-poverty activists in Ethiopia)
- Despite rain, hundreds of Ethiopians Rally in Wiesbaden
(EMF)
- World 'ignoring' Eritrea media crackdown
- Somali officials escape assassination attempts
- Brown takes over as UK prime minister
- CIA reveals Cold War secrets
- Nine killed in Israeli Gaza raids
- Protesters torch Iran gas stations

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(For those of you who are not regular visitors to this website, ETP is not affiliated with any political party in the diaspora)

Washington Update

By Mesfin Mekonen

Markup of HR 2003, the Ethiopia Democracy and Accountability Act of 2007, delayed. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs committee postponed “markup” (the step immediately before a subcommittee vote) of HR 2003 in response to urgent communications from the State Department.

Officials from the Meles regime informed the State Department that going ahead with the markup would prevent the release of political prisoners. The Meles regime claims that if the markup is delayed it will release the prisoners within 10 days. Congressional staff expressed skepticism about the Ethiopian government’s true intentions, but said the U.S. Congress does not want to stand in the way of releasing the prisoners.

Meles has now made it absolutely clear to anyone who doubted it that he is holding Kinijit leaders, Journalists and civic group for purely political reasons and that he is treating them as hostages.

This blatant attempt to coerce Congress should reinforce its determination to enact HR 2003 and take other steps to encourage democracy and human rights in Ethiopia .

Members of Congress will be watching to see not only if the prisoners are released, but also whether they receive medical attention to help them overcome the horrors of their extended imprisonment, and that they are permitted to resume their efforts to create a peaceful transition to real democracy.

In addition to HR 2003, Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) has introduced H.R.2228, the Ethiopia Freedom, Democracy, and Human Rights Advancement Act of 2007. Rep. Smith was the first member of Congress to introduce legislation promoting democracy and human rights in Ethiopia . The introduction of two bills with similar goals in the current Congress has created some confusion. Rep. Smith has agreed to support HR 2003 when it comes to the floor of the House.

It is essential that all Ethiopians contact members of Congress and tell them how important it is for them to co-sponsor and express their support for HR 2003. They could mention that the European Parliament in November 2006 passed a resolution demanding the release of the prisoners of conscience and the resumption of an all inclusive dialogue between the party in power and the opposition.

Amnesty International, in its May 2007 report, concluded that these "prisoners of conscience have not used or advocated violence and were peacefully exercising their right to freedom of expression, association and assembly, as guaranteed by the Ethiopian Constitution and international human rights treaties which Ethiopia has ratified." The Committee to Protect Journalists has condemned the regime in Addis Ababa for its brutal actions against journalists.

We continue to stay in close contact with Congress, as well as non-profit organizations such as the Just Foreign Policy Group, Amnesty International, Human Rights Group and CPJ.

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

MELES to US CONGRESS "IF YOU MARK-UP H.R. 2003, KALITY PRISONERS WILL NOT BE RELEASED"

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

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Also:
- International Day of Solidarity - 28 June; calling for the acquital of anti-poverty activists in Ethiopia
- Professor Donald Levine on the conviction and promised release of political prisoners
- CUD's tommorrow court session closed to the public (Lewit)

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[press release, Coalition for HR 2003 ]

The Coalition for HR 2003 has just learned that Zenawi, through his lobbyists and intermediaries, has communicated to House Africa Subcommittee Chairman Donald Payne and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Tom Lantos that if the Foreign Affairs Committee goes forward with the mark-up of H.R. 2003, he will NOT release the Kality political prisoners.

On the eve of the mark-up scheduled for June 26, 2007, a steady stream of State Department officials, lobbyists and others have gone to the Hill or called to tell Chairmen Payne and Lantos that the fate of the Kality prisoners will depend on the Committee’s decision to mark-up H.R. 2003.

State Department officials have sought to persuade the two committee chairmen and other members that Zenawi is in the final stages of releasing the Kality prisoners, and that marking up the bill at this time would cause him unspeakable embarrassment. Members were told that by marking-up the bill at this critical time, Zenawi will “lose face” among his people and the international community. To help him “save face”, members were asked to delay the mark-up for at least two weeks.(MORE)

Today's Top HEADLINES

-Lewit - CUD's tommorrow court session closed to the public
-International Day of Solidarity - 28 June 2007 (Join activists around the world on 28 June 2007 in calling for the acquital of anti-poverty activists in Ethiopia)
-Final Day in Court?
-6 die in bomb explosion in Somali capital, witnesses say
-Somalia minister escapes from bomb attack
-Sheltering Ethiopian women
-Session on Darfur ends without action plan
-Israel to release Fatah prisoners
-Tony Blair Set to Be Named Mideast Envoy
-Immigration Gets a Second Senate Shot

On the conviction and promised release of political prisoners

Professor Donald Levine

Reports of the signing of a mediated consensus document by political prisoners at Kaliti brings a fresh blast of hope to all who care for human rights and for the future of Ethiopia. It offers a chance to get the country's progress toward democratization and development back on track.

It makes me feel like saying Ethiopia, you are coming home! You are returning to your honorable traditions: of hig makeber, of gaaddisa nagayaa, of shemgilna, of gurabet mekebabir, of beherawi andenet. You may be saying goodby to outmoded customs such as hamet, mesedadeb, political sem-inna worq, and politik be-temenja.

The timing is of course perfect. It opens the way to a genuinely joyous celebration in Maskaram of the Ethiopian millennium. It enables all concerned to face the future instead rather than continuing to obsess over past grievances, even though a future agenda will include efforts to redress those grievances. I am delighted to learn that my good friend and great Ethiopian patriot Zeleke Gessesse, of One Love Africa, is in Ethiopia preparing a special musical celebration of this supreme moment of peaceful reconciliation.

I hope all concerned will seize this moment as an opportunity to make renewed progress toward a genuinely democratic system. This means:

- the return of the CUD prisoners to a full and respected place as members of one of the opposition parties in the country;
- the release of all Oromos, Tigrayans, and any others who are being held as political prisoners;
- the creation of an independent structure to manage and ensure the independence of government-controlled media;
- open use of electronic media;
- institutional capacity-building in the judicial system to ensure that it is kept free from interference from political pressures stemming from any quarter;
- institutional capacity-building in the Election Commission to ensure that future elections will be free and fair; and
- a pledge by ALL parties inside and outside Ethiopia to renounce the kind of hate propaganda and violence that flourished around the time of the May 2005 election and since, and to engage in the kinds of peaceful communication that has characterized Ethiopians at their finest.
These changes will take time, but I urge everyone to do what can be done to ensure that irreversible steps toward them are put in place over the next few months.

