Sunday, August 21, 2016

#OromoProtests

This Ethiopian runner just won silver in the marathon. And then he led a protest of his government that could land him in jail.

  
NAIROBI — When he crossed the Olympics marathon finish line, Feyisa Lilesa put his hands above his head in an "X." Most of those who watched Lilesa's spectacular silver medal performance didn't know what that meant — or just how dangerous a protest they were watching.
Lilesa was protesting the Ethiopian government's killing of hundreds of the country's Oromo people — an ethnic majority that has long complained about being marginalized by the country's government. The group has held protests this year over plans to reallocate Oromo land. Many of those protests ended in bloodshed. According to Human Rights Watch, more than 400 people have been killed since November.
For months, the Oromo have been using the same "X" gesture that Lilesa, 26, used at the finish line.
At a news conference following the race, he reiterated his defiant message.
"The Ethiopian government is killing my people, so I stand with all protests anywhere, as Oromo is my tribe," Lilesa said. "My relatives are in prison and if they talk about democratic rights they are killed."
It was a remarkable turn of events — within seconds, Lilesa had gone from a national hero to a man who might not be able to return to his home country. In addition to those killed, many Oromo protesters are currently languishing in prison.
In Ethiopia, the state broadcaster did not air a replay of the finish.
Lilesa was conscious of the danger. He immediately suggested that he might have to move somewhere else.
"If I go back to Ethiopia maybe they will kill me. If not kill me, they will put me in prison. I have not decided yet, but maybe I will move to another country," he said.
It wasn’t the first time an Ethiopian athlete had considered defecting after competition. In 2014, four of the country’s runners applied for asylum in the United States after disappearing from the international junior track championships in Eugene, Ore.
The plight of the Oromo and the Ethiopian government's use of force against civilians have received some attention recently, but nothing as prominent as Lilesa's defiance. Earlier this month, the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa saidthat it was “deeply concerned” about the most recent killing of protesters. But likely because Ethiopia remains a U.S. ally in the fight against Somali Islamist group Al-Shabab, American officials have been reluctant to offer any further condemnation.
Oromo dissidents, particularly those outside Ethiopia, have been active on social media about their cause. As soon as Lilesa crossed the finish line, tweets and Facebook posts went up with pictures of their new folk hero. Ethiopia is one of Africa's fastest growing nations, and it seen by many as a model of economic potential. The government has played down the protests, saying earlier this month that “the attempted demonstrations were orchestrated by foreign enemies from near and far in partnership with local forces.”
Lilesa has been racing internationally for Ethiopia for more than eight years, and holds one of the world's fastest ever marathon times: 2:04:52.

Feyisa Lilesa Speaks Out About Killings of Oromo Protesters in Ethiopia

#OromoProtests

Ethiopian runner makes protest sign as he crosses line in Rio

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  • From the sectionAfrica
Ethiopia's Feyisa Lilesa crossed his arms above his head at the finish line of the Men"s Marathon athletics event of the Rio 2016 Olympic Games at the Sambodromo in Rio de Janeiro on August 21, 2016.Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Image captionFeyisa Lilesa made the gesture as he crossed the line and again at a press conference
An Olympic marathon runner from Ethiopia staged a daring protest against his home government when he crossed the line in Rio on Sunday.
As he took the silver medal, Feyisa Lilesa crossed his arms above - a gesture made by the Oromo people who have suffered brutal police crackdowns.
Lilesa is from Oromia, home to most of Ethiopia's 35 million Oromo people.
He repeated the protest gesture later at a press conference, saying his life would be in danger if he returned home.
Human rights groups say that Ethiopian security forces have killed hundreds of people in recent weeks as they crack down on anti-government protests.
Explaining his actions, Lilesa said: "The Ethiopian government are killing the Oromo people and taking their land and resources so the Oromo people are protesting and I support the protest as I am Oromo.
"The Ethiopian government is killing my people so I stand with all protests anywhere as Oromo is my tribe. My relatives are in prison and if they talk about democratic rights they are killed. I raised my hands to support with the Oromo protest."
The marathon runner said that he might be killed if he returned.
"If not kill me, they will put me in prison," he said. "I have not decided yet, but maybe I will move to another country."
Image copyrightEPA
Image captionFeyisa Lilesa celebrates crossing the line in second place in Rio
Asked if he was worried about being sanctioned by the International Olympic Committee (IOC), he said: "I cannot do anything about that. This was my feeling. I have a big problem in my country, it is very dangerous to make protest in my country."
Rule 50 of the Olympic charter bans political displays or protests and the IOC say they are gathering information about the case.
The American duo of Tommie Smith and John Carlos were famously stripped of their medals after the pair flashed the black power salute on the medal stand at the 1968 Summer Games.
There has been a wave of protests in Ethiopia in recent months over a series of frustrations, including attempts by the governments to reallocate land in the Oromo and Amhara regions.

