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ethiopia

 

Ethiopian by Mr.Endalkachew gulum

-April 28, 2014The Committee to Protect Journalists is alarmed by the Ethiopian government’s arrests of nine journalists in one of the worst crackdowns against free expression in the country.

 

Top row, from left: Zelalem, Natnail, Mahlet. Middle row, from left: Atnaf, Abel, Befekadu. Bottom row, from left: Tesfalem, Edom, Asmamaw. (Courtesy Zone 9, Addis Guday, Facebook)

“With the latest arrests, Ethiopian authorities are turning the peaceful exercise of free expression into a crime,” said CPJ East Africa Representative Tom Rhodes.

On Sunday, a public prosecutor in the capital, Addis Ababa, accused the detainees–editor Asmamaw Hailegeorgis, freelancers Tesfalem Waldyes and Edom Kassaye, and bloggers Abel Wabella, Atnaf Berhane, Mahlet Fantahun, Natnail Feleke, Zelalem Kibret, and Befekadu Hailu–of working with foreign human rights organizations and using social media to create instability in the country, according to news reports and local journalists. Tesfalem, Asmamaw, and Zelalem will have their next court hearing on May 7, while the rest will appear in court on May 8, the same sources said. The journalists have not been formally charged with a crime.

The bloggers are members of an independent collectivecalled Zone 9, which publishes news and commentary, according to news reports. Formed in May 2012 in response to the evisceration of the independent press and the narrowing of the space for free expression, the group’s name is derived from Kality Prison, the main jail where Ethiopia’s political prisoners, including several journalists, are held, reports said. With the motto “We Blog Because We Care,” the group has voiced concerns over domestic issues, including political repression and social injustice. The Zone 9 blogs were frequently blocked inside Ethiopia, but gained a following with Ethiopians in the diaspora, according to local reports.

The arrests follow an April 23 announcement on Facebook by the bloggers in which they said they would resume publishing after seven months of inactivity. They had suspended publishing after being harassed by security agents, according to the blog. The day before their arrest, security agents allegedly ordered Natnail to hand over contact details of all Zone 9 members, a request he refused, local journalists told CPJ.

Local journalists said the other detainees–Asmamaw, a senior editor of the private Amharic weekly news magazine Addis Guday, and freelancers Tesfalem and Edom–may have been arrested on suspicion of being affiliated with the Zone 9 journalists.  Edom had been approached on several occasions and asked about her relationship to the other Zone 9 journalists and the support they received from outside organizations, the same sources said.

“These are not journalists. Their arrest has nothing to do with journalism, but with serious criminal activities,” Getachew Reda, an adviser to Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn, told Reuters. “We don’t crack down on journalism or freedom of speech. But if someone tries to use his or her profession to engage in criminal activities, then there is a distinction there.”

“We call on Ethiopian authorities to halt their slide into paranoia and authoritarianism, and instead to allow critical commentary and public debate to thrive,” said CPJ’s Rhodes. “These nine journalists should be released immediately.”

Ethiopian government spokesman Shimeles Kemal did not immediately return CPJ’s repeated calls for comment.

The journalists, who were arrested in multiple raids on Friday and Saturday, have been denied access to their family and lawyers and are being held at the Maekelawi federal detention center, according to local journalists. According to a report by Human Rights Watch, interrogators at Maekelawi routinely use torture to extract false confessions from detainees. The Ethiopian government denies the allegations.

 

 
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Posted by on April 30, 2014 in ENGLISH, POLITICS

 
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Violations of human rights in Ethiopia !

Politics ! from  mr.Endalkachew guluma

-modern concept of human rights is rooted in the experiences of ‘legal lawlessness’ when crimes were committed with the authorization of the law, and when some human beings were denied their status as such. An answer to these experiences was the emergence of the international human rights law. The main aim of this branch of international law is to prevent broad violations of fundamental rights from recurring in the future. Appreciating the worth of every human being, the international community decided to eliminate elements that could destroy the individual person, but also to create the conditions that would enable him or her to develop and flourish. Accordingly, the Preambles to the International Bill of Rights provide that the “foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world” is the “inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family.” (International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 1966). However, the dictator government of Ethiopia, otherwise known the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF), is unable in the enforcement of these rights and remain a headache – mainly due to technical blockades, lack of effective institutions, or the existence of weak institutions only, and lack of political will to implement human rights with differing degrees. Therefore, asking your rights in Ethiopia will either lead you to  imprisoned or count you as anti-government.

Instability in the Horn of Africa and TPLF
The current crisis in the Horn of Africa is a struggle between oppressed peoples, who are fighting for self-determination and, on the other hand, the regime of TPLF that is trying to impose its rule by force.

The regime has set off war, hunger, poverty and disease to ransack the country. In particular, the regime has been and is systematically violating human rights of the Oromo and other peoples in the country as well and the neighboring regions. There are many resistance movements in Ethiopia to stop these human rights violations of the TPLF regime; among them is the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF).

The Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) believes in peace, democracy and development. As the main organ that is championing the right of self-determination of the Oromo people, it fully realizes the present day global reality. It affirms that the international community does have legitimate concerns and interests in the political stability and economic development of the Horn of Africa. Moreover, the OLF is cognizant of the fact that the day of carving spheres of influence and promoting clients in superpower rivalry has given way to globalization. Further, the OLF firmly believes in the immediate termination of the vicious cycle of political conflicts, economic backwardness, environmental degradation, natural and man-made disasters that today ravage the peoples of the Horn of Africa. (OLF on Liberating the Oromo People for Stability and Development in the Horn of Africa)

Human Rights Issues in Ethiopia
Allegations of arbitrary detention, torture, and other ill-treatment at the hands of Ethiopian police and other security forces are not new. But, since the disputed 2005 elections, the Ethiopian government has intensified restrictions on freedom of expression, association, and assembly, deploying a range of measures to clamp down on dissidents. These include arresting and detaining political opposition figures, journalists, and other independent voices, and implementing laws that severely restrict independent human rights monitoring and press freedom.

