Thursday, May 19, 2016

#OromoProtests



As usual ‪#‎Addis_Standard‬ raised an important issues of "Ethiopian Gauntanamo" called " Maekelawi " that has been used to inhumanly torture innocents for the last 50 years by two successive regimes.
The current regime, that supposedly struggled to dismantle the previous regime repression , has perfected and enhanced the repression and torture once it secured power and still running the torturing facility.
Thanks Addis Standard editors for continuously raising issues that resonate to public's heart. Tsedi
"After declaring itself a “Democratic Republic” 25 years ago this month, why is Ethiopia still running a ‘Torture Chamber’ from the past? Why keep it running even as it goes against the basic principles of constitutionalism? Why keep it running when part of the reason the founders of the current regime paid the ultimate price was precisely to dismantle repressive institutions like Ma’ekelawi? And what do we know about the inside of this infrastructure of repression? "
On our editorial –

#OromoProtests



As usual ‪#‎Addis_Standard‬ raised an important issues of "Ethiopian Gauntanamo" called " Maekelawi " that has been used to inhumanly torture innocents for the last 50 years by two successive regimes.
The current regime, that supposedly struggled to dismantle the previous regime repression , has perfected and enhanced the repression and torture once it secured power and still running the torturing facility.
Thanks Addis Standard editors for continuously raising issues that resonate to public's heart. Tsedi
"After declaring itself a “Democratic Republic” 25 years ago this month, why is Ethiopia still running a ‘Torture Chamber’ from the past? Why keep it running even as it goes against the basic principles of constitutionalism? Why keep it running when part of the reason the founders of the current regime paid the ultimate price was precisely to dismantle repressive institutions like Ma’ekelawi? And what do we know about the inside of this infrastructure of repression? "
On our editorial –

THE OROMO MOVEMENT: THE EFFECTS OF STATE TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION IN OROMIA AND ETHIOPIA

Paper presented at the Conference on New Directions in Critical Criminology, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee, May 6-7, 2016.
—–

THE OROMO MOVEMENT: THE EFFECTS OF STATE TERRORISM AND GLOBALIZATION IN OROMIA AND ETHIOPIA

Asafa Jalata
The Oromo movement is engaging in struggle to empower the Oromo people in order to restore their control on their economic resources such as land and cultural resources and to overcome the effects of Ethiopian state terrorism and globalization. The Oromo people were colonized and incorporated into Abyssinia, present Ethiopia, and the capitalist world system during the “Scramble for Africa” by the alliance of Ethiopian colonialism and European imperialism. This colonization involved terrorism and genocide in order to transfer Oromo economic resources, mainly land, through destroying Oromo leadership and the cultural foundation of the Oromo society. The Oromo resistance that started with the colonization of the Oromo was transformed into the anti-colonial movement in the 1960s and still continues in various forms. On their part, successive colonial Ethiopian governments have been using various forms of violence to destroy the Oromo struggle for national self-determination and democracy. Starting in 1992, the Tigrayan-led Ethiopian government has been imposing state terrorism, genocide, and political repression, with the assistance of big powers and international institutions on the Oromo, the largest ethno-national group, and other groups in order to destroy the Oromo national movement led by the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) and to dominate the political economy of Oromia (the Oromo country) and Ethiopia in order to transfer economic resources, particularly land, to Tigrayan state elites and their domestic and international supporters.
This paper first provides the historical background for these complex issues. Second, it outlines theoretical and methodological approaches of the paper. Third, the piece explains the role of big powers in supporting the Ethiopian state at the cost of democracy and human rights in order to promote “savage development” (Quan 2013) or “violent development” (Rajagopal 2003) in this age of globalization. This section also explores how the Tigrayan-led Ethiopian government and its international supporters are using the discourses of democracy, human rights, and economic development while terrorizing the Oromo and other indigenous peoples by dispossessing them of their rights and their ancestral land and natural resources. Fourth, it explains how the ongoing peaceful Oromo mass protest movement has emerged in Oromia, how and why the regime is violently cracking down on protestors, including Oromo school children and university students, farmers, and other sectors of the Oromo society, and why the West is facing a political dilemma regarding supporting a government that is openly massacring peaceful protestors and violently repressing dissent. Finally, the piece explores the larger political and economic consequences of the Oromo protest movement in bringing about a fundamental transformation to the political economy of Oromia and Ethiopia.