Be-zimdina'nna wodajenet

Liben Gebre Etiyopia
aka Professor Donald Levine

Monday, June 25, 2007

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

Markup of H.R. 2003

The Coalition for HR 2003 is pleased to share with all of our pro-human rights and pro-democracy supporters and allies that H.R. 2003, the “Ethiopia Democracy and Accountability Act of 2007” introduced by Chairman Donald Payne on April 20, 2007, has been scheduled for a mark-up vote at the U.S. Congress Committee on Foreign Relations on Tuesday, June 26, 2007, at 10 AM. (More...)

TOP HEADLINES

- Kality News, Comments
- TPLF dissidents forming a new party
- Ethiopian Govt. planning complete monopolization of info, reminiscent of socialist era - critics say
- Ethiopia rebels say govt kills 40 in air raids
- THE WEEK IN REVIEW PLUS WEEKEND NEWS
- Security Personnel Kill Civilians Waiting For Food In Somali

Sunday, June 24, 2007

The Week in review plus weekend news

ETP - There are credible reports that an agreement has been reached or is close to being reached, between Jailed Kinijit Leaders and the Ethiopian government. We are all anxiously awaiting the final outcome.

However, pro-democracy Ethiopians might want to hold off on the celebrations until the democratically elected leaders actually, physically - walk out of Kality. (Now is not the time for MeZenagaT). Therefore, all of us should continue business as usual - lobbying, organizing, demonstrating, writing letters, signing petitions, etc...

Weekend Top Stories:
[TPLF dissidents forming a new party] - [Kality News, Comments] - [Mogadishu stunned by blasts despite curfew] - [Somali MP survives assassination attempt] and more of the weekend's top stories!
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The Week in Review

TOP STORIES FROM THE PAST WEEK
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Kality News, Comments


Opposition leaders due in court June 27 (Ethiomedia)
With No Room Left to Wiggle (Lewit)
EPRDF executive committee approves (EZ)
Loyalty and trust are truly the glue (Seblework Tadesse)
All have signed the document (Reporter)
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TPLF dissidents and other prominent Ethiopians forming a new party
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Somali MP survives assassination attempt

MOGADISHU, June 24 (Reuters) - Gunmen tried to kill a Somali lawmaker on Saturday night in the latest assassination attempt on a government official in the violent Horn of Africa country. Member of parliament Hussein Osman was in his house west of Mogadishu when gunmen opened fire. He told local media on Sunday he did not know who the assailants were.

"This was a well-planned plot to eliminate me," he was quoted as saying. Witnesses said Osman's security guards repulsed the gunmen after a brief but heavy exchange of fire. No one was hurt.(More...)

Seven Killed in Fighting Among Somali Soldiers

NAIROBI, June 22 -- In another sign of trouble for Somalia's transitional government, fighting erupted Friday among hundreds of government soldiers belonging to two rival sub-clans.

Seven people were killed in the brief but heavy battle near the southern coastal city of Kismaayo, home to a lucrative port and fertile farmland that the Majerteen, the sub-clan of Somali President Abdullahi Yusuf, and the Marehan, their historical enemies, would both like to control.(More...)

Also see:
-Clan fighting erupts between govt troops in south Somalia, 17 dead
-15 die as Somali troops from rival clans fight it out
-Fighting in Somali port city of Kismayo


Mogadishu stunned by blasts despite curfew

Around 11 bomb blasts have trembled overnight the Somalia’s volatile city Mogadishu despite curfew imposed by the national security commission to restore normalcy – there are no immediate casualties from the latest explosions.

The explosions followed by gunfire happened in north and south of the capital but this morning the city was quiet as the Somali government troops along with the Ethiopian forces set up checkpoints in the main Mogadishu streets.(More...)

Also see:
-Explosions rock 3 cities in Somalia
-Series of Bomb Explosions Rock Mogadishu Amid Curfew in Place
-Five killed in explosion against police in Mogadishu

Friday, June 22, 2007

TPLF dissidents and other prominent Ethiopians forming a new party

(Dekialula) - According to reliable sources, former TPLF officials led by Gebru Asrat and other prominent Ethiopians have submitted an application to the National Electoral Board of Ethoipia for a formation of a new political party. Sources say the TPLF dissidents submitted all the necessary requirements including the party's name, program, by laws, and over 1200 signatures to the NEB in March but the electoral board has not approved their application yet.

(Picture - Gebru Asrat)

Sources say although the constitution stipulates a multiparty system, the ruling party leaders led by Sebhat Nega and Abay Tsehaye are busy preaching to their supporters/cadres that Tigreans are one and the same and no alternative party to TPLF is needed in Tigray. In fact, the government has distributed a list of the people who signed for the party formation to its cadres and the cadres in turn have started their intimidation and harassment campaign.

Many observers say this new development is a major breakthrough for Ethiopians in general and Tigreans in particular who have been yearning for a formidable alternative party for years. Sources say an overwhelming majority of Tigreans are enthusiastic by this development and hope the NEB approves their application soon.

Attention Ethiopians in Europe!

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

(On yesterday’s EP resolution) -- For the key provisions of the resolution to be translated into practice, it needs the cooperation of the European Commission, which is, in turn, dependent on the cooperation of the European Council. Since the latter is made up of representatives of EU Member States, the ball ultimately rests in the courts of the government of powerful member states.

It is, therefore, up to Ethiopians and friends of Ethiopia across Europe to make a concerted campaign at the national level. The campaign may involve, demanding members of national parliaments in each EU member country to table and adopt similar resolutions (something similar to what the Coalition for HR2003 is doing across the United States), asking them to urge their respective governments to implement the resolutions of the European Parliament, etc.

