Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Unrest continues in Oromia, largest coffee producing region in Ethiopia; rising instability could impact markets

The Oromia National Regional State in Ethiopia is a federal region providing the country with its largest flow of export commodities, such as coffee, khat, gold and cattle. Since mid November 2015, protests – against lack of adequate self-rule in Oromia (an example of which is the Master Plan) for the Oromo people, who make up the largest ethnic group in Ethiopia, and against decades-old marginalization of the Oromo in the country as a whole – have hit Oromia; in addition to the report below, experts have also expressed that Ethiopia’s export economy will be impacted by the ongoing protests, in the short-term – with speculations that the government is seriously considering devaluation of the Birr. Though the government’s decision to halt the Master Plan has been taken positively by the protesters, the fact that the decision to halt the Master Plan came after the government had mobilized its armed military, thereby killing more than 140 Oromo persons, and maiming and arresting thousands of Oromo persons, shows the lack of institutional mechanisms to address the Oromo people’s concerns in particular, and all other people’s concerns in general, in Ethiopia. The lack of these institutional mechanisms, if not addressed by the government permanently, will continue to fuel the unrest in Oromia and beyond. The following report focuses on economic impacts of the ongoing Oromo protests in Oromia.
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Rising instability in Ethiopia could impact markets

Ethiopia is experiencing increased levels of instability, calling into question the notion that Ethiopia is ‘rising’, but such issues are unlikely to have an adverse impact on the economy in the long-term.
Ethiopia is facing a number of sensitive challenges which have arisen in tandem with its impressive economic growth rates, which the World Bank claims will result in the country reaching middle-income status by 2025 thanks to the government’s astute economic decision-making.
Ethiopia’s continued rise
Exciting developments continue to emerge from Ethiopia into 2016. On 5 January, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs announced plans to increase regional trade links with Sudan, South Sudan, Kenya, Somalia and Kenya, supported through the government’s increased investments in infrastructure linking the neighbouring countries.
In addition, Ethiopia’s large coffee industry is set to play an increasingly important role in the country’s economy. According to recent reports, Ethiopia will likely increase coffee exports by 45% due to government initiatives, with coffee exports already earning around 30% of Ethiopia’s hard currency.

– Read More (Global Risk Insights (GRI))

European Parliament’s motion for 15-point resolution on situation in Ethiopia | #OromoProtests & #EthiopiaCrisis

The following is the European Parliament’s motion for a 15-point resolution on the situation in Ethiopia; the European Parliament has been in plenary session since January 18, 2016, in Strasbourg, France, and this session will last until January 21, 2016.
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MOTION FOR A RESOLUTION: European Parliament resolution on the situation in Ethiopia

19.1.2016
With request for inclusion in the agenda for a debate on cases of breaches of human rights, democracy and the rule of law pursuant to Rule 135 of the Rules of Procedure
on the situation in Ethiopia (2016/2520(RSP))
Victor Boştinaru, Knut Fleckenstein, Ana Gomes, Richard Howitt, Josef Weidenholzer, Pier Antonio Panzeri, Eric Andrieu, Nikos Androulakis, Zigmantas Balčytis, Hugues Bayet, Brando Benifei, José Blanco López, Vilija Blinkevičiūtė, Biljana Borzan, Nicola Caputo, Andrea Cozzolino, Andi Cristea, Miriam Dalli, Viorica Dăncilă, Isabella De Monte, Jonás Fernández, Monika Flašíková Beňová, Doru-Claudian Frunzulică, Eider Gardiazabal Rubial, Lidia Joanna Geringer de Oedenberg, Neena Gill, Michela Giuffrida, Maria Grapini, Roberto Gualtieri, Jytte Guteland, Sergio Gutiérrez Prieto, Anna Hedh, Cătălin Sorin Ivan, Liisa Jaakonsaari, Eva Kaili, Jude Kirton-Darling, Jeppe Kofod, Javi López, Olle Ludvigsson, Andrejs Mamikins, Costas Mavrides, Marlene Mizzi, Sorin Moisă, Csaba Molnár, Alessia Maria Mosca, Victor Negrescu, Momchil Nekov, Demetris Papadakis, Vincent Peillon, Tonino Picula, Miroslav Poche, Inmaculada Rodríguez-Piñero Fernández, Daciana Octavia Sârbu, Siôn Simon, Renato Soru, Tibor Szanyi, Claudia Tapardel, Marc Tarabella, Marita Ulvskog, Julie Ward, Flavio Zanonato, Damiano Zoffoli, Carlos Zorrinho on behalf of the S&D Group