Background

The Ethiopian colonial terrorism and genocide that started during the last decades of the nineteenth century with the assistance of England, France, and Italy still continue in the 21st century with the support of global powers (Jalata 2010). During Ethiopian (Amhara-Tigray) colonial expansion, Oromia, “the charming Oromo land, [would] be ploughed by the iron and the fire; flooded with blood and the orgy of pillage” (de Salviac 2005 [1901]: 349). Martial de Salviac (2005 [1901]: 349) called this event “the theatre of a great massacre.” The Oromo oral story also testifies that the Abyssinian armies destroyed and looted the resources of Oromia and committed genocide on the Oromo people and others through terrorism, slavery, depopulation, cutting hands or breasts, and creating a series of famines and diseases during and after the colonization of Oromia. According to Martial de Salviac 2005 ([1901]: 8), “With equal arms, the Abyssinia [would] never [conquer] an inch of [Oromo] land. With the power of firearms imported from Europe, Menelik [Abyssinian warlord] began a murderous revenge.”
The colonization of Oromia involved human tragedy and destruction: “The Abyssinian, in bloody raids, operated by surprise, mowed down without pity, in the country of the Oromo population, a mournful harvest of slaves for which the Muslims were thirsty and whom they bought at very high price. An Oromo child [boy] would cost up to 800 francs in Cairo; an Oromo girl would well be worth two thousand francs in Constantinople” (de Salviac 2005 [1901]: 28). The Abyssinian/Ethiopian government massacred half of the Oromo population (5 million out of 10 million) and their leadership during its colonial expansion (Bulatovich 2000: 68). The Amhara warlord, Menelik, terrorized and colonized the Oromo and others to obtain commodities such as gold, ivory, coffee, musk, hides and skins, slaves and lands. Menelik controlled slave trade (an estimated 25,000 slaves per year in the 1880s); with his wife he owned 70,000 enslaved Africans; he became one of the richest capitalists. He invested in American Railway Stock; “Today the Abyssinian ruler had extended the range of his financial operations to the United States, and is a heavy investor in American railroads . . . with his American securities and his French and Belgian mining investments, Menelik has a private fortune estimated at no less than twenty-five million dollars.” (New York Times, November 7, 1909).

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

#OromoProtests

Do Not Chase Me
You, the big man!
You, who has all the power,
Given to you by betrayals of gangsters and traitors
Who sell us out to the enemy,
Whose mission is fulfilled by agents.
Your money, happiness and power won’t be endless.
You greedy man, you selfish man!
Why do you follow me?
Why do you surround me?
Why do you follow my every step?
Why do you control my every move?
I am proudly confronting you, to not be deprived of my natural rights.
Your nightmare means nothing for us, we are out of there now.
Our aim is freedom, because freedom never harmed anyone.
Let us live with Humanity, Justice and Equality!
Stop following me; don’t chase me. That is to violate the law of nature.
I call you a thief, you and your gang of thieves.
Forget about dreaming that I would sing for you.
No, never. Rather, I oppose you.
As long as I’ve had a language to speak, you have imposed silence on me.
But, I am still screaming and shouting to be heard and remembered.
You deprived me of my natural rights
Your fantasies and thoughts make you confused and perverted
You trust your weapons; you trust your muscles,
But I will never die.
You don’t have the power to make me not believe in justice.
I trust the power of the people.
Yes, the power of the People.
No one can stop them; they will send you to hell.
You, Big man,
You, corrupted one, you gambling and bribing one,
You can scare me; you try to destroy my life,
But I have never raised for you a knife.
My courage is my pen; my weapons are ideas.
My power is with my people.
I preach Love; I declare Justice and Freedom.
I struggle for better times.
You wondered if I would be your messenger,
But, let me assure you: I never think of being disloyal to my people.
You might undermine me more and more,
But I proudly believe that love will bring this to its end.
Though I have been deprived of my humanity,
I am not a lesser human, as you thought.
Go ahead, and we will see what will be.
I won’t be under your knee; I love to live as free.
If that is a crime that makes you chase me,
You are ridiculous!
So stop following me; do not be mad.
You couldn’t destroy my peace of mind.
Yes, you made millions disappear; you pushed them to flee.
You made many disabled; you killed thousands of innocents.
However, I do not fear that you would kill me,
Even if it is in your hand to do so.
You couldn’t kill my ideas; the seed is already planted in the hearts of my people.
Because of that, I won’t surrender.
My life is not more precious than the lives you have already taken.
I am not more special than our heroes and heroines who have fallen.
Now leave me alone, stop following me.
Don’t chase me in your dream.
Don’t follow me like my own shadow.
Caalaa Hayiluu, March 2012
Published with permission