Since 2009, a new law, the Anti-Terrorism Proclamation, has become a particularly potent instrument to restrict free speech. The law’s provision undermine basic legal safeguards against prolonged pre-charge detention and unfair trials. In this context, Maekelawi, the main torture and investigation facility, has become an important site for the detention and investigation of some of the most politically sensitive cases.

Many detainees accused of offenses under the law — including some of Ethiopia’s most prominent political prisoners — have been detained in the Maekelawi facility as their cases were investigated or prepared for trial (Human Rights Watch, 2013).

In addition, as a result of enforcement of the FDRE Proclamation 621/2009 (the Charities and Societies Proclamation), which has been intended to impose superior regulation of charities, the party leaders of TPLF decide who should receive and who should not receive the emergency support at grassroots level in the respective community. Older Oromos are usually victims of this type of abuse because of their allegiances to the values of the Oromo Gadaa system, that promotes respect and dignity to people in difficult situation. In so doing, technically, the authorities decide who should die from and who should survive the hunger. (Ethiopia/UK: Oromo rally in London)

Endless Focus on Oromos by TPLF, Why?
The Oromo people constitute the single largest national group in the Ethiopia empire and the Horn of Africa with the total population of over 40 million. The number of the Oromo people and the geographical location of their country Oromia make the Oromo country (Oromia) the heart of Ethiopia. The Ethiopian empire mainly survives on the economic resources of Oromia although the Oromo people are one of the most impoverished and terrorized indigenous people. Recognizing that Oromia is the richest and largest populous state, the Tigrayan-led Ethiopia government has been using collective violence to dominate, control and exploit Oromia, which is the key in controlling the Ethiopian government’s political economy. Understanding the situation in Oromia helps in generalizing what is going through the country. (Oromo Studies Association, 2010)

The Oromo people are arrested and accused of being members or supporters or sympathizers of the Oromo liberation struggle led by the OLF. To the Ethiopian government authorities, every Oromo appears to be a member of the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF), a political organisation struggling for the socio-economic, cultural and political rights of the Oromo people. One has to prove he/she is not a member or supporter of the OLF in order to live in relative peace. The safest proof is one and only one – to become a member of the EPRDF, the ruling coalition party of organizations created by TPLF; failure to prove non-affiliation with OLF or any attempt to remain politically indifferent has come to be dangerous in Ethiopia for every ordinary Oromo. Business persons are systematically eliminated from investment and smallscale business if they fail to be members of the ruling party in any case. Every student in college or university is required to secure membership of the ruling party at the campus in order for her/him to get a job in public institutions or to run private business after the completion of the study. The situation is worse for the rural people whereby farmers are required to be members of and demonstrate allegiance to the EPRDF in order to get agricultural inputs and/or have their children learn in school without assault by the government security.

 
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Posted by on February 24, 2014 in ENGLISH, POLITICS

 
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human right

Politics ! from  mr.Endalkachew guluma

Ethiopian People’s Revolutionary Front (EPRDF) conducted organizational evaluation and quoted Bereket Simon, former Ethiopia’s Information Minister and new advisor to Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalgen, on how he characterized the differences amongst the EPRDF leaders during their deliberations. He said:

Before we replaced Revolutionary Democracy with Developmental Democracy, the Front has been divided into three groups. One group of the leadership had argued that our problem was internal and that we need to first check that, while the other group held that our problem was Shabia/Eritrea and that we need to fight them first, but the third position which said that after fighting Shabia/Eritrea, we should then look at our internal problems had become the winning idea.

According to the statement, the EPRDF is no longer a Revolutionary Democracy. It is now Developmental Democracy (whatever that means). In order to come up to that determination however, the group was divided to three camps but the final outcome was a decision to fight “Shaebia/Eritrea” as a primary focus and address their issues later.

After the late genocidal dictator Meles Zenawi was rumored to have been sick, incapacitated or dead, Bereket Simon used the time cunningly to direct the course of the current Ethiopian political direction to suit his needs and the needs of few of his close allies.

The irony, one prerequisite to development or any progress for any nation is peace. When a nation ensures relative peace then there is a foundation for progress. The decision by the EPRDF to “Fight Shaebia/Eritrea” as a prerequisite to their developmental democracy is simply absurd, laughable and dangerous at the same time.

After a 15 year period that started with a border war and morphed into the current so called No-War No- Peace strategy; the Tigrayan People’s Liberation Front (TPLF/EPRDF) decided to continue on the same path albeit with a dressed-up name. The question is, at what cost? Who paid for it initially? Who is responsible for the last 15 years? The TPLF evaluation did not entertain peace with Eritrea; does that mean they have no intention to make peace with Eritrea ever? Furthermore, on what grounds does Ethiopia’s current regime, the TPLF/EPRDF is trying to continue the path of hostility? What is the ultimate goal? How will Eritrea deal with the intransigent TPLF? And ultimately, what constituency of Ethiopia will support this intransigence?

Moreover, how did Ethiopia do without peace with Eritrea? Could it have done better?   How have the people of Ethiopia and Eritrea fared? Is the past 15 years a model by which two neighboring countries should conduct their affairs for the future? Who pays for all these? Who paid for the past?

The key question, why did Bereket Simon come-out now and made these absurd statements? Moreover, why now, when many particularly the US, for the first time in over 15 years is talking peace did Bereket Simon roll-out this war agenda? The questions are endless.

The answer to all these questions are found on a statement one astute Eritrean political figure made a while back. When asked to respond about outrageous repeated statements by the TPLF against Eritrea, he answered, “When a dog barks uncontrollably disturbing peace, the best option is to talk to the owners of the dog.”

There are three key reasons why Bereket Simon decided to come out and declared the continuation of the hostilities.