More on Ethiopia's unrest


Protesters in the Amhara region - from the Welkait community - first took to the streets of the city of Gondar in July over the reallocation plans.
The Oromos, who make up around a third of the population, have joined the protests over long-held frustrations that they are excluded from the country's political process and the economic development.
New York-based Human Rights Watch says that more than 400 people were killed in clashes with the security forces in Oromia, although the government disputes this figure.

#OromoProtests

ኦሮሞነት ያሳስራል ያስገድላል!
≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈≈
በአዲስ አበባ ዛሬ ነሐሴ 15 ሊካሄድ የታሰበውን ሰልፍ ተከትሎ ከተማዋ በመለዮ ለባሽ ፌድራል ፖሊስና የአጋዚ ወታደር እንዲሁም ሲቪል በለበሱ ጆሮ ጠቢዎች በወረራ ተይዛ ነበር።
በመስቀል አደባባይ አካባቢ ይንቀሳቀሱ የነበሩ ወጣቶችን ፌድራሎቹ እያዋከቡ በቀይ ሽበር ሰማዕታት ሀውልት ስር ከአንድ ሰዓት በላይ አግተዋቸው አስጨናቂ ምርመራ በጅምላ ዱላንም ጨምረው ከአካሄዱባቸው በኋላ ሌሎቹን ሲለቁ ‪#‎ዘጠኝ‬ ወጣቶችን በፒካፕ ጭነው ወደ አልታወቀ ስፍራ ወስደዋቸዋል።
በፒካፑ ላይ ብዛት ያለው የተለያየ እግር ጫማ ተከማችቶበት እንደነበር ከዓይን ምስክሮች ለመረዳት ተችሎዋል።
የነዚህ ዘጠኝ ወጣቶች ከሌሎቹ የተለየ ሆኖ የተገኘባቸው ጥፋት መታወቂያቸው ላይ ብሔር የሚለው ቦታ ላይ ‪#‎ኦሮሞ‬ የሚል መገኘቱ ነው።
የአዲስ አበባ ልጅ እንኳን ብትሆን ከኦሮሞ ብሔረሰብ በመወለድህ ብቻ በወንበዴው ስርዓት በማንነትህ ላይ የታወጀው የዘር ማፅዳት ዘመቻ ተቋዳሽ መሆንህ እንደማይቀር ይህ ምልክት ነው።
ታፍሰው ከተወሰዱት ወጣቶች ውስጥ ይደረግባቸው በነበረው ምርመራ ወቅት ለማወቅ እንደተቻለው ሁለቱ የማስተርስ ምሩቅ ሲሆኑ አራቱ የመጀመሪያ ድግሪ ተመራቂዎች ናቸው።
ባለፉት 25 ዓመታት ውስጥ ብዙዎች ኦሮሞ በመሆናቸው ብቻ እስር ቤቱን እንዲሞሉት ተፈርዶባቸዋል።
ባለፉት 25 ዓመታት ውስጥ ብዙዎች ኦሮሞ በመሆናቸው ብቻ የደረሱበት ሳይታወቅ እንዲሁም በየቦታው ተገለዋል። ለዚህም የወደቁባቸው ጎዳናዎች እንዲሁም ሸለቆዎችና ጥሻዎች ድምፅ አውጥተው ይመሰክራሉ።