The Very First Day
The very first day they jailed you
Your body was in a tiny hole with your heart still at home
The very first day they brought you that prison meal
You were chewing pain, but tasting home
The very first day they tortured you
You were bleedin when they were cursin you for not brakin
The very first day they took you away
You were tryin not to see the loved ones cryin
The very first day they let you out from the cage
You were wonderin whether that very first day will be comin again, with you bein chained
The very first day they let you leave
Your body was home but your soul was in the prison hole, waitin for those who still didn’t got home
That very first day should not be the very first day for any human you know
That very first day should just be the last day
– A, 2015 for Untold Stories

#OromoProtests

When you are in Ethiopia , you can write but not publish. You can write, but not read it for the people. Still, I wrote things that the government didn't like. But here in Sweden I can write, I'm free. But who will read it? I have the right to write, but to whom? Where's the social interaction? who listen to you?

By Caalaa Hailu

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

New Report from State Department Details Widespread Human Rights Abuses in Ethiopia

May 9, 2016
Media Contact: Frederic Mousseau, fmousseau@oaklandinstitute.org
Villager looks on as a backhoe excavates land.
Oakland, CA—The United States Department of State recently released its annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, including an in-depth account of the human rights situation in Ethiopia. The report confirmed many of the ongoing human rights violations that the Oakland Institute has detailed in Ethiopia, including: abuses associated with the Government’s villagization program; restrictions on basic freedoms of expression, assembly, association, movement, and religious affairs; restrictions on activities of civil society organizations; and more.
“The US State Department report confirms that countless human rights abuses are being perpetrated by the Ethiopian Government,” said Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director of the Oakland Institute. “It also highlights appalling issues associated with Ethiopia’s criminal system, such as the use of torture, a weak and politically influenced judiciary, life-threatening prison conditions, and the use of electric shocks and beatings to extract confessions.”
Caught in this horrific system are thousands of journalists, political opposition members, land rights defenders, students, and indigenous and religious leaders, who have been unlawfully detained and arrested under Ethiopia’s draconian Anti-Terrorism Proclamation.
Included in the State Department report are the cases of Ethiopian Muslim leaders, detained and charged under the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation for participating in protests for religious freedom; and of land rights defenders Omot Agway Okwoy, Ashinie Astin, and Jamal Oumar Hojele who were arrested en route to a food security conference in Nairobi and charged under the Anti-Terrorism law.
Countless more stories were not included in the report, including that of indigenous Anuak leader Okello Akway Ochalla, who was abducted in South Sudan and forcibly taken to Ethiopia, in complete violation of extradition treaties and international law, for speaking out about abuses perpetrated against the people of Gambella, Ethiopia. On April 27, 2016, after more than two years in jail, Mr. Okello was handed a nine year prison sentence.
“Over the past years, countless indigenous communities have been evicted from their land to make way for large-scale land grabs in Ethiopia,” commented Mittal. “These displacements are happening without the free, prior, and informed consent of the impacted populations, and when communities resist, they are forcibly removed by means of violence, rape, imprisonment, and the denial of humanitarian assistance, including food aid. To make matters worse, the people who stand up and fight for the rights of those communities – people like Mr. Okello and Pastor Omot – are being jailed. This must stop.”
“Ethiopia is the United States’ closest ally in Africa and the second largest recipient of US overseas development assistance in Africa,” she continued. “In these unique roles, the US has both the power and the moral responsibility to ensure that basic human rights and the rule of law are upheld in the country. Through its report, the United States acknowledges the widespread human rights violations taking place in Ethiopia. The question is: when will the US finally do something to address this egregious situation?”
###

Dispatches: Using Courts to Crush Dissent in Ethiopia

Dispatches: Using Courts to Crush Dissent in Ethiopia

Monday, May 9, 2016

Abdirahman Mahdi of ONLF: 'Ethiopia is boiling'

Abdirahman Mahdi of ONLF: 'Ethiopia is boiling'

Senior leader of Ethiopia's Somali rebel group discusses a growing alliance of groups seeking self-determination.

 | PoliticsWar & ConflictEthiopiaAfrica
Ethiopia, Africa's oldest independent country, is one of the West's closest allies in the Horn of Africa. 
Bordering Kenya, South Sudan, Eritrea, Djibouti and Somalia, this vast nation is home to about 80 different ethnic groups, many with their own languages and customs.
Despite Ethiopia's demographic diversity, the country's power structure in mainly centralised in its capital Addis Ababa, located in the heart of the country.
And this is resented by some of Ethiopia's many different ethnic groups.
To the far east of the country lies Ethiopia's Somali region. The people there have Ethiopian nationality but identify as Somalis. Many there say that their desperately poor region is starved of resources.
This has led some to rise up and challenge the government.