European Parliament resolution on the situation in Ethiopia (2016/2520(RSP))

The European Parliament,
– having regard its previous resolutions on the situation in Ethiopia
– having regard to the statement by the EEAS spokesperson on recent clashes in Ethiopia, 23 December 2015
– having regard to the joint statement by Federica Mogherini, High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy/Vice-President of the European Commission, and Minister of Foreign Affairs Tedros Adhanom of the Federal Republic of Ethiopia, 20 October 2015
– having regard to the press release on the meeting between the High Representative/Vice-President Federica Mogherini and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Federal Republic of Ethiopia, Tedros Adhanom, 13 January 2016
– having regard to the statement by the EEAS Spokesperson on elections in Ethiopia, 27 May 2015
– having regard to the press release of the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, 10 July 2015
– having regard to press briefing note of the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, 10 July 2015
– having regard to the universal Declaration of Human Rights
– having regard to the African Union Charter of Human and Peoples’ Rights
– having regard to the UN the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
– having regard to Rule 123(2) its Rules of procedure
A. whereas over the past two months, Ethiopia’s largest region, Oromia, has been hit by a wave of mass protests over the expansion of the municipal boundary of the capital, Addis Ababa which has posed risks for farmers eviction from their land;
B. whereas security forces used excessive lethal force and killed at least 140 protesters and injured many more, in what may be the biggest crisis to hit Ethiopia since the 2005 election violence;
C. whereas on the 14 January 2016 the government decided to cancel the disputed large scale urban development plan; whereas if implemented, the plan will expand the city’s boundary by 20 times its current size; whereas Addis Ababa’s enlargement has already displaced millions of Oromo farmers and trapped them in poverty;
D. whereas the ethnic Oromos continue to suffer particular discrimination and human rights violations in efforts to suppress potential dissent in the region;
E. whereas the Ethiopian authorities arbitrarily arrested a number of peaceful protesters, journalists and opposition party leaders in the context of a brutal crackdown on the protests in the Oromia Region; whereas those arrested are at risk of torture and other ill-treatment;
F. whereas the government’s labelled largely peaceful protesters as ‘terrorists’ deploying military forces against them;
G. whereas on December 23, the authorities arrested Bekele Gerba, deputy chairman of the Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC), Oromia’s largest legally registered political party; whereas Mr Gerba was being taken in a prison known for torture and other ill-treatment practices and shortly after he was reportedly hospitalized; whereas his whereabouts are now unknown, raising concerns of an enforced disappearance;
H. whereas other senior OFC leaders have been arbitrarily arrested in recent weeks or are said to be under virtual house arrest;
I. whereas last December leading activists such as Getachew Shiferaw (Editor-in-Chief: Negere Ethiopia), Yonathan Teressa (an online activist) and Fikadu Mirkana (Oromia Radio and TV) have been arrested arbitrarily though yet to be charged by the Ethiopian authorities;
J. whereas the current protests echo the bloody events of April and May 2014, when federal forces fired into groups of largely peaceful Oromo protesters, killing dozens; whereas at least hundreds more students were arrested, and many remain behind bars;
K. whereas Ethiopia’s government has regularly been accusing people who express even mild criticism of government policy of association with terrorism; whereas dozens of journalists, bloggers, protesters, students and activists have been prosecuted under the country’s draconian 2009 Anti-Terrorism Proclamation;
L. whereas Ethiopia’s government imposes pervasive restrictions on independent civil society and media; whereas according to the Committee for the Protection of Journalist’s (CPJs) 2014 prison census found that Ethiopia was the fourth worst jailer of journalists in the world, with at least 17 journalists behind bars, whereas Ethiopia also ranked fourth on CPJ’s 2015 list of the 10 Most Censored Countries;
M. whereas the Ethiopian authorities have routinely summoned to court the “Zone 9 bloggers” with terrorism charges for their writing over the past 2 years;
N. whereas numerous prisoners of conscience, imprisoned in previous years based solely on their peaceful exercise of their freedom of expression and opinion, including journalists and opposition political party members, remained in detention.; whereas these included some convicted in unfair trials, some whose trials continued, and some who continued to be detained without charge, among others Eskinder Nega, Temesghen Desalegn, Solomon Kebede, Yesuf Getachew, Woubshet Taye, Saleh Edris, and Tesfalidet Kidane;
O. whereas severe restrictions on external funding continue to undermine the work and effectiveness of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) under the 2009 Charities and Societies Proclamation;
P. whereas Ethiopia rejected recommendations to amend the Charities and Societies Proclamation and the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation that several countries made during the examination of its rights record under the Human Rights Council Universal Periodic Review in May 2014;
Q. whereas Andargachew Tsige, a British-Ethiopian citizen and leader of an opposition party living in exile, was arrested in June 2014 while in transit through Yemen’s main airport and forcibly removed to Addis Ababa; whereas Tsige had been condemned to death several years earlier in his absence, and has been in death row practically incommunicado since then; whereas Juan Mendez, the UN special rapporteur on torture, has written to the Ethiopian and UK governments saying he is investigating the treatment of Tsige, following claims that Tsige is being deprived of sleep and held in isolation;
R. whereas the Ethiopian government has de facto imposed a widespread blockade of the Ogaden region in Ethiopia, rich in oil and gas reserves; whereas attempts to work and report from the region by international media and humanitarian groups are seen as criminal acts, punishable under the anti-terrorist proclamation; whereas there are reports of war crimes and severe human rights violations perpetrated by the Army and government paramilitary forces against the Ogaden population;