#OromoProtests

Grand ‪#‎OromoProtests‬: Now the TPLF divided the Oromo people into two: the OPDO and the general Oromo public. This division is inline with the divide and rule tactics of TPLF, otherwise they treat these two groups in exactly the same ways. They prosecute them, they torture them and they kill them. The number of OPDO officials and members prosecuted over the last 9 months confirm this fact. It is not too late for OPDO members to bridge this false division and to stand with their people. We frequently hear that most OPDO members/Officials defend this brutal government out of fear that Oromo people and/or future leaders will harm them for their alliance with TPLF. It is understandable that TPLF is disseminating this kind of information to put the OPDO members in projected fear while they are killing them today. The OPDO officials and members needs to stop making this wrong calculations based on TPLF figures. I once again ask you to stop feeding yourself these wrong information/hope. That takes you nowhere, look at what happened to your officials very recently (Daba Dabale, Zelalem Jemaneh, Solomon Kuchu etc). On the other hand, look at what is happening in neighboring regions (example Amhara region). Stand up with your people! ‪#‎Oromia‬‪#‎OPDO‬

Saturday, August 20, 2016

#OromoProtests

2000px-Seal_of_the_United_States_Department_of_State.svg

The United States Announces Additional Humanitarian Assistance for Ethiopia

The United States announced nearly $35 million in additional humanitarian assistance to help the people of Ethiopia face the impacts of the worst drought in fifty years
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia, August 19, 2016/APO/ —
(APO) — The United States announced nearly $35 million in additional humanitarian assistance to help the people of Ethiopia face the impacts of the worst drought in fifty years.
Triggered by El Niño, the drought follows successive poor rainy seasons and has exceeded many people’s ability to cope. Today’s funding announcement will support USAID’s UN and NGO partners in providing humanitarian aid, including more than 6,000 metric tons of supplementary and therapeutic foods to help an estimated one million people suffering from moderate and severe acute malnutrition. The new funding will also increase access to safe water and sanitation facilities and promote hygienic practices to drought-affected communities.
USAID’s Mission Director in Ethiopia Leslie Reed announced the new funding in Addis Ababa during an event commemorating World Humanitarian Day
To get communities back on their feet, USAID partners are providing seeds to farmers and assistance to protect their livestock and other assets. We are also helping to train health workers, expand programs that address gender-based violence in drought-affected areas, and augment logistics capacities so that critical supplies get to people most in need. These efforts will help Ethiopians meet immediate needs, protect development gains made, and complement long-term efforts to build resilience to future disasters.
With this announcement, the United States is providing nearly $774 million since FY 2015 in humanitarian assistance and continues to be the single largest humanitarian donor to the people of Ethiopia.
USAID’s Mission Director in Ethiopia Leslie Reed announced the new funding in Addis Ababa during an event commemorating World Humanitarian Day, which was designated by the United Nations in memory of the 22 UN and relief agency staff who lost their lives in a bombing in Baghdad 13 years ago. With this year’s theme being One Humanity, USAID stands in solidarity with the people of Ethiopia, to help them mitigate the worst impacts of the drought.
The United States commends other donors who have contributed to the Ethiopia drought response, and encourages others to join this international effort. Mobilizing a robust and coordinated global response will be critical to protect the country’s development gains and ensure early recovery.

OHCHR Press Briefing Notes – (1) Ethiopia

Spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights: Ravina Shamdasani
GENEVA, Switzerland, August 19, 2016/APO/ — (1) Ethiopia
High Commissioner reached out to the Ethiopian Government, seeking access for independent observers to the country to assess the human rights situation