There is little time to be wasted, for most parliaments will be on summer recess. If a handful of committed individuals in key European countries could take the initiative, the present EP resolution will have had an enormous impact two weeks from now. This is also the best we can do to express our gratitude and admiration to the upright EU parliamentarians who are tireless working to advance the cause of human rights and democracy in Ethiopia.(More...)
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-RESOLUTION ON ETHIOPIA approved yesterday by the EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT (Official)

-ANA GOMES' SPEECH at yesterday’s plenary session before the resolution was voted on

-PRESS RELEASE SENT OUT YESTERDAY by the Socialist Group of the EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

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-STOP U.S. SUPPORT OF HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS IN ETHIOPIA (Petition sponsored by justforeignpolicy.org)
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Thursday, June 21, 2007

Consider targeted sanctions against senior Ethiopian govt. officials EP tells EC

Update on today's EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT resolution:

European Parliament asks European Council to consider targeted sanctions against senior Ethiopian government officials: "the EU Commission and Council should "pursue a coherent post-electoral policy in Ethiopia" and "consider the application of targeted sanctions against senior government officials"".[Unofficial Resolution]

- SUMMARY OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT RESOLUTION ON ETHIOPIA AND RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FOLLOW-UP (Ethiopians in Europe are asked to pay particular attention to the 'Summary Remarks' section)
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The Washington Post is reporting that a deal has been struck between some of the 38 opposition leaders in Kality (not all) and the Ethiopian govt. The report also asserts that those who signed the agreement could be free within days. We advise our readers to take this story with a grain of salt. Also see Ethio-Zagol and EMF’s report.
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Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Deki-Alula: When Winning in a Free Election becomes a Crime!

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

Also in the news:
[Witnesses Say Ethiopian Troops Killed at Least 8 in Mogadishu] - [Sounding the Horn: Portland woman fights for her country] - [Ethiopian Airlines - The Purse of Ethiopia's Dictatorship] - [Somalia Needs Power-Sharing, Expert Tells U.S., EU Lawmakers]

International:
[First S Leone war crimes verdicts] - [NYC mayor leaves GOP amid White House speculation] - [Women, children evacuate Gaza ] - [abcnews: U.S. Using BlackBerries to Spy on France?] and more of today's top stories!


(Ethiopian refugees, Who left their country due to economic hardship and/or government harassment, perform a dance during celebrations to mark "World Refugee Day" in Nairobi, June 20, 2007. Last year was one of the worst on record for refugees and the crisis is deepening in 2007. REUTERS) [The reasons for World Refugee Day]

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(On the Addis Millennium Celebrations)
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Kinijit Australia Press Release

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[AUDIO] - Statement on the June 11 verdict and Badme, Vancouver Ethiopians
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The perfectly legal civil disobedience at the Ethiopian Embassy-U.S (June 18), is worthy of imitation in other major cities
(By Seblework Tadesse, CUDP member and former prisoner of conscience)
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THE OREGON LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY HAS ADOPTED A HISTORIC RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN ETHIOPIA
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Letter to the Editor

(Seyoum Mesfin on Jeffrey Gettleman and The New York Times)

Dear Editor,

The remarkable rebuttal by Seyoum Mesfin regarding Jeffery Gettleman's expose is absolutely laughable... I would call it the-opposite-of-reality rebuttal.

I hope other people recognize this for exactly what it is... an apologist of the regime who is willing to say anything on the world stage no matter how deceptive, fallacious, or convoluted to give the appearance of a fair and just government of the people that has, in his own words:
"gradually moved through various stages of democracy in the last 16 years, culminating in the first real competitive multi-party elections in 2005. Despite some controversial elements, including the deeply regretted riots and deaths in June and November 2005, these were largely successful. We now have a functional, indeed, lively, opposition in parliament, and a parliamentary body to which the administration is now answerable."
This reconstructed fabrication of a well documented history is such a bold-faced lie that it totally undermines Mr. Mesfin's credibility and brings into question the validity of anything and everything he asserts in his letter.

If the government is so supportive and benevolent to the people of the Ogaden, for example, then please except my request, now, to visit the region freely and unobstructed to document all of these services the government is supplying so that I may indeed attest to Seyoum Mesfin's claims. If militaristic genocidal rape is truly a wild claim that the "Ethiopian army takes very seriously... and investigates any and all accusations that are made against its troops," then please allow me to verify that, as well.

I'm not a journalist "seeking my name in bold" as a by-line. I am just the one of the world citizens that Seyoum Mesfin is trying to convince. I'd be happy to verify any of his claims by my own presence. AND, if denied this opportunity "for my own personal safety," then I know all too well by this tired old excuse, that the government is indeed trying to hide the facts.

It appears that Seyoum Mesfin and the administration he represents is either delusional or desperate.

Keif Schleifer
Executive Director
The Empowerment Initiative
Human Rights, Social Justice, Non-Violence Advocacy
Empowerment.Initiative@gmail.com


When Winning in a Free Election becomes a Crime!

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The article presented here may not entirely reflect the views of ETP; nevertheless, it is extremely well written and offers outstanding insight on the significance of the May 2005 elections
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Deki-Alula.com - Solomon Medhanie

"...Addis Ababa, a metropolitan city where people of different ethnics and politically informed citizens reside, because of their relative access to private media outlets, were considered by many election observers, including EPRDF’s election team, to be a leading indicator of the overall winner of the election.

....The court, without any fear of repercussion, should repent this mayhem, drop the charges and set the elected officials free; order mayor Dr. Birhanu Nega to take his responsibility and form the administration of the city of Addis; and instruct all political parties to settle their differences through negotiation and reconciliation with good faith, and in the spirit of the new millennium for the unity of our CHILDREN, GRAND CHILDREN, and for the future of our country, ETHIOPIA, for heaven sake."(More...)

Ethiopian Airlines - The Purse of Ethiopia's Dictatorship

It does not require anyone to be a rocket scientist to understand some very simple issues that follow from logic and facts. Ethiopian Airlines is government owned, that naturally means 100% owned by the government of Ethiopia. Ethiopia's foreign minister no less is the chairman of Ethiopian Airlines.

Ethiopian Airlines is the major single source of hard currency income to the Ethiopian govt. Being the airline with the most routes throughout Africa, it makes, even in declared figures, hundreds of millions of dollars annually.

It's executives are paid salaries in the declared region of $100,000 in a country where less than $100 a month is the average per capita income.

The government is accused by all human rights groups of gross violation of human rights in the areas of democracy, elections, incarceration of political opponents, press freedom, and in engaging in large scale oppression of national minorities or even majorities in other parts of the country.(More...)

Sounding the Horn
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A Portland woman fights to focus Americans' attention on her native Ethiopia
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On June 11, 38 prominent opposition leaders in Ethiopia were found guilty of multiple capital crimes, including treason and "outrages against the constitution."

The developments were the latest outrage in Africa's third most populous nation. Since contested elections in May 2005 resulted in surprisingly strong showings by opposition parties, hundreds of opposition political leaders, students, lawyers and others have been killed or arrested.