S. whereas The Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), the ruling party coalition, won all 547 parliamentary seats in the May 2015 elections, due in part to the lack of space for critical or dissenting voices in the election process; whereas May’s federal elections took place in a general atmosphere of intimidation, and concerns over the lack of independence of the National Electoral Board;
T. whereas Ethiopia enjoys political support from western donors and most of its regional neighbours, mostly due to its role as host of the African Union (AU) and its contribution to UN peacekeeping, security and aid partnerships with Western countries;
U. whereas Ethiopia receives more aid than any other African country – close to $3bn per year, or about half the national government budget;
V. whereas for decades the government have been authorizing big development projects to foreign investors, which have been leading to severe land grabbing and millions vulnerable people often forcibly evicted and insensitively resettling; whereas often the government does not offer the local communities any alternative to permanent settlement and had not fully consulted groups before evicting them;
W. whereas some donors, including UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) and the World Bank, rechanneled funding from the problematic Protection of Basic Services (PBS) program in 2015 which was associated with the abusive “villagization program,” a government effort to relocate 1.5 million rural people into permanent villages, ostensibly to improve their access to basic services; whereas some of the relocations in the first year of the program in Gambella region in 2011 were accompanied by violence, including beatings and arbitrary arrests, and insufficient consultation and compensation;
X. whereas Ethiopia is experiencing its worst drought in decades, deepening food insecurity and severe emaciation and unusual livestock deaths; whereas with 640,000 refugees, Ethiopia is the country in Africa with the highest number of refugees; whereas nearly 560,000 people are internally displaced due to floods, violent clashes over scarce resources and drought;
Y. whereas the current political situation in Ethiopia and the brutal repression of dissent put a serious risk the security, development and stability in the country;
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1. Strongly condemns the recent use of excessive force by the security forces in Oromia and in all Ethiopian regions, the increased cases of human rights violations and abuses, including violations of people’s physical integrity, arbitrary arrests and illegal detentions, the use of torture, and violations of the freedom of the press and of expression, as well as the prevalence of impunity;
2. Calls for an immediate end to violence, human rights violations and political intimidation and persecution;
3. Urges for the immediate release of all those jailed for exercising their rights to peaceful assembly and freedom of expression, including students, farmers, opposition politicians, academics, bloggers and journalists;
4. Calls on the government to carry out a credible, transparent and impartial investigation into the killings of protesters and other alleged human rights violations in connection with the protest movement, and to fairly prosecute those responsible, regardless of rank or position;
5. Welcomes the government’s decision to completely halt the Addis Ababa and Oromia special zone master plan, that plans to expand the municipal boundary of Addis Ababa. Calls for an immediate inclusive and transparent political dialogue, including the government, opposition parties, civil society representatives and the local population preventing any further violence or radicalisation of the population; takes the view that such dialogue, conducing to the democratisation of the country, is not possible under the current political conditions;
6. Calls on the Government of Ethiopia to respect the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the African Union Charter of Human and Peoples’ Rights, including the right to peaceful assembly, freedom of expression and association;
7. Urges the government to immediately invite the UN Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of association and peaceful assembly and other UN human rights experts to visit Ethiopia to report on the situation;
8. Calls on the government to stop suppressing the free flow of information, including by jamming media broadcasts and harassing media, including through intrusive surveillance programs, and facilitate access throughout Ethiopia for independent journalists and human rights monitors;
9. Calls on the government to include local communities in a dialogue on the implementation of any large scale development project and ensure equal distribution of future benefits to the population; to ensure that farmers and pastoralists are adequately compensated, preventing them from any arbitrary or forced displacement without consultation and adequate compensation;
10. Expresses its concerns on the government’s forced resettlement program, known as “villagization program;”
11. States that respect for human rights and the rule of law are crucial to the EU’s policies to promote development in Ethiopia and throughout the Horn of Africa;
12. Call on the EU to effectively monitor programs and policies to ensure that EU development assistance is not contributing to human rights violations in Ethiopia, particularly programs linked to displacement of farmers and pastoralists, and develop strategies to minimize any negative impact of displacement within EU funded development projects;
13. Further calls on the EU and Member States to react promptly to the escalation of violence and the deterioration of the human rights situation in the country by publicly and privately condemning the use of excessive force by security forces in Oromia and call on the government to exercise restraint in its response against protests and the exercise of basic freedoms by the Ethiopian people;
14. Stresses that financial support to Ethiopia from the EU should be measured attending to the country’s human rights record and the degree to which the Ethiopian government promotes reforms towards democratisation, as the only way to ensure stability and sustainable development;
15. Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Government and the Parliament of Ethiopia, the European Commission, the Council, the Vice-President of the Commission/High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, the institutions of the African Union and the Secretary-General of the United Nations.
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Wednesday, January 13, 2016