1) The current chatter that the US is on the verge reestablishing ties with Eritrea is a concern and they are crying for some attention. They want to make sure that the US does not abandon them. Ambassador David Shinn’s comment that we will not have relations with Eritrea at the expense of our important ally Ethiopia is designed to do just that; allay concerns. That however, is not working because the reaction to Ambassador Shinn has been very harsh.

2) Improved Eritrea US relations are a serious concern for the pocket books of the minority regime. Ethiopia has provided boots for the West that funds its military. In turn the TPLF controls its army with the billions in funding received from the West specifically the US by using it as incentive. Those who are loyal are rewarded by assignments on peacekeeping missions for lucrative pay. That means there is a security dimension to it as well because the funds pacify multi ethnic military that could turn on them.

3) Peace is the greatest threat to the very existence of the TPLF/EPRDF. Therefore, they must perpetuate these conflicts particularly with Eritrea. The TPLF is using the border issue to control the people of Ethiopia by misleading them as if the border is a negotiating ploy hence continues the declared No-Peace No-War agenda indefinitely.

Time the enemy

The TPLF/EPRDF has run out of time. There has been tremendous regional and global changes that lead to change of attitude and approach in dealing with the countries of the region. Their strategy to subdue Eritrea failed. To the contrary all economic signals indicate that Eritrea is forging ahead independently. The US waited for over a decade and half to bring regime change in Eritrea using Ethiopia and failed.

China’s influence in the region is forcing changes on US Africa policy. The changes on Western global Geo-Strategic shift away from Middle East to Asia plays a factor. Military and other budget cuts in the US will certainly affect changes. In addition, the death of Meles Zenawi and, the power transition that ensued has created a precarious power- sharing leadership arrangement that generated a great deal of uncertainty.

Moreover, countries in the region are working for their interests diligently. Recent activities by countries in the region particularly Egypt, Sudan and Eritrea are something to pay attention to for many reasons.

To Conclude

The US holds the key to Eritrea Ethiopia future relations simply because Ethiopia as a client state and dependent on US for political, diplomatic, economic, food and military support/aid is amenable to US demands. Thus, when and if the US decides it is on the best interest of the US for the TPLF to create peace with Eritrea then there will be no choice left but to acquiesce to US demands. That is the reality.

The question however remains, after paying dear lives of over 20,000 Eritrean souls, thousands more wounded; after having millions displaced; after decades of hostility that impacted families negatively in many ways; in short, after Eritrea paid the price with dear blood why on earth will the people of Eritrea throw a lifeline to the TPLF? Will they?

That simply means the neck of the TPLF is on the table. The US is at a critical point where they have to make a choice whether to save Ethiopia or the TPLF. When an organization with no constituency and according to Bereket Simon not clear about the future-direction of the nation  decide to place their fate on hostilities with a neighboring country Eritrea; the US has a lot to worry about.  When the perception remains Bereket Simon is the key figure rendering Prime Minister Hailmariam Desalegne as a figurehead, the US has a lot to worry about. Is TPLF/EPRDF Ethiopia?  These are some sticky points. Ambassador David Shinn tried to address these conundrum but no takers. He said,

“Although the United States might decide to try again to improve relations with Eritrea, it will not do so at the expense of its ties with Ethiopia.”

The statement above said Ethiopia, not TPLF/EPRDF. The US is cognizant of these complexities. The US at this stage is desperate to save Ethiopia because the current states of affairs are unsustainable.

Ambassador Hank Cohen’s approach is therefore commendable as he is trying to thread a thin line to save a nation from embedded ethnic-political-system that can spell disaster with long term consequences for the region and US long term interests.

Eritrea therefore holds the key.

´

 

 
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Posted by on February 3, 2014 in ENGLISH, POLITICS

 
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Ethiopia when opportunists fall in the Hall-of-Shame !