The most recent convictions and the overall human-rights crackdown since the 2005 elections have been condemned by worldwide human-rights groups (Reporters without Borders recently ranked Ethiopia second worst on the African continent for press freedoms behind Eritrea). But that's been largely overshadowed in major U.S. media more focused on Ethiopia's military intervention in Somalia against the Islamic Union of Courts—with U.S. military support.(More...)

VOA: Witnesses Say Ethiopian Troops Killed at Least 8 in Mogadishu
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Ethiopian troops opened fire on a minibus, killing two passengers, and shot several youths in the area, including three brothers
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Witnesses in Somalia's capital say Ethiopian troops shot and killed at least eight people late Tuesday, following a roadside bomb attack. The witnesses say the bomb hit an Ethiopian military convoy, damaging a truck and causing an unknown number of casualties.

They say after the blast, Ethiopian troops opened fire on a minibus, killing two passengers, and shot several youths in the area, including three brothers. Attacks on Somali government officials and their Ethiopian allies have increased in recent weeks despite a government claim of victory over Islamist insurgents in late April.

On Tuesday, the interim government offered amnesty to some of the insurgents, although fighters who engage in what officials called "international terrorism" were excluded from the offer.(More...)

Also see:
-Ethiopian forces 'kill 5 boys'
-Ethiopian troops kill five youths in Somalia
-Gunmen launch attacks on Somali police stations
-Somalia prime minister flies to US for UN conference
-Somalia's Opposition Regrouping, Planning


Somalia Needs Power-Sharing, Expert Tells U.S., EU Lawmakers

United States Department of State

Washington -- The main hope for a nonmilitary solution to the Somalia crisis is for the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) to share power with moderate opposition groups, making national reconciliation a prime goal, a former ambassador told U.S. and European lawmakers.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia David Shinn, now an adjunct professor at George Washington University, spoke June 8 at a meeting with members of the European Parliament and the U.S. Congress, sponsored by the House Subcommittee on Africa.

Shinn said most observers agree that power-sharing is the key to sustainable peace in Somalia, and therefore "political reconciliation … is the most urgent task." The question, he said, is how to achieve that reconciliation.(More...)

Ethiopia’s Tiananmen Square

(Excerpt from the New York Times report)

(Doctors and Ethiopian students display dead bodies at the Black Lion Hospital in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. Up to 100 people in their twenties were also being treated for serious gun shot wounds and other injuries at the hospital in the third day of clashes between protesters and police on the streets of Addis Ababa. Addis Ababa 08 June 2005. Andrew Heavens)

Its (Ethiopia's) leaders, many whom were once rebels themselves, from a neglected patch of northern Ethiopia, are widely known as some of the savviest officials on the continent. They had promised to let some air into a very stultified political system during the national elections of 2005, which were billed as a milestone on the road to democracy.

Instead, they turned into Ethiopia’s version of Tiananmen Square. With the opposition poised to win a record number of seats in Parliament, the government cracked down brutally, opening fire on demonstrators, rounding up tens of thousands of opposition supporters and students and leveling charges of treason and even attempted to kill top opposition leaders, including the man elected mayor of Addis Ababa.

Many opposition members are now in jail or in exile. The rest seem demoralized.

There are no real steps toward democracy,” said Merera Gudina, vice president of the United Ethiopian Democratic Forces, a leading opposition party. “No real steps toward opening up space, no real steps toward ending repression.(More...)
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Tiananmen square, what is it ?
The Tiananmen Square protests of 1989
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At least three journalists a month flee their home countries to escape threats of violence, imprisonment, or harassment. CPJ has documented 243 cases of journalists forced into exile over the past six years. The 243 journalists surveyed by CPJ came from 36 countries, with more than half hailing from just five. Ethiopia is second in the world, next to Zimbabwe, where journalists are forced into exile to escape harassment.(More...)

Today's Top International Stories

-First S Leone war crimes verdicts (Three men have been convicted of war crimes and crimes against humanity during Sierra Leone's decade-long war)
-Libya Court to Rule July 11 on AIDS Case
-NYC mayor leaves GOP amid White House speculation
-Women, children evacuate Gaza
-Malaysians, Taliban, protest at Rushdie honor
-U.S. Using BlackBerries to Spy on France?
-Berlin hotel recreates East Germany





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Tuesday, June 19, 2007

U.S administration to double non-humanitarian aid to the Govt. of Ethiopia

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

Also in the news:
[Somalia presidential spokesman shot] - [Islamists oppose reconciliation conference, discredit Ethiopia's role] - [Ishac Diwan makes way for Kenichi Ohashi] - [A roadside bomb explodes as an Ethiopian convoy passes]

International:
[US-Israel talks on Palestinians] - [Splitsville For French Power Couple] - [Gazans stream to crossing with Israel] - [Videotape supposedly shows suicide bomber 'graduation'] and more of today's top stories!

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At least three journalists a month flee their home countries to escape threats of violence, imprisonment, or harassment. CPJ has documented 243 cases of journalists forced into exile over the past six years. The 243 journalists surveyed by CPJ came from 36 countries, with more than half hailing from just five. Ethiopia is second in the world, next to Zimbabwe, where journalists are forced into exile to escape harassment.(More...)

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LEBA! LEBA! - video by the Ethiopian Television Network (ETN)
(June 18 protest at the Ethiopian embassy in Washington DC)
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THE OREGON LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY HAS ADOPTED A HISTORIC RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN ETHIOPIA
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Shame on Zenawi

by Tumusiime Kabwende
(spokesman for the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Network)

"It is unbelievable that Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has turned himself into one of Africa’s nascent dictators, yet no international body has come out strongly to condemn him"(More...)

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Bush administration to double non-humanitarian aid to the Ethiopian Govt.

(Excerpt from the New York Times report )

US Administration officials are trying to double the amount of non-humanitarian (Not for humanitarian purposes) aid to Ethiopia to $481 million next year, from $284 million this year. But key Democrats in Congress, including Mr. Payne (seen here), are questioning this, saying that because of Ethiopia’s human rights record, it is time to stop writing the country a blank check.

...This is a country that is abusing its own people and has no respect for democracy,” said Representative Donald M. Payne, Democrat of New Jersey and chairman of the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on Africa and global health.

We’ve not only looked the other way but we’ve pushed them to intrude in other sovereign nations,” he added, referring to the satellite images and other strategic help the American military gave Ethiopia in December, when thousands of Ethiopian troops poured into Somalia and overthrew the Islamist leadership. (More...)