EU asked to break silence on alleged killing of Oromo protesters in Ethiopia

EU asked to break silence on alleged killing of Oromo protesters in Ethiopia

Rights groups claim that Ethiopian security forces have killed at least 140 protesters. The Ethiopian foreign minister is in Brussels to answer questions by members of the European Parliament on the alleged offences.
Oromo Proteste in Äthiopien
Human Rights Watch (HRW) last week alleged that Ethiopian security forces had killed at least 140 protesters and injured many more. Opposition parties and activists asserted thousands of Oromo protesters had been arrested and injured since the protests started in mid-November.
In a surprise move on Wednesday (13.01.2016), the Oromo Peoples' Democratic Organization (OPDO) party, which is part of the ruling coalition, announced that it wanted to halt the so-called "Addis Ababa Masterplan" which is at the root of the ongoing crisis. The plan involves the expansion of the capital into the surrounding Oromia region. Government spokesman Getachew Reda told reporters that the government would respect this decision, but that they would still prosecute those who had participated in the protests.
The plans to expand Addis Ababa were hotly contested by members of Ethiopia's largest ethnic group. Universities across the country turned into battlefields, with police firing live bullets to disperse the crowds. On social media, Ethiopians united under the hashtag #OromoProtests and Ethiopians of all ethnic backgrounds staged vigils all around the world.
On the eve of the hearing of Foreign Minister Tedros Adhanom in Brussels, rights groups insisted that EU officials "should convey serious concerns about Ethiopian security forces against the Oromo protesters."
Another topic on the Brussels agenda is the recurrent drought that has hit the country. Estimates say that as many as 15 million people could be threatened by hunger this year.
 