Self-determination struggle

A movement for self-determination for Ogaden, which is officially known as the Somali region, led by the Ogaden National Liberation Force (ONLF), began in the mid-1980s. ONLF took up arms a decade later.
Their attacks led the Ethiopian government to send in troops and to carry out what many describe as a brutal crackdown on the some five million ethnic Somalis who live in this arid region.
Thousands of people have died in a struggle that few outsiders are allowed to witness. It's an invisible conflict that has cost lives and livelihoods, and despite several rounds of talks in recent years, has no end in sight.
After decades of conflict with little or no progress, should ONLF give up their fight?
"How long did South Africa [take to] defeat Apartheid? When you are fighting for your rights, time is not an issue," Abdirahman Mahdi, a founding member and the foreign secretary of ONLF, tells Al Jazeera.
The only policy in the Somali region they have is to dominate it, to exploit the oil, to consider the people as just a nuisance, and to exploit our resources and kill our people. Even if they allowed 10% of our rights in 1994, this fighting would not have started.
Abdirahman Mahdi, founding member and foreign secretary of the Ogaden National Liberation Force (ONLF)
"My father was fighting for our rights and my children will fight for our rights. So for us, justice is the only solution - there is no other way."
Madhi denies that ONLF wants to secede from Ethiopia and claims this is "a misconception that's being propagated by the Ethiopian regime".
ONLF's fight, he says, is about seeking the "right to decide our future".
The movement wants the "right to self-determination, including even leaving the country". ONLF "cannot decide what the Somali people want. What we are saying is let them be given their right to decide."
He says: "Free choice is not secession; free choice means you can choose the right to live together in peace and dignity."
ONLF's fight is not with federalism nor with ethnicity, Madhi says. "The issue is when one group wants to dominate the rest of the people in Ethiopia. So we are going to dismantle that."
Madhi speaks of the marginalisation of Ethiopia's Somali region. "[Until] recently, we had only one secondary school after 100 years of Ethiopian occupation, we had one hospital ... Our women have no maternity services."
The region, he says, suffers from a brutal trade and aid embargo and a military occupation, which he alleges has resulted in the rape of 30% of the region's women and more than 30,000 detentions.
"How can you develop people you are raping?" he asks.
Madhi says ONLF is an Africanist movement, the struggle is expanding and the group is now working with other ethnic groups in the country by staging "peaceful mass demonstrations".
"Our alliance is now expanding," he says. "Like the Arab Spring, we are going to start insurrection all over the place. Ethiopia is now boiling ... The regime is now in disarray; they're divided. The people of Ethiopia have now risen up. They want their rights. We are tired of one clique dominating the rest of Ethiopia."
On Talk to Al Jazeera, Madhi discusses the future and vision of ONLF, the criticism that he is out of touch with the needs and situation of the people in Ethiopia's Somali region now that he lives abroad, and he responds to allegations of human rights abuses committed by ONLF and that the group is armed and trained by Eritrea.
You can talk to Al Jazeera too. Join our Twitter conversation as we talk to world leaders and alternative voices shaping our times. You can also share your views and keep up to date with our latest interviews on Facebook
Source: Al Jazeera

Saturday, May 7, 2016

Ethiopia: Activist Charged With Terrorism Over Facebook

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — A court in Ethiopia has charged a social media activist for inciting violence and other terror-related offenses citing Facebook posts as evidence.
Yonathan Tesfaye, a former spokesman for the opposition Blue Party, was charged Wednesday by Ethiopia's Federal High Court. If convicted, he could face a death sentence.
Yonathan was detained by Ethiopian security forces in December at the height of violent protests in the Oromo community over an alleged plan by the government to grab their land.
Rights groups say the Ethiopian government is using sweeping anti-terror laws to crack down on those critical of the regime.
Muthoni Wanyeki, Amnesty's regional chief, said Yonathan spoke against a possible land grab in Oromia, which is not a crime and is certainly not terrorism.