politics-From From  Mr.Endalkachew guluma

The recent interest in Jawar Mohammed’s rant on Islamic Forum isn’t new and should not consume too much of our precious time. It should remind us the cost of opportunistic tribal and religion peddlers on our people survival.Jawar has been preaching the same thing in similar forums before. Only after he became full adult a few years ago and started appearing in the international Media as young ‘political analyst’ to make his next opportunistic move people in large number noticed him. In fact, the late Melse said and done far worst things peddling tribalism at the same age with no one noticing.Jawar is the new generation tribal opportunist coming to age. Like many opportunist of our time he is a moving target; running loss without much challenge. He began his journey in isolation from the real world; fixated by tribalism to get his wants. As an ‘Oromo’ he ranted about victimization of the ‘Abyssinians’ Empire that didn’t get him much traction beyond his circle. As self appointed spokesperson of the ‘the oppressed Nation and Nationality’ of Ethiopia, he crossed Woyane drawn regions to form solidarity with other ethnic ‘victims’ of his imagination, that didn’t get him anywhere either. In exile, he became African-Black-Oromo-Ethiopian American to put his tribe aside in solidarity with his race as victim of ‘American racism’; that wasn’t even a blimp on the radar to be noticed.  As youth ‘victim of the old’ he went back generations and talked about the youth victims as a force in the democratic movement of the Arab Spring model to come in Africa (except Ethiopia he preserve to liberate his Oromia). He is a classic opportunist peddler of the new generation.The only people he skipped in his opportunistic victim rant are the women of Ethiopia or in his case Oromia. Whether he forgot women because they don’t serve his opportunistic agenda or he feels they don’t count as victims because he is the male species that ‘victimize’ them, nobody knows. But, when he runs out of victims that would serve his agenda and crossed regions and borders to look for Muslims as his next ‘victims’ to seek solidarity and mix it with his ‘Oromia’ ambition is when he exposed his true nature as a genocidal tribal peddler driven by some unknown force with a bigger agenda than freedom and liberation, just like the late Melse Zenawi.  Give him an audience and stir him up enough he is allover the world map at the service of what his audience want to hear while he is pushing his main agenda by all means necessary.His problem began when he is forced to break loss of tribalism to appear as ‘political analyst’ in the world Media a few years back. He completely put aside his tribal agenda to be all-he-can-be for one-and-all of the world audience; pimping universal suffrage to get platform. When he returned back and forth peddling his tribal agenda is when everything broke loss.In reality, Jawar is a manifestation of the ‘Woyane Doctrine’ that prevailed after Marxism ideology bit the dust and left the field open to be filled by tribal opportunist in a cover of Ethnic Federalism. He will be around as long as there are confused and uninformed audience (a meal ticket for opportunist) to manipulate his way in-and-out of the world audience and tribalism until he is no more. It seems the only thing opportunist of our time need to get platform these days is to wave their educational credential and a sharp mouth without doing practical anything.Jawar, like his mentors before him is stuck in his tribal prism that brought us today’s Revolutionary Democracy of Woyane; fueling his ambition. Thus, like Melse he is trying to maneuver his way in-and-out of his tribal cage to test the diversity of the world and the complexity of democratic governance that demands the truth: to-be-or- not-to-be a leader or a pimp.  The pressure is so much so tribal Jawar and universal Jawar are in collusion course.His political ambition was born on ‘Oromia’ like the late Melse was on Tigray. The only hope tribal opportunists had to have traction is preaching confined audiences of their tribe.  But, when he found out he can be a leader of the world with Ivy League education and the attention of the world Media on the top of the universal President Barak Hussein Obama ascendency to the pinnacle of world power the poor kid got caught up between a tribal peddler and the possibilities of universal leader. His tribal upbringings (thanks to Woyane and OLF) to his new fantasy of wanting to be universal without putting a penny to earn it became incompatible. He ended up fallen in Hall-of-Shame just like Melse Zenawi tried and fail to go back where he started.  As far as Ethiopians are concerned Jawar is damage good as a leader or political analyst with no redemption value. Therefore, searching for solidarity with anybody he can find to push his main agenda is the only thing left for him.When they say leaders are born not made they aren’t kidding. It is because leaders see the possibilities when opportunists see the impossibilities.   Leaders seek democracy to empower people for the possibilities but opportunists seek tribalism to stay alive. That is why Ethiopia is full of opportunities in the position of power or aspiring to be.Jawar ambition to learn political science to be an Oromo leader didn’t do him good. The more he learned the Science the more confused he become from his original tribal sin. His inconsistency from the old tribal Jawar to the new universal Jawar began to show, just like his old mentor Melse Zenawi that moved away from the old tribal Zenawi to the new opportunist universal Zenawi to end up having none.  That is why tribal opportunists go ballistic when rejected and return back to their safe house of tribalism; blaming everybody but themselves.Ethiopians are way civilized than what tribal opportunist at the bottom end offer. What we should ask ethnic opportunists is to stick with their primitive tribalism than wondering around where they don’t belong. The problem with Jawar as it was with Melse is they go in-and-out of tribalism and ended up to be no good for their ‘tribes’, the people of Ethiopia and humanity as a whole thus, democracy and individual freedom.Jawar went further in his recent rant; dragging religion in tribalism. That, my friends is when tribalism hit the bottom. Like Woyane dragging religion when minority tribalism hit the bottom Jawar greed to drag religion in his Oromia took him where no tribal peddler has gone before. There is no end to tribal opportunist journey to nowhere. Only Ethiopians can stop them on their tracks before they cause more chaos more than what they already did to stay alive.In a sprit of Ethiopiawinet tribalism is a dead end as Jawar proved us beyond reasonable doubt when he peddles the Muslim audience. One thing people didn’t notice is he was speaking, not in English, Arabic or Oromigna but in Amharic to tell the Muslim audience how ‘majority Muslim Oromia’ can save the Muslim religion itself; insulting his audience more than one way. Frankly, Ethiopians Muslim can save the lost soul before he goes further and turn in to an Imam and claim he is the messenger of the Prophet himself.

 
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Posted by on January 10, 2014 in ENGLISH, POLITICS

 
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The Phenomenon of Self-Subjugation in the Current Ethiopian Politics !

 
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Posted by on December 22, 2013 in ENGLISH, POLITICS

 
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Federalism , Human RIGHTS and the EPRDF Constitution in Ethiopia

 

Ethiopian politics.   Mr.Endalkachew guluma !