Watch video01:40

Fatal clashes in Ethiopia 19.12.2015

Donor darling Ethiopia
With Ethiopia ranking fifth on the table of aid recipients globally, raking in some $3.8 billion (3.5 billion euros) in 2014, donor countries have a responsibility to follow up on how the government handles human rights issues, Daniel Bekele, Executive Director with HRW's Africa Division, told DW.
His concern is echoed by EU advocacy director at HRW, Lotte Leicht, who says "[the] European Union should break its silence and condemn Ethiopia's brutal use of force to quell the Oromo protests." Being the single largest donor, the EU "should press the Ethiopian government to respond with talks rather than gunfire to the protesters' grievances."
The US State Department earlier urged the Ethiopian government "to permit peaceful protest and commit to a constructive dialogue to address legitimate grievances."
The Ethiopian government denies the alleged death toll of 140. Government spokesman Reda instead accused the Oromo protesters of "terrorizing civilians."
Ethiopian legal expert Awol Kassim Allo said he would like to see a space for all Ethiopians to participate in the political arena. "Only with such an approach can there be a possibility of paving a way to move forward," he told DW. In the last general elections in May 2105, Ethiopia's ruling coalition, the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), won 100 percent of the seats in parliament.
Deutschland Oromo Demonstration Berlin
In Berlin protesters demonstrated in front of the German chancellery in support of the #OromoProtests
'Cultural genocide'
In a recent debate, Bekele Naga, Secretary General of the opposition Oromo Federalist Congress(OFC), told DW's Amharic Service that "the constitution of the country proclaims that the land belongs to the people." He added that the Ethiopian government "has been engaged in land-grabbing, leading to cultural genocide [of the Oromo people]." Another Ethiopian legal expert, Tsegaye Ararsa, complained that no government officials, including Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, have publicly voiced regret over the loss of young protesters' lives. He believes there should be an independent fact-finding committee to look into the case.

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Ethiopia cracks down on dissent

Ethiopia cracks down on dissent

Security forces in Ethiopia have killed at least 140 people during a crackdown on anti-government demonstrations in recent weeks, according to activists and human rights groups.
As reported by Al Jazeera, protests were organised by members of the country’s largest ethnic group, Oromo, who fear the government’s development plans (to extend the capital territory of Addis Ababa into Oromo lands) will lead to land grabbing and large-scale evictions.
As reported by the Sudan Tribune, an estimated two million people, mostly farmers live in the Oromia region areas that have proposed by the government for expansion.
The government has admitted to killing dozens of protesters, and has promised to launch an investigation, according to Al Jazeera. Officials also said 13 security forces have been killed in the violence.
During interviews with Al Jazeera, protesters and families of those shot said they have little hope that an investigation will lead anywhere, or that their political demands will be met.
“The government is cautiously trying to avoid recognising real problems in the society,” Merera Gudina, an opposition leader, told Al Jazeera.
In a separate report, The Washington Post notes that young people, journalists and musicians have been the target of Ethiopia’s ruling regime’s quest to silence political dissent.
According to reports, the government has arrested and charged several journalists, including Getachew Shiferaw, editor in chief of the Negere Ethiopia news site, under the country’s 2009 anti-terrorism legislation. Fikadu Mirkana, of Oromia Radio and TV, has also been arrested. The US-based television channel ESAT, which has been covering the Oromo protests, claimed that the Ethiopian regime jammed one of its broadcasting satellites.