Given the extremely alarming reports that emerged earlier this month about serious human rights violations in the Oromia and Amhara regions of Ethiopia, the High Commissioner reached out to the Ethiopian Government, seeking access for independent observers to the country to assess the human rights situation. We have now received a reply from the Government, indicating that they will launch an independent investigation into the events.
We welcome the decision to launch an independent investigation, and we urge the Government to ensure that the investigation has a mandate to cover allegations of human rights violations since the unrest in Oromia began in November 2015, that it is indeed independent, transparent, thorough and effective, with a view to establishing whether the use of excessive force occurred and with a view to bringing to justice the perpetrators of any human rights violations.
We stand ready to assist in ensuring that the investigation is undertaken in line with international human rights standards. We also reiterate our request for access to the affected areas, as the situation on the ground makes it very challenging for independent civil society actors to operate, particularly given the tense situation in parts of the Oromia and Amhara regions, where a large security presence has reportedly been deployed, and there are reports of ongoing arbitrary arrests, intimidation and harassment of people in the regions.
We call on the Government to ensure that the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly and expression are protected and that those detained for exercising these rights are promptly released. Protests must be handled by security forces with full respect for international human rights laws and standards on the use of force.
We also call on the Government to work towards opening up the political and democratic space. This should include a comprehensive reform of the security sector, as well as legislative and institutional reforms.

#OromoProtests

NEWSETHIOPIA

Ethiopia pledges probe into killing of protesters

The Ethiopian government says it will investigate allegations that security forces killed hundreds of protesters.

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Ethiopian government has said it will launch an independent investigation about the killing of protesters by security forces during anti-government demonstrations but denied that the police violence in the country is "systematic."
"I have to reiterate once again this is not systemic," government spokesperson Getachew Reda told Al Jazeera.
"There are cases of off-grid police officers who sometimes take the law into their own hands," he said.
"The government takes such allegations very seriously."
The Human Rights Watch said Ethiopian security forces have killed at least 500 people since anti-government protests began in November and that thousands of people have been arrested and detained.
Anti-government protests that started among the Oromo, Ethiopia's largest ethnic group, have spread in recent weeks to the second largest ethnic group in the country, the Amhara.
Both groups are demanding more political and economic rights.
The ruling party won a hundred percent of federal and regional parliamentary seats in last years election [Tiksa Negeri/Reuters]
"The ruling party won a hundred percent of federal and regional parliamentary seats in last years election," said Al Jazeera's Charles Stratford, reporting from Adis Ababa.
"The opposition protesters say the party is dominated by a minority ethnic group that has been in power for more than 25 years and is ignoring their constitutional rights."
Earlier this month, security forces killed nearly 100 people across Ethiopia in three days of violent protests, according to Amnesty International. Security forces opened fire on protesters, according to activists.
The Ethiopian government blamed the opposition in and outside the country for organising what it calls "unauthorised protests by anti-peace forces."

'We welcome the decision'

“We welcome the decision to launch an independent investigation," Ravina Shamdasani, a spokesperson for the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), told reporters in Geneva on Friday.
Ethiopia has previously dismissed a plea from the UN to allow international observers to investigate the killing of protesters by security forces.
"We urge the Government to ensure that the investigation has a mandate to cover allegations of human rights violations since the unrest in Oromia began in November 2015," Shamdasani said.
She went on to stress that the probe should be "indeed independent, transparent, thorough and effective, with a view to establishing whether the use of excessive force occurred and with a view to bringing to justice the perpetrators of any human rights violations."
"The government has repeatedly said that security forces who have committed abuses or bear any responsibility for the killing of innocent protesters will be punished," said Al Jazeera's Stratford.
"But so far, publicly at least, no one has been called to account."
Source: Al Jazeera

#OromoProtests

Wed Aug 17, 2016 8:44AM
PressTv User
Scores of people were killed across Ethiopia’s Oromia and Amhara regions as security forces brutally suppressed a new wave of anti-government protests. (File photo)
The latest Ethiopian assault that has left scores of people dead underlines the government’s utter contempt for human rights and the rule of law, encouraging a politics of fear.
What has prompted the latest crisis in the east African country?

Dr. Awol Kassim Allo speaks to the ARISE NEWS on the current protests

Oromo TV: Lets be clear for each other

Friday, August 19, 2016

#OromoProtests

The Oromo and Amhara protest movements could change the course of Ethiopia's future, but it is not yet clear what the result of their uprising will be. A change of leadership could bring greater political freedoms, such as allowing outlawed opposition groups to take part in free and fair elections. On the other hand, it could also lead to prolonged conflict and instability. If the resistance against the government reaches critical levels, Desalegn could decide against an armed struggle and instead take political measures to liberalize or transfer power. Regardless of how this situation develops, Ethiopia's Tigray-dominated government may not be able to sustain its hold on power for much longer. And though the current protests may be Desalegn's first major challenge, they will likely not be his last.