Slightly  more  than  two  decades  have  passed  since  the  TPLF  enshrined  ethnicity  in  the  laws  and      constitution  of  the  country  as  the  foundation  as  well  as  the  guiding  principle  of  statecraft  and  inter-­ethnic  relations.    The  experience  gained  during  this  period  of  our  political  history  is  more  than  adequate  for  assessing   the  wisdom   of  structuring  government  on  such  an  emotionally  charged,  divisive  and  unstable  basis.    It  provides  as  well  a  window  to  the  likely  consequences  of  this  form  of  governance  on  the  future  fate  of  our  common  citizenship  (“Ethiopiawinnet”),  inter-­ethnic  harmony,  individual  and  minority  rights,  and  the  state’s  ability  to  enforce  the  much-­vaunted  but  often  ignored  dictates  of  the  rule  of  law. The  recent  expulsions  of  Ethiopians  of  Amhara  heritage  from  Gura  Ferda  and  Beni-­Shangul,  the  confiscation  of  their  properties  and  the  crime  of  rape  and  other  forms  of  victimization  inflicted  upon  them,  are  not  only  a  negation  of  the  forgoing  values  but  also  unmistakable  harbingers  of  worse  forms  of  ethnic  oppression,  discrimination,  and  social  conflict  looming  on  the  horizon.    An  unmistakable  lesson  of  these  experiences  of  mass  atrocity  is  that  the  notion  of  an  undifferentiated  citizenship  holds  very  little  or  no  sway  in  the  country  any  longer,  thereby  condemning  ethnic  minorities  trapped  in  the  wrong  titular  state  to  the  tender  mercies  of  the  ethnic  elites  in  control  of  these  states  and  the  connivance  and  manipulation  of  the  ruling  elites  at  the  center.    If  citizens  who  do  not  belong  to  the  “right”  ethnic  group  can  be  endangered  with  impunity  in  this  way  merely  on  account  of  being  “different”  from  the  relevant  majority,  can  it  be  long  before  the  notion  of  a  common  citizenship  gradually  atrophies  and  becomes  extinct? Even  if  this  particular  result  can  somehow  be  avoided,  the  devolution  of  political  power  to  ethnic  majorities  will  always  put  at  risk  the  security,  status  and  rights  of  those  who  do  not  belong  to  the  empowered  regional  majorities.  If,  the  fundamental  political  constitutional  issue  in  Ethiopia  is  how  citizens  of  varying  ethnic  and  cultural  backgrounds  can  coexist  harmoniously,  the  atrocities  alluded  to  above  highlight  another   sobering  lesson:  federalism,   by  itself,  is  not  enough   as  a  means  for  promoting  ethnic  harmony  or  for  protecting  individual  rights.    This  is  because  the  glorification  of  ethnic  identity  under  the  auspices  of  ethnic  federalism  is  fundamentally  and  inherently  incompatible  with  the  notion  of  equal  rights  and  a  common  citizenship.    Consequently,  the  most  important  immediate  political  task  for  all  Ethiopians  should  be  to  nourish  a  countrywide  sense  of  identification  and  belonging  and  to  tamp  down  the  rhetoric  and  obsessive  fascination  with  the  so-­called  national  question  that  continues  to  captivate  and  freeze  otherwise  intelligent  minds.    I  do  realize  that  this  is  indeed  a  tall  order  under  the  prevailing  political  circumstances.  But  if  we  are  to  avoid  the  two  most  tragic  consequences  of  ethnic  division  and  conflict-­  genocide  and  the  break-­up  of  the  country-­  there  is  no  other  option  but  to  come  together  in  defense  of  Ethiopiawinnet  and  equal  citizenship.  The  danger  exposed  by  Gura  Ferda  and  Beni-­Shangul  should  serve  as  a  wake-­up  call  to  action. In  the  following  pages,  I  will  address  four  questions  that  the  crimes  committed  against  Amharas  in  Gura  Ferda  and  Beni-­Shangul  raise.    The  first  question  concerns  the  ideology  that  motivates  political  ethnicity  and  its  underlying  aims.    I  will  then  briefly  note  the  ways  in  which  the  ruling  party  in  Ethiopia  has  entrenched  these  aims  in  the  basic  law  of  the  country.  This  is  followed  up  by  a  brief  discussion  highlighting  the  particular  ways  in  which  the  constitutionalization  of  ethnicity  objectively  undermines  Ethiopiawinnet  and  basic  human  rights  as  internationally  recognized.  In  particular,  these  remarks  will  highlight  how  this  constitutional  formula  is  likely  to  lead  to  the  most  odious  forms  of  human  rights  violations,  namely,  ethnic  cleansing  and  genocide.  I  will  conclude  by  pointing  out  that  upholding  Ethiopiawinnet  holds  the  key  for  forestalling  such  tragedies  and  for  maintaining  social  peace  and  stability,  and  for  promoting  democracy  and  human  rights.                            