Also see:
-Ethiopian Govt. Bullies its Citizens, United States keeps Ignoring
-"New York Times" Covers Ethiopia Horrors
-U.S. Funds African Civil War


Somalia presidential spokesman shot twice

MOGADISHU (Reuters) - Somalia's presidential spokesman was shot twice at close range in the latest assassination attempt on government officials in the Horn of Africa nation, officials said on Tuesday.

"He was shot in the neck and near the jaw," a security source speaking on condition of anonymity told Reuters. "I think the gunman was aiming for the head. He wanted to eliminate him."

The security source, who saw Hussein Mohamed Mahamud "Hubsired" recuperating in a hospital run by African Union peacekeepers in Mogadishu, said he was in stable condition and was to be flown to Nairobi for treatment.(More...)

Also see:
-Assassination attempt in East Africa
-Somalia presidential spokesman wounded in latest violence
-Somalia presidential spokesman shot twice in capital


Ishac Diwan makes way for Kenichi Ohashi
By Groum Abate

Capital -- The World Bank has appointed Kenichi Ohashi as its new country director for Ethiopia and Sudan. Kenichi Ohashi will succeed Ishac Diwan, who had been serving in the position since 1997.

According to the WB, Kenichi served the World Bank as a Country director for Nepal and would be replaced by Susan Goldmark on July 1st 2007.

Before his current position, Ishac served as Manager of the Economic Policy for Poverty Reduction Unit of the World Bank Institute (WBI) and head of the Institute’s Attacking Poverty Program.

Mr. Diwan has dual Lebanese and Canadian nationality with a Ph.D in Economics from the University of California at Berkeley.
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TOP STORIES FROM THE PAST WEEK____________________________________

A roadside bomb explodes as an Ethiopian convoy passes

An Ethiopian military convoy hit a roadside bomb around former Somalia Defense Ministry in northwest of the capital where contingents of Ethiopian forces are based. Witnesses told Shabelle that they saw the mine explode while the Ethiopian convoy was passing by the road.

It is not yet clear if any of the Ethiopians were hurt in the blast that occurred at 3:00 pm local time, according an eye-witness refused to be named.(More...)

Ethiopia’s Tiananmen Square

(Another Excerpt from the New York Times report)

(Ethiopian students protest outside Addis Ababa Tegbareed Industrial Technology College in the Mexico area of the Addis Ababa. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia 07 June 2005. Andrew Heavens/REUTERS)

Its (Ethiopia's) leaders, many whom were once rebels themselves, from a neglected patch of northern Ethiopia, are widely known as some of the savviest officials on the continent. They had promised to let some air into a very stultified political system during the national elections of 2005, which were billed as a milestone on the road to democracy.

Instead, they turned into Ethiopia’s version of Tiananmen Square. With the opposition poised to win a record number of seats in Parliament, the government cracked down brutally, opening fire on demonstrators, rounding up tens of thousands of opposition supporters and students and leveling charges of treason and even attempted to kill top opposition leaders, including the man elected mayor of Addis Ababa.

Many opposition members are now in jail or in exile. The rest seem demoralized.

There are no real steps toward democracy,” said Merera Gudina, vice president of the United Ethiopian Democratic Forces, a leading opposition party. “No real steps toward opening up space, no real steps toward ending repression.(More...)
_____________________________
Tiananmen square, what is it ?
The Tiananmen Square protests of 1989
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Islamists oppose reconciliation conference, discredit Ethiopia's role

The much anticipated Somalia national reconciliation conference may not take place after all because of inter-clan suspicion and the stand taken by the ousted Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) that it must be held on neutral grounds.

As the conference failed to take place for the second time, The EastAfrican obtained a communiqué issued by UIC leaders in Doha, Qatar, on June 7 during a two day conference, in which the Islamists insisted that there would be no genuine reconciliation until Ethiopian troops left Somalia.

Ethiopian embassy officials in Nairobi, however, insisted that Addis Ababa will only act according to bilateral agreements with the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) led by President Abdullahi Yusuf.(More...)

Today's Top International Stories

-US-Israel talks on Palestinians
-Gazans stream to crossing with Israel
-Videotape supposedly shows suicide bomber 'graduation'
-Splitsville For French Power Couple
-YouTube makes international move
-Moscow ranks as world's priciest city
-Papers show Isaac Newton's religious side



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Monday, June 18, 2007

NYT: In Ethiopian Desert, Fear and Cries of Army Brutality

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

Also in the news:
[TPLF takes festival in hand] - [Islamists oppose reconciliation conference, discredit Ethiopia's role] - [Explosion Rocks Somali Capital] - [Sebhat Nega stirs things up in Ethiopia]

International:
[Zimbabwe ruling party (Zanu-PF) starts talks with opposition leaders] - [Rushdie made a British knight] - [EU, Bush express support to Abbas] - [Chicago's biggest mob trial in years set] and more of today's top stories!


_______________

Shame on Zenawi

by Tumusiime Kabwende
(spokesman for the East and Horn of Africa Human Rights Defenders Network)

"It is unbelievable that Prime Minister Meles Zenawi has turned himself into one of Africa’s nascent dictators, yet no international body has come out strongly condemn him"(More...)
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THE OREGON LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY HAS ADOPTED A HISTORIC RESOLUTION IN SUPPORT OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN ETHIOPIA
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Town Hall meeting LA, June 24 - Kinijit LA
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JEFFREY GETTLEMAN is the New York times reporter who was arrested by the Ethiopian military on May 16, 2007 in the Ogaden region. He was held for five days, interrogated at gunpoint, and then released without any charges.

In Ethiopian Desert, Fear and Cries of Army Brutality

By JEFFREY GETTLEMAN

[watch video]

IN THE OGADEN DESERT, Ethiopia — The rebels march 300 strong across the crunchy earth, young men with dreadlocks and AK-47s slung over their shoulders.

Often when they pass through a village, the entire village lines up, one sunken cheekbone to the next, to squint at them. “May God bring you victory,” one woman whispered.

This is the Ogaden, a spindle-legged corner of Ethiopia that the urbane officials in Addis Ababa, the capital, would rather outsiders never see. It is the epicenter of a separatist war pitting impoverished nomads against one of the biggest armies in Africa.