#OromoProtests

Ethiopia: TPLF to stage-manage and carry out a “terrorist” attack, intelligence sources warn
Photo: Gondar uprising against TPLF regime



By Engidu Woldie | ESAT

Sources close to ESAT disclosed that the TPLF regime in Ethiopia is prepared to carry out deadly attacks that mimics the work of terrorists in cities across the nation and use that as an excuse to squash the growing popular resistance against the regime in the name of fighting Al Shabaab terrorists.

The sources said the TPLF intelligence and security has selected five locations - Adama, Dire Dawa, Gondar, Bahir Dar and Shashemene – to target public places and higher institutions of learning. The plan was to use Somali speaking individuals from the Ethiopian Somali region to carry out attacks at the selected locations, according to the sources.

The sources also said the regime hopes to garner support from Western allies posing as a regional peacekeeper and fighter of terrorism in the Horn of Africa.

Last year there were a number of explosions at colleges in the Oromo region during ongoing protests in the region and at the Grand Anwar Mosque in Addis Ababa as the Ethiopian Muslims staged a protest rally. The government had blamed what it called terrorist elements but failed to corroborate its claims. A bomb blast in the Bole area of the capital killed two in 2013. In 2011 the regime said it had foiled a planned bomb attack by Eritrea at the African Union Summit in Addis Ababa.

Its past records show that the Ethiopian regime has a habit of using deadly tricks of throwing grenades at public gatherings and institutions and put the blame on resistance groups and neighboring Eritrea, in a futile scheme to get them labeled terrorists.

Regarding the 2006 explosion in Addis, the Wikileaks Ethiopia file exposed the diplomatic cable from the US Embassy in Addis reported that “The GoE announced that the bombs went off while being assembled, and that the three dead were terrorists from the outlawed Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) with links to the Oromo National Congress (ONC). An embassy source, as well as clandestine reporting, suggests that the bombing may have in fact been the work of GoE security forces.”

The regime at the time reported that “the bombs were part of a coordinated terror attack by the OLF and Sha'abiya (Eritrea) aimed at disrupting democratic development," according to the cable.

The cable published by the Wikileaks at the time quoted Dr. Merara Gudina as saying that “the deceased had not died while constructing a bomb, but rather at the hands of GoE cadres. Dr. Merera said that the men had been picked up by police a week prior, kept in detention and tortured. He said police then left the men in a house and detonated explosives nearby, killing 3 of them.”

Not coincidentally, political observers believe, the Inter-Governmental Authority on Development (IGAD) issued a report on Monday warning that terrorist attacks from Al Shabaab were not just confined to Somalia but also threatens neighboring countries.

It should be noted that the regime in Ethiopia is a leading member of the regional body, IGAD and the Security Sector Program that launched the 53 page report is led by Ethiopian regime officials.

It remains to be seen if the regime, which is hit hard by ongoing public resistance all across the nation calling for its demise, would once again use its deadly trickeries knowing that its deceits in the past were exposed widely.

#OromoProtests

Jeg har kontakt med en venn i Etiopia, han skriver: " what is on the ground is they have put a soldier at every single 100 metre in some places and the control is more outrageous, if the soldiers see any thing different than the usual routine, they shoot and kill. So, I dont think more exposed killing will happen. Now they are killing those in prison." . Dette vitner om en ekstremt spent situasjon, hvor faren for fortsatte drap er overhengende, både på gatene om folk tør å demonstrere, og i fengslene- hvor det må sitte et stort antall demonstranter. Regimet ser ut til å gjøre hva som helst av grusomheter for å slå ned kritikk, motstand og opprør. Og Norge, som er en stor bidragsyter, er tause. "Hvor kan vi finne støtte? ", det spør min venn om.Snorre Valen