                                        Political  Ethnicity  and  Its  Aims  

Lurking  behind  the  politicization  of  ethnic  identity  in  Ethiopia  is  a  pernicious  ideology:  the  ideology  of  ethnic  nationalism  which  the  Ethiopian  Student  Movement,  wittingly  or  unwittingly,  popularized  under  the  ill-­conceived  rubric  of  the  “national  question.”  For  many,  this  slogan  signified  nothing  more  than  a  demand  for  a  policy  of  ethnic  equality  so  as  to  exorcise  the  cultural  milieu  of  ethnic  mistrust  and  antagonism  as  well  as  to  encourage  ethnic  groups  to  come  together,  as  Lenin  would  have  us  believe  –  naively,  as  it  turned  out.  But  ethno-­nationalist  ideologues  and  politicians  are  rarely  satisfied  with  ethnic  equality  per  se;  they  demand  much  more. Ethno-­nationalism  has  three  defining  characteristics  that  reveal  the  chief  aims  of  political  ethnicity  and  the  difficulty  of  bringing  ethnic  groups  to  come  together  when  politicians  use  ethnicity  as  a  source  of  political  identity.  As  our  own  experience  demonstrates,  citizens  who  might  not  have  been  aware  of  their  ethnicity  regrouped  under  its  banner  as  soon  as  the  state  deliberately  used  it  as  a  source  of  identity.    Thus  the  first  characteristic  of  the  ideology  of  ethnic  nationalism  is  that  nations  are  to  be  defined  solely  in  ethnic  terms,  i.e.,  in  terms  of  a  common  history,  tradition,  and  a  common  language.  Secondly,  nations  should  have  their  own  states,  so  that  the  nation  as  so  defined  and  the  state  should  be  congruent  with  each  other.  Finally,  the  loyalty  of  members  of  a  nation  should  override  all  other  loyalties  including  loyalty  to  an  overarching  countrywide  nationalism.  Clearly,  this  notion  of  nationalism  is  at  odds  with  the  citizen  nationalism  which  Ethiopiawinnet  seeks  to  uphold.  Ethiopiawinnet  holds  that  all  Ethiopians  are  part  of  the  same  nation  irrespective  of  their  ethnic  background  and  are  united  by  a  patriotic  attachment  to  a  common  country  in  which  all  enjoy  equal  rights. But  civic  nationalism  has  to  contend  with  the  dangers  inherent  in  the  ideology  that  conceives  ethnic  groups  as  “nations.”  The  main  danger  inherent  in  ethno-­nationalism  is  threefold:  expansionism,  exclusivism  and  secessionism.  Expansionist  ethnic  nationalism  threatens  the  territorial  integrity  of  states  and  sub-­states.  In  the  case  of  Ethiopia,  the  most  obvious  example  is  the  expansionism  of  the  TPLF  into  Gondar  and  Wollo  provinces  in  fulfillment  of  the  Greater  Tigray  project. Ethnic  nationalism  is  also  inherently  exclusivist  and  gives  rise  to  various  forms  of  ethnic  cleansing,  as  we  have  witnessed  in  Gura  Ferda  and  Beni-­Shangul.    As  one  of  the  most  virulent  ethno-­nationalists,  Jawar  Mohammed,  has  told  us  Ethiopians  living  in  the  so-­called  Oromia  must  leave  the  region  or  “else.”    Some  may  naïvely  dismiss  or  discount  Jawar’s  threat  captured  in  YouTube  as  the  outbursts  of  a  callow  young  man.  But  that  would  be  a  mistake.  It  behooves  us  to  remember  that  those  whose  ideology  demands  blind  loyalty  to  their  own  community  and  its  self-­righteous  claims  of  right,  and  those  who      glorify  their  own  ethnic  group  to  the  denigration  of  others  are  often  those  who  will  have  no  qualms  to  engage  in  ethnic  cleansing  and  genocide  in  the  “name”  and  the  “defense”  of  their  ethnic  group.  Entranced  by  their  ideology  and  a  sense  of  a  past  victimization  that  is  often  rooted  in  half-­truths  and  utter  lies,  they  will  have  little  or  no  compunction  to  deny  the  humanity  of  those  whom  they  regard  as  the  “Other.” Dyed-­in-­the  wool  ethno-­nationalists  are  secessionists  to  the  core  as  well.  The  missionaries  of  ethnic  federalism  may  indulge  the  belief  that  their  chosen  form  of  governance  will   satisfy  the  ethno-­nationalists’  desire  for  self-­government  and  thereby  discourage  secessionism.  But  this  is  a  pious  hope  and  a  dangerous  illusion.  The  devolution  of  political  power  to  an  ethnic  majority  is  more  often  than  not  a  political  arrangement  that  risks  fuelling  the  ambitions  of  nationalist  leaders  who  will  be  satisfied  with  nothing  short  of  their  own  nation-­state.  Examples  of  this  abound:  Nagorno-­Karabakh  in  Azerbaijan,  Abkhazian  in  Georgia,   Chechnya  in  Russia,  and   the  Serbian  region  of  Bosnia-­Herzegovina.  We  should  not  be  surprised  to  see  this  trajectory  replicated  in  Ethiopia  in  the  future,  making  the  country’s  territorial  integrity  always  provisional  and  contingent,  its  politics  messy  and  unstable,  and  the  rights  of  individuals  belonging  to  ethnic  minorities  precarious.

                                      Ethnicity  and  the  EPRDF  Constitution  

The  Ethiopian  Constitution  is  in  essence  the  expression  and  implementation  of  the  TPLF’s  ethno-­nationalist  ideology.  What  the  constitution  enshrines  is  not  the  idea  of  democracy  as  a  polity  of  equal  citizens,  but  rather  of  the  creation  of  a  national  state  for  the  local  majority,  ethnically  defined. Article  8  unabashedly  announces,  “All  sovereign  power  resides  in  the  Nations,  Nationalities  and  Peoples  of  Ethiopia”  and  goes  on  to  provide  that  “This  constitution  is  an  expression  of  this  sovereignty.” Article  8  sounds  the  death  knell  of  Ethiopia  as  a  sovereign  nation  because  it  locates  sovereignty  not  in  all  its  citizens  as  a  people  acting  in  their  individual  capacities  unimpeded  by  their  particular  ethnic  affiliations  but  rather  in  the  various  ethnic  communities  that  inhabit  the  country.  In  other  words,  by  jettisoning  the  notion  of  popular  sovereignty  based  on  “We  the  people”  in  favor  of  ethnic  group  sovereignty,  the  constitution  envisions  a  state  in  which  each  ethnic  group  (at  least  the  major  ones)  is  privileged  to  decide  its  own  form  of  governance,  identity,  future  association  with  the  state,  and  the  rights  of  Ethiopians  subject  to  its  jurisdiction. In  implementation  of  this  vision,  the  constitution  has  divided  the  country  into  nine  ethnic  states  with  the  principal  aim  of  making  each  state  as  a  vehicle  for  aggregating  and  expressing  the  political,  cultural  and  linguistic  identity  of  the  country’s  major  ethnic  groups.  The  animating  idea  behind  this  constitutional  edifice  is  the  desire  to  foster  the  emergence  of  ethnic  groups  as  distinct  polities,  i.e.  “nation  states  “of  homogeneous  ethnicity.  Lest  there  be  any  lingering  doubt  about  this  intention,  Article  39  dispels  the  doubt  and  undergirds  this  goal  by  proclaiming  the  unconditional  of  right  of  ethnic  groups  to  secession.   In  addition,   to  forestall   any  attempt  at  revision  of  the  Article,   the  Constitution  ensures  its  continued  effectiveness  by  requiring  the  consent  of  ALL  states  before  any  amendment  to  this  provision  can  be  attempted.  This  essentially  means  that  every  state,  even  the  tiny  state  of  Harari  has  veto  power  to  thwart  any  revision.  As  far  as  I  know,  no  democratic  constitution  has  ever  gone  down  this  road  and  certainly  not  as  far.