What goes on here seems to be starkly different from the carefully constructed up-and-coming image that Ethiopia — a country that the United States increasingly relies on to fight militant Islam in the Horn of Africa — tries to project.(More...)
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TOP STORIES FROM THE PAST WEEK____________________________________

The following articles are by Seblework Tadesse, CUDP member and former prisoner of conscience at Kality penitentiary

A Personal Call to Action (Part 1)
A Personal Call to Action (Part 2)

Also:

[audio] IEWO Interview with Seblework Tadesse - June 17

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Explosion Rocks Somali Capital

VOA - Authorities in Somalia say a roadside bomb blast has rocked the capital, Mogadishu. Authorities say the bomb was intended for a military convoy passing through northern Mogadishu Monday.

Some reports say two children were killed in the attack. Other sources say the victims were wounded. Officials say five suspects have been detained. Their identities have not been released.

Sympathizers of the country's Islamist movement frequently attack Somali troops and their Ethiopian allies in Mogadishu.(More...)

Also see:
-Blast hits government compound in Mogadishu
-Blast strikes Mogadishu
-Grenade attack on Somali bank kills one, wounds three
-Blast kills 2 children in Somali capital


TPLF takes festival in hand
Indian Ocean Newsletter N° 1216 16/06/2007

The millennium committee preparing the 11 September festivities has been taken under the wing of the TPLF.

The most unpopular of the officials on the Ethiopian millennium committee, Mulugeta Asrate Kassa, is now in the firing line. This partisan of the EPRDF (governing party) who was based in London and is the son of the late Ras Asrate Kassa, is no longer on the committee, which has a budget of 240 million birrs ($26 million) to prepare the 11 September festivities.

Two new people join the committee: Gifty Abasiya as manager and Netsanet Asfaw as head of public relations. The first is an executive in the OPDO and is a loyal supporter of the government; the latter is a leader of the TPLF (hard core of the EPRDF), is very aggressive and well into his sixties.

Seyoum Bereded retains his function of chairman of the committee, but will be supervised by the two newcomers. Bereded is the cousin of the chief of security Getachew Assefa.

Islamists oppose reconciliation conference, discredit Ethiopia's role

The much anticipated Somalia national reconciliation conference may not take place after all because of inter-clan suspicion and the stand taken by the ousted Union of Islamic Courts (UIC) that it must be held on neutral grounds.

As the conference failed to take place for the second time, The EastAfrican obtained a communiqué issued by UIC leaders in Doha, Qatar, on June 7 during a two day conference, in which the Islamists insisted that there would be no genuine reconciliation until Ethiopian troops left Somalia.

Ethiopian embassy officials in Nairobi, however, insisted that Addis Ababa will only act according to bilateral agreements with the Transitional Federal Government (TFG) led by President Abdullahi Yusuf.(More...)

Sebhat Nega stirs things up in Ethiopia
Indian Ocean Newsletter N° 1216 16/06/2007

The interview of a leader of the governing party broadcast on 28 May by Radio Dimtse, owned by the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF, government), has made significant waves in Addis Ababa.

Sebhat Nega tried in this interview to put himself over as the voice of Ethiopian nationalism. He hence defended a very hard line against the Ethiopian opposition, while nevertheless presenting the TPLF as the spearhead and guarantor of Eritrean independence. He went as far as to state that the current Ethiopian government was “the sole force able to defend Eritrean independence”.

This extreme position came over as the expression of a muffled power struggle at the top of the TPLF, in which Sebhat Nega was positioning himself as an alternative to the present Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. Accordingly, Sebhat Nega, who holds a post of responsibility in the Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray (Effort), could be the target of an investigation into the financial management of this consortium of companies with links to the government coalition. Certain Ethiopian MPs have already called for precisely such an investigation.

He has therefore mobilised his sister Kidusan Nega, the mayor of Mekele, her husband Tsegaye Berhe the President of the Tigray Regional State, and other members of his family and friends to prepare to fireback against a possible accusation of corruption that could be levelled against him. Such a tactic had already been used a few years ago against the TPLF dissident Seye Abraha.

The mobilisation of his partisans confirms Sebhat Nega is planning to return to the limelight of the political scene. They have been fuelling the reproaches made against Meles Zenawi for keeping Seye Abraha, “a TPLF hero” in prison and call for him to be freed. Sebhat Nega has tested the feeling of the Tigrayan Diaspora about him by gaining the support of a former TPLF dissident now living in exile in Ohio (USA), Bisrat Amare, who went back to the TPLF after the general election in July 2005.

Zimbabwe ruling party (Zanu-PF) starts talks with opposition leaders

Zimbabwe's opposition and ruling parties are holding talks aimed at solving the country's economic and political crisis, officials say. The first talks since South African President Thabo Mbeki was tasked with mediating between the rivals began in South Africa at the weekend.

An opposition spokesman confirmed the talks but refused to give any details. The economy is in meltdown, with the world highest inflation rate - 3,700% - and just one adult in five in work. Last week, a report said the economy would collapse within six months.

"I can only confirm that we have representatives in South Africa attending roundtable discussions with the country's other political players," Nelson Chamisa spokesman for the opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) told the AFP news agency.(More...)

EU, Bush express support to Abbas

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip — The emergency government Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas installed after Islamic militants seized control of Gaza reaped its first windfall Monday with the European Union promising to restore hundreds of millions of dollars in crucial aid.

President Bush also lent critical support in a phone call to Abbas, who called for a resumption of Mideast peace talks. The Bush administration is expected to soon lift its sanctions on the Palestinian government now that it no longer includes the Islamic Hamas.

Russia also said it supported Abbas's move to form an emergency government, but urged him and Islamic Hamas to seek a "wide-ranging dialogue."(More...)

Also see:
-Abbas vows to press on with peace process
-Hamas grip on Gaza limits Fatah's options
-Fatah loyalists hurry to escape Gaza


Rushdie made a British knight

CNN reporter, KGB double agent also to be honoured

LONDON -- Author Salman Rushdie, who was forced into hiding for a decade after the leader of Iran's revolution ordered his assassination, has been made a knight, Buckingham Palace will announce today.

The author of The Satanic Verses, along with CNN reporter Christiane Amanpour, a KGB double agent and perhaps the government's toughest human-rights critic, were on the list of honours marking the Queen's official birthday.

Mr. Rushdie, one of the most prominent novelists of the late 20th century, went into hiding after Iran's Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomaini issued a 1989 fatwa, ordering Muslims to kill the author because The Satanic Verses allegedly insulted Islam. The Iranian government declared in 1998 that it would not support but could not rescind the fatwa.(More...)