Ethiopia: Powerful Speech by Jawar Mohammed at OMN Fundraiser in Atlanta...

Monday, January 11, 2016

Ethiopia's crackdown on dissent takes rising toll

Ethiopia's crackdown on dissent takes rising toll

Rights groups say 140 people killed in recent weeks as government moves forward with controversial development plans.

Charles Stratford |  | AfricaEthiopia
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The protests - 
by members of the country's largest ethnic group, 
Oromo - 
have been prompted by fears that farmers will be displaced by government development plans.
The government has admitted to killing dozens of protesters, and has promised to launch an investigation.
However, the protesters and families of those shot say they have little hope that an investigation will lead anywhere, or that their political demands will be met.
One injured woman, whose family spoke to Al Jazeera, will receive medical assistance from authorities, the government said on Sunday.
According to the government, 13 security forces have also been killed in the violence and an investigation is under way. 
"The government is cautiously trying to avoid recognising real problems in the society," Merera Gudina, an opposition leader, told Al Jazeera.
"In fact, Ethiopian society is simply fed up with the regime, especially the youth. The young people have lost hope."
The protests have largely calmed down, but security forces remain in affected areas.
Source: Al Jazeera

Friday, January 8, 2016

140 drepne i Etiopia etter protestar mot regimet

Etiopiske styresmakter sine planar om å bygge fabrikkar utanfor hovudstaden har ført til store protestar frå folket som bur i området. Fredfulle demonstrasjonar har blitt valdelege, og så langt er 140 drepne.
Etiopia, Oromo, demonstrasjoner
Representantar frå det etiopiske Oromo-folket demonstrerer under Afrika-EU-toppmøtet på Malta i november. Dei er misnøgde med etiopiske styresmakter si neglisjering av Oromoar.
FOTO: DARRIN ZAMMIT LUPI / REUTERS
Ein livlaus student ligg i gata, medan andre livredde studentar flyktar frå dei etiopiske tryggingsstyrkene. Det som starta som eit fredfullt studentopprør har blitt ein blodig konflikt.

– Dei tek landet vårt

Det er studentar og andre personar frå Oromo-folket som dei siste vekene har protestert mot styresmaktene i Etiopia. Oromo-folket er den største etniske gruppa i Etiopia, men har lenge blitt neglisjert av styresmaktene.
Oromo, veisperring ved Wolenkomi
Demonstrantar frå oromofolket legg ut vegsperringar utanfor byen Wolenkomi for å stanse tryggingspoliti som slår ned på demonstrasjonane deira.
FOTO: WILLIAM DAVISON / AFP
Årsaka til uroa den siste tida er styresmaktene i Etiopia sine planar om å ta meir kontroll over landområde utanfor hovudstaden Addis Abeba.
Men i dei aktuelle områda bur folk frå Oromo-folket, og dei fryktar no at landbruksjorda deira vil bli gjort om til fabrikktomter.
– Dei tek landet vårt, dei drep barna våre. Kvifor drep dei berre ikkje oss alle med ei gong, ropte ein mann til ein journalist frå AFP som var i området før jul.
Og etter den tid har det berre blitt verre.

Tortur og arrestasjonar

I tillegg er arbeidsløysa stor blant Oromo-folket, og mange meiner styresmaktene hindrar dei frå å få jobbar. Difor trur mange at dei heller ikkje vil få ta del i den eventuelle økonomiske utviklinga som fabrikkane kan gje.
Protestane mot styresmaktene sine ferske planar starta fredeleg, men har enda i valdelege opptøyar. Så langt skal minst 140 vere drepne, opplyser menneskerettsorganisasjonen Human Rights Watch (HRW).
Det kjem også rapportar om tortur, massearrestasjonar og at folk forsvinn sporlaust. Nestleiaren for det politiske partiet Oromo Federalist Congress er blant dei som har blitt borte.
Oromo, demonstrant i Valletta, Malta
Ein demonstrant viser si misnøye med styresmaktene i Etiopia. Han er ein av mange frå Oromo-folket som har protestert mot styresmaktene sine planar om å gjere landjord om til fabrikktomter.
FOTO: DARRIN ZAMMIT LUPI / REUTERS
– Han vart først frakta til Maekalawi-fengselet, der tortur og anna overgrep er vanleg rutine. Den 54 år gamle språkprofessoren vart lagt inn på sjukehus kort tid etter arrestasjonen, men det er ikkje kjent kor han er no, og det er gryande uro for at han har blitt tvungen til å forsvinne, skriv HRW i ein rapport.