                                       The  Evils  of  Ethnic  Constitutionalism  

Instability  is  the  antithesis  of  constitutionalism.  A  well-­considered  and  legitimate  constitution  should  provide  a  structure  of  political  action,  a  set  of  institutions  within  which  political  conflict  can  be  resolved  through  political  processes  that  are  accepted  as  legitimate  by  the  citizenry.  Moreover,  such  a  constitution  should  contain  effective  guarantees  for  the  protection  of  individual  and  minority  rights. Ethiopia’s  constitution  falls  woefully  short  of  these  requirements.  Far  from  providing  a  framework  for  resolving  conflict  and  protecting  minority  rights,  the  constitution  instead  essentially  mirrors  the  very  configuration  of  ethnic  conflict  and  division  that  it  ostensibly  seeks  to  resolve.  Said  differently,  the  constitution  provides  a  framework  for  the  polarization,  not  the  moderation,  of  contesting  ethnic  elites  and  organized  polities  by  devolving  political  power  to  majority  ethnic  groups  and  encouraging  them  to  form  political  parties  to  represent  their  particularistic  interests.    At  the  present  time,  the  TPLF,  like  the  erstwhile  Communist  Party  of  the  Soviet  Union  and  the  Communist  League  of  Yugoslavia,  seeks  to  maintain  national  unity  through  the  tight  control  it  maintains  over  its  ethnic  affiliates.  The  false  sense  of  security  that  this  political  modus  vivendi  does  seem  to  offer,  however,  belies  the  underlying  reality  of  ill-­will  and  resentment  the  party’s  ethnic  partners  feel  toward  their  overlords.  It  would  be  the  height  of  naiveté’  to  entertain  the  belief  that  the  various  ethnic-­based  political  formations-­–inside  and  outside  government-­(with  a  few  possible  exceptions)  are  committed  to  the  current  lopsided  political  arrangement  which  unquestionably  serves  and  benefits  the  elites  of  one  ethnic  group. It  is  to  be  expected,  therefore,  that  the  leaders  of  the  subservient  components  of  the  federation  are  biding  their  time.  They  will  raise  their  heads,  assert  themselves,  and  challenge  the  ruling  power  over  some  question  of  importance  to  the  challenger  when  the  circumstances  appear  propitious.    This  is  likely  to  occur  when  the  local  government  feels  that  it  has  substantial  support  among  its  “own”  population  to  challenge  action  by  the  center  as  illegitimate  or  when  it  perceives  that  the  center  as  no  longer  capable  of  enforcing  its  rule.  The  existence  of  independent  ethnic  governments  will  serve  as  a  means  for  collating  and  articulating  ethnic  demands  and  grievances  against  the  central  government  or  to  urge  action  toward  gaining  independent  statehood.  Under  either  scenario,  what  begins  as  a  conflict  of  interest,  over  economic  questions  such  as  land  ownership,  for  example,  may  be  turned  into  a  conflict  of  principle  over  the  legitimacy  of  the  federation  itself,  thus  setting  the  stage  for  the  breakdown  of  the  federal  state  into  a  war  among  its  components.  Such  is  the  kind  of  conflict  the  constitution  at  bottom  configures  but  provides  next  to  nothing  to  ensure  political  legitimacy  and  stability. The  TPLF  constitution  is  configurative  of  ethnic  conflict  in  another  way  and  for  that  reason  can  never  be  a  recipe  for  social  peace  or  governmental  stability.  The  sole  rationale  and  impetus  for  the  constitution  is  the  right  of  ethnic  majorities  to  self-­determination  each  with  its  “own”  territory  and  government.  Ethnic  constitutionalism  is  the  hallmark  of  such  a  form  of  state:  a  constitutional  and  legal  structure  that  privileges  the  members  of  the  ethnically  defined  nation  over  the  other  residents  of  a  particular  state.  It  thus  envisions  government  of  one  kind  of  people,  by  that  kind  of  people,  for  that  kind  of  people,  whose  sovereignty  must  be  protected  against  perceived  encroachments  form  all  others.  Such  a  system  of  government  institutionalizes  ethnic  division  between  those  who  are  members  of  the  sovereign  nation  and  those  who  are  not.  As  our  experience  to  date  demonstrates,  the  chief  motive  for  “national  liberation”  is  not  really  to  free  oneself  from  domination  or  perceived  domination  but  rather  to  acquire  the  means  to  dominate  and  mistreat  others.  Thus  those  who  are  relegated  to  minority  status  in  an  enclave  state  may  be  citizens  of  the  country  but  may  not  aspire  to  equality.  Under  these  circumstances,  the  very  premise  of  the  polity  may  be  seen  as  an  inversion  of  Affirmative  Action   as  practiced  in  the  United  States:   ethnic  constitutionalism  institutionalizes  invidious  discrimination  and  negative  action  against  minorities,  which  the  constitution  has  simply  defined  out  of  the  body  politic  because  they  are  not  considered  natives  of  the  regions  in  which  they  reside.  Constitutionally  defining  out  a  targeted  population  in  this  way  is  a  serious  matter  especially  where  the  target  group  has  roots  in  the  territory  that  go  back  generations,  even  centuries,  because  it  deprives  the  excluded  group  of  their    fundamental  rights  to  nondiscrimination  and  equality. No  group  of  people  will  willingly  accept  relegation  to  second-­class  status  and  exclusion.  On  the  contrary,  ethnic  minorities  (and  their  co-­ethnics  elsewhere)  are  more  likely  to  be  encouraged  to  oppose  the  majoritarian  government   which   defines  them  as  social  and  political  outcasts   and  tyrannizes  them.  Moreover,  ethnic  constitutionalism  necessarily  gives  rise  to  two  very  divergent  and  conflicting  visions  of  citizenship:  national  and  ethnic.  