Also see:
-Tehran slams Britain for knighting Salman Rushdie
-Pakistani parliament condemns British title for Rushdie



Today's Top International Stories

-Security worsens in eight African states
-Coalition raids target flow of Iranian aid to insurgents
-Sarkozy Party Wins, But Not In Landslide
-In video, group threatens to kill BBC reporter
-Migration and the changing face of Europe
-North Korea plans to shut reactor in July: report
-Chicago's biggest mob trial in years set




____________________________________

Sunday, June 17, 2007

The Week in review plus weekend news

__________________________________
Weekend Top Stories:
[Convictions in Ethiopia Trials Condemned by Amnesty International USA]
[Somalia insurgents show missile in video] - [Sebhat Nega stirs things up in Ethiopia] - [Ministers 'knew Ethiopia Swedes were tortured'] and more of the weekend's top stories!
__________________________________

The Week in Review

TOP STORIES FROM THE PAST WEEK
__________________________________

The following articles are by Seblework Tadesse, CUDP member and former prisoner of conscience at Kality penitentiary

A Personal Call to Action (Part 1)
A Personal Call to Action (Part 2)

Also:

[audio] IEWO Interview with Seblework Tadesse - June 17

__________________________________


Sebhat Nega stirs things up in Ethiopia
Indian Ocean Newsletter N° 1216 16/06/2007

The interview of a leader of the governing party broadcast on 28 May by Radio Dimtse, owned by the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF, government), has made significant waves in Addis Ababa.

Sebhat Nega tried in this interview to put himself over as the voice of Ethiopian nationalism. He hence defended a very hard line against the Ethiopian opposition, while nevertheless presenting the TPLF as the spearhead and guarantor of Eritrean independence. He went as far as to state that the current Ethiopian government was “the sole force able to defend Eritrean independence”.

This extreme position came over as the expression of a muffled power struggle at the top of the TPLF, in which Sebhat Nega was positioning himself as an alternative to the present Prime Minister Meles Zenawi. Accordingly, Sebhat Nega, who holds a post of responsibility in the Endowment Fund for the Rehabilitation of Tigray (Effort), could be the target of an investigation into the financial management of this consortium of companies with links to the government coalition. Certain Ethiopian MPs have already called for precisely such an investigation.

He has therefore mobilised his sister Kidusan Nega, the mayor of Mekele, her husband Tsegaye Berhe the President of the Tigray Regional State, and other members of his family and friends to prepare to fireback against a possible accusation of corruption that could be levelled against him. Such a tactic had already been used a few years ago against the TPLF dissident Seye Abraha.

The mobilisation of his partisans confirms Sebhat Nega is planning to return to the limelight of the political scene. They have been fuelling the reproaches made against Meles Zenawi for keeping Seye Abraha, “a TPLF hero” in prison and call for him to be freed. Sebhat Nega has tested the feeling of the Tigrayan Diaspora about him by gaining the support of a former TPLF dissident now living in exile in Ohio (USA), Bisrat Amare, who went back to the TPLF after the general election in July 2005.

Also see:
-WHO IS IN POWER? (EthioMedia)


Convictions in Ethiopia Trials Condemned by Amnesty International USA

(New York) -- Amnesty International USA (AIUSA) condemns the recent convictions in Ethiopia of 38 opposition party members, journalists and a human rights defender on charges that could carry life in prison or the death penalty.

"We are deeply concerned about the fairness of political trials in Ethiopia and call on the government to immediately and unconditionally release all prisoners of conscience," said Lynn Fredriksson, advocacy director for Africa for AIUSA.

The defendants were convicted on June 11 after a 14 month trial by the Federal High Court of Ethiopia. The group included Professor Mesfin Woldemariam, founder and first president of the Ethiopian Human Rights Council, who has been a "special focus" case for AIUSA.(More...)

Also:
-[Audio]Lynn Fredriksson, Advocacy Director for Amnesty International USA on the Trials


Ministers 'knew Ethiopia Swedes were tortured'

Swedish Foreign Ministry officials had been told that three Swedes imprisoned in Ethiopia had been tortured, it has been revealed in a report by the Swedish Security Police (Säpo).

The three men have told a number of Swedish media that they were exposed for various forms of torture during the four months that they were in Ethiopian prisons. They claimed that they told Säpo and Swedish Embassy officials of this while they were still jailed in Ethiopia.(More...)

Somalia insurgents show missile in video

NAIROBI, Kenya - A video circulating in Somalia's capital shows a masked man firing a surface-to-air missile — a graphic but unsubstantiated claim that Islamic insurgents in the country are capable of shooting down planes.

The video, available on the streets of Mogadishu and obtained by The Associated Press on Friday, is one of several released recently by the insurgents, echoing the propaganda tactics of radical groups in Iraq and elsewhere in the Middle East. They may serve less to communicate with the world than to rally supporters at a time when the movement has been driven underground by Somalia's government and its Ethiopian military backers.(More...)




___________________________________________

Friday, June 15, 2007

Letter from the govt. of PM Meles: We unconditionally accept, take Badme

Check back with ETP for more news throughout the day

Also in the news:
[LETTER FROM KALITI - ENG. GIZACHEW SHIFERAW]
[ERITREA REJECTS ETHIOPIA'S ACCEPTANCE OF BORDER DECISION]
[Suspected insurgents battle Ethiopian troops in Somali capital] - [NATO to help transport African peacekeepers in Somalia] - [German court Aquits white men Accused of beating an Ethiopian unconscious] - [OUTRAGE OVER ETHIOPIA CONVICTIONS]

International:
[Zimbabwe passes bill to allow govt. to monitor e-mails] - [Bush pushes for immigration overhaul in 2007] - [U.S., Israel plan to ease sanctions to boost Abbas] - [Baby monitor picks up video from NASA] and more of today's top stories!