Også uroleg aust i Etiopia

Også oromoar som bur utanfor Etiopia har protestert mot utviklinga den siste tida, mellom anna under Afrika-EU-toppmøtet på Malta i november.
Det er ikkje vanleg med store demonstrasjonar i Etiopia, men det har altså i det siste blussa opp ein del uro. Dette har bakgrunn i ei langvarig neglisjering av Oromo-folket som føler at dei står utanfor det etiopiske samfunnet både politisk og økonomisk.
Også aust i Etiopia, i Ogaden-regionen, er det grupper som er sterkt kritiske til det etiopiske regimet. I denne regionen er det knapt mogleg for journalistar å få innreiseløyve, og det vert stadig rapportert om menneskerettsbrot også her.

JANUARY 7, 2016 Dispatches Dispatches: Arrest of Respected Politician Escalating Crisis in Ethiopia

Over the past eight weeks, Ethiopia’s largest region, Oromia, has been hit by a wave of mass protests over the expansion of the municipal boundary of the capital, Addis Ababa. The generally peaceful protests were sparked by fears the expansion will displace ethnic Oromo farmers from their land, the latest in a long list of Oromo grievances against the government.
Bekele Gerba in Washington DC, December 2015.
Bekele Gerba in Washington DC, August 2015. 
Security forces have killed at least 140 protesters and injured many more, according to activists, in what may be the biggest crisis to hit Ethiopia since the 2005 election violence.
The crisis has taken another worrying turn: on December 23, the authorities arrested Bekele Gerba, deputy chairman of the Oromo Federalist Congress (OFC), Oromia’s largest legally registered political party. There had been fears he would be re-arrested as the government targets prominent Oromo intellectuals who they feel have influence over the population. He was first taken to thenotorious Maekalawi prison, where torture and other ill-treatment are routine. The 54-year-old foreign language professor was reportedly hospitalized shortly after his arrest but his whereabouts are now unknown, raising concerns of an enforced disappearance. Other senior OFC leaders have been arbitrarily arrested in recent weeks or are said to be under virtual house arrest.
This is not the first time Bekele has been arrested. In 2011, he was convicted under Ethiopia’s draconian counterterrorism law of being a member of the banned Oromo Liberation Front – a charge often used to silence politically engaged ethnic Oromos who oppose the ruling Ethiopian Peoples’ Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF). He spent four years in prison and was only released shortly before the elections last May. The OFC ran candidates but the EPRDF coalition won all 547 parliamentary seats, a stark reflection of the unfair electoral playing field.
Bekele is deeply committed to nonviolence and has consistently advocated that the OFC participate in future elections, despite the EPRDF’s stranglehold on the political landscape.
By treating both opposition politicians and peaceful protesters with an iron fist, the government is closing off ways for Ethiopians to nonviolently express legitimate grievances. This is a dangerous trajectory that could put Ethiopia’s long-term stability at risk.
The Ethiopian government should release unjustly detained opposition figures including Bekele and rein in the excessive use of lethal force by the security forces. They should also allow people to peacefully protest and to express dissent and ensure that farmers and pastoralists are protected from arbitrary or forced displacement without consultation and adequate compensation.
These steps would be an important way to show Oromo protesters that the government is changing tack and is genuinely committed to respecting rights. Without this kind of policy shift, desperate citizens will widen their search for other options for addressing grievances.


Dispatches: Arrest of Respected Politician Escalating Crisis in Ethiopia

Dispatches: Arrest of Respected Politician Escalating Crisis in Ethiopia