LETTER FROM KALITI - ENG. GIZACHEW SHIFERAW

__________________________________________

'BEHIG AMLAK' - Superb Poem by Tewodros Abebe on the verdict

'IF NOT NOW, WHEN?' Article by Girma Kassa (AMHARIC)

__________________________________________

TESTIMONY OF DR. DADIMOS HAILE TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

TESTIMONY OF JUDGE WOLDEMICHAEL MESHESHA TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT

TESTIMONY OF DR. MULUALEM TAREKEGN, EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEMBER OF THE CUDP, TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT


__________________________________________

Ethiopian govt. continues to Ridicule Siye Abraha

(decision has been postponed in his case so many times, for so many comical reasons - that it’s hard to keep count)

Dr. Berhanu Nega in his book "Yenetsanet Goh Siked" has a dedication to Siye which reads as follows:

"To Siye Abraha and Asseffa Abraha - You are living proof of a government that pays lip service to the rights and protection of ethnic groups while only visiting misery, lawlessness and incarceration on those who stand up for those same rights and liberties"

[Why Siye matters]
[Free Siye Abraha!!]


Letter from the govt. of PM Meles: We unconditionally accept, take Badme

In a letter last week to the U.N. Security Council, the Ethiopian government gave its unconditional acceptance of the commission's decision announced five years ago that gives Badme to Eritrea

CLICK HERE TO READ LETTER FROM THE ETHIOPIAN GOVERNMENT ADDRESSED TO THE SECURITY COUNCIL
________________________________________

UNITED NATIONS (AP) - After years of conflict and a tense border dispute, Ethiopia has accepted a U.N. commission's ruling to turn over a disputed town to Eritrea.

"I believe it's good news ... that was one of the bottlenecks in the situation," U.N. associate spokesman Yves Sorokobi said Thursday. "If they do agree, it should move the process forward a bit more quickly."

Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia in 1993 following a 30-year guerrilla war. The Horn of Africa neighbors initially promised to accept the boundary commission's 2002 ruling awarding Badme to Eritrea, but Ethiopia has not handed it over.

In a letter last week to the U.N. Security Council, the Ethiopian government gave its unconditional acceptance of the commission's decision announced five years ago.(More..)

Also see:
-NUMBER OF WAR DEAD SOLDIERS IN THE BATTLE FOR BADME REPORTEDLY 123,000
-Ethiopia to return key town to Eritrea
-Ethiopia returns town of Badme to Eritrea
-Ethiopia agrees to give a key town to Eritrea following years of border dispute


ERITREA REJECTS ETHIOPIA'S ACCEPTANCE OF BORDER DECISION

15 June 2007, Asmara, Eritrea -- In a statement posted on the state-run website of the Ministry of information, shabait.com, Eritrea today dismissed Ethiopia's unconditional acceptance of the Boundary Commission's decision that awarded the key town of Badme to Eritrea as half-measure and a " bid to mislead the Ethiopian people and the international community".

"Although, the TPLF regime claimed it had accepted the ruling of 13 April 2002, it is putting forth dialogue as a precondition in the implementation of the Commission's ruling." Said the statement.(More...)

Outrage over Ethiopia convictions

The conviction of 39 Ethiopian opposition leaders earlier this week in connection with election violence has been widely condemned by human rights activists.

The leaders, charged with "instigating and organising rebellion against the government" and "outrages against the constitutional order", are to be sentenced on July 8. Those convicted on Monday include three leaders of the main opposition party, the Coalition for Unity and Democracy. Hailu Shawel, the chairman of the party, is among them.

All 39 face either a death sentence or life imprisonment. The federal high court trial began in December 2005 following post-election violence that erupted during protests over polls six months earlier.(More...)

Grenade attack kills four in Somalia

MOGADISHU (Reuters) - A grenade attack killed four people and wounded six others watching a video in the western town of Baidoa in the latest flare-up in chaotic Somalia, residents said on Friday.

"The hand grenade was thrown at a video show in Baidoa late last night," said resident Mohamed Ali, adding that he did not know who the attackers were. "Four people died and six were wounded. The video show was full of people watching an Indian movie at the time."(More...)

Also see:
-At least nine people slain in Somalia blasts
-Grenade attack on Somalia cinema
-Four die in Somalia attack


Suspected insurgents battle Ethiopian troops in Somali capital

MOGADISHU, Somalia - Suspected Islamic insurgents attacked Ethiopian soldiers in the Somali capital, residents said Thursday, raising fears of a return of the violence that bloodied Mogadishu earlier this year.

The fighting was the heaviest in the city since the government declared victory against Islamic insurgents in late April. The insurgents, along with clan militiamen, have been battling government forces and their Ethiopian allies since they drove an Islamic movement from Mogadishu six months ago. Thousands of civilians have been killed and hundreds of thousands displaced.

Residents in northern Mogadishu said one of several attacks late Wednesday took place at a former factory used as a base by Ethiopian troops who have remained in the country in support of its transitional government.(More...)

NATO to help transport African peacekeepers in Somalia

Brussels - NATO defence ministers Friday agreed to provide transport for African Union peacekeepers in war-torn Somalia.

NATO spokesman James Appathurai said the alliance would decide on further details of its logistical support for the AU force once the organization knew just how many more soldiers it wanted to deploy in the country. The AU is believed to be planning to send 8,000 troops to Somalia in addition to a smaller number of African forces which are already in the country.(More...)

German court Aquits white men Accused of beating an Ethiopian unconscious

A German court aquitted two white men of a 2006 attack in which an Ethiopian-born German man was beaten unconscious. The judges said there was a lack of evidence that the two men were involved in the attack.

The brutal beating of Ermyas M. came just a few months before the soccer World Cup, raising fears of xenophobic violence during the event in which Germany hosted 2 million foreign guests.

The 38-year-old victim is an Ethiopian-born engineer and father of two who has been living in Germany since 1987. He was found unconscious and seriously injured at a tram stop in the city of Potsdam in the early morning of April 16, 2006.(More...)

NSU prof’s fate demands outcry

The only crime that Yacob Hailemariam ever committed is in believing too fervently in the right of self-rule for his fellow Ethiopians.
__________________________________________

For trying to bring to life democratic ideals like free elections, the right to dissent and impartial justice, Hailemariam now faces the death penalty.

The longtime Norfolk State University professor gave up his comfortable American ways, left his family behind in Kempsville and returned to Africa in hopes of pushing Ethiopia along the last leg of an internationally admired political transformation by its prime minister, Meles Zenawi. Bill Clinton once saluted Zenawi as a visionary for his democratic impulses.(More...)

Today's Top International Stories

-Zimbabwe passes bill to allow govt. to monitor e-mails
-Bush pushes for immigration overhaul in 2007
-Hamas fighters control Gaza, defy Abbas
-Amnesty Granted to Fatah Leaders
-U.S., Israel plan to ease sanctions to boost Abbas
-Angry eBay pulls Google adverts
-Baby monitor picks up video from NASA





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