As  the  experiences  of  Yugoslavia  and  the  ex-­  Soviet  Union  have  shown,  however,  rival  citizenships  of  this  kind  are  a  prolific  source  of  social  conflict  and  can  hardly  coexist-­  at  least  not  for  a  long  time-­  in  the  same  political  space.  These  experiences  suggest  that  ethnic  minded  individuals  are  far  more  willing  to  exchange  their  national  citizenship  for  ethnic  citizenship  (recall  Jawar’s  outburst  of  “I  am  first  an  Oromo”  on  Al  Jazeera)  and  are  willing  to  kill  or  die  for  their  ethnic  group.  Recall  also  that  pride  in  and  loyalty  to  the  ethnic  group  are  salient  attributes  of  ethnic  nationalism.  The  late  Meles  Zenawi  captured  this  sentiment  when  he  said  to  the  country”  I  am  proud  to  be  born  a  Tigrayan,  the  Golden  people  of  Ethiopia.”  Furthermore,  they  illustrate  that  when  the  two   kinds  of  nationalism   compete,  countrywide  nationalism  is  likely  to  be  the  loser  because  it  lacks  the  emotional  force  that  ethnic  citizenship  can  so  easily  muster.  We  all  know  from  our  own  recent  history  that  the  struggle  between  these  forms  of  citizenship  has  often  resulted  in  disastrous  civil  wars,  economic  dislocations,  and,  more  seriously,  in  ethnic  cleansing. Thus,  from  a  human  rights  perspective  ethnic  constitutionalism  is  inherently  problematic.    Even  leaving  aside  for  a  moment  ethnic  cleansing  and  genocide  -­  ominous  systemic  risks  which  Gura  Ferda  and   Beni-­Shangul  have  exposed   -­   ethnic  constitutionalism  is  a  negation  of  the  various  internationally  recognized  human  rights  the  country  has  solemnly  covenanted  to  uphold.    To  begin  with,  in  so  far  as  ethnic  constitutionalism  empowers  a  particular  ethnic  group  to  control  a  subunit  of  the  federation,  such  a  group  will  invariably  frame  and  enforce  rules  and  practices  calculated  to  privilege  its  members  and   to   subordinate  so-­called  outsiders.  Such  discrimination  violates,  for  example,  the  International  Covenant  on  the  Elimination  of  All  Forms  of  Racial  Discrimination,  which  specifically  outlaws”  any  distinction,  exclusion,  restriction  or  preference  based  on  …  ethnic  origin  which  has  the  purpose  or  effect  of  nullifying  or  impairing…  the  enjoyment  or  exercise,  on  equal  footing,  of  human  rights  and  fundamental  freedoms  in  the  political,  economic,  social,  cultural  or  any  other  field  of  public  life.”    Ditto  for  Article  25  of  the  Ethiopian  Constitution.    Notwithstanding  these  provisions,  ethnic  discrimination  is  a  daily  dirge  heard  among  wide  sections  of  Ethiopian  society.  Space  does  not  allow  me  to  go  into  this  point  in  greater  detail.  Suffice  it  point  out  that  recruitment  to  the  civil  service,  the  police  and  other  branches  of  the  government  is  disproportionately  from  either  the  ethnic  group  controlling  the  center  or  the  ethnic  groups  that  control    the  sub-­states. Ethnic  constitutionalism  also  violates  the  guarantee  of  equal  rights  to  political  participation  as  mandated  by  international  human  rights  law.  The  International  Covenant  on  Civil  and  Political  Rights,  for  example,  recognizes  the  right  of  every  citizen  to  “take  part  in  the  conduct  of  public  affairs”,  the  right  to  vote  and  be  elected  in  periodic  elections,  and  the  “right  to  have  access  on  general  terms  of  equality,  to  public  service  in  his  country.”  Yet,  ethnic  federalism  nullifies  these  guarantees.  In  the  State  of  Beni-­Shangul-­  Gumuz,  for  example,  a  proclamation  passed  in  2007  has  allocated  55%  of  the  seats  of  city  councils  in  the  state  to  ethnic  groups  considered  indigenous  (i.e.,    Gumuz,  Shinasha,  Komo  and  Mao).  The  rest  of  the  population  of  the  state  are  considered  outsiders  and  second-­class  citizens  even  though  they  together  constitute  more  than  40  %  of  the  state’s  population.  Similarly,  in  the  state  of  Oromia  another  proclamation  provides  that  in  the  so-­called  First  and  Second  Class  Cities,  if  the  number  of  Oromos  residing  in  these  cities  are  fewer  in  number  than  the  rest  of  the  resident  population,    then  50%  of  the  Council  seats  will  be  reserved  for  them  along  with  an  additional  20%  for  Oromos  living  in  the  surrounding  rural  areas.  Under  both  these  laws,  Ethiopian  citizens  who  are  considered  non-­native  to  these  areas  are  purposely  relegated  to  minority  status. In  the  face  of  such  discrimination  and  exclusion,  it  is  no  wonder  that  citizens  are  reluctant  to  exercise  their  right  under  international  human  rights  law  to  move  freely  in  the  country  and  reside  wherever  they  choose  to.    To  be  sure  the  Ethiopian  constitution  guarantees  this  right  as  well  but  its  practical  implementation  is  another  matter  altogether.  Because  employment  opportunities,  political  power,  rights  of  political  participation  and  access  to  economic  and  business  opportunities  all  depend  on  belonging  to  the  “right”  ethnic  group,  those  that  do  not  belong  have  no  incentive  to  move  into  regions  controlled  by  such  group,  especially  now  when  the  political  atmosphere  has  been  polluted  by  ethnic  cleansing.  More  worrisome  violations  of  the  foregoing  rights  are  the  impending  danger  of  ethnic  cleansing  and  genocide.    This  is  no  exaggeration.  Consider:  If  ethnic  cleansing  is  already  here,  can  genocide  be  far  behind?  My  fear  is  that  it  cannot  be.    I  base  this  fear  on  the  simple  logic  of  the  ethnic  fundamentalist  ideology  the  Ethiopian  constitution  has  embraced.   As  noted,  the  driving  ideology  of  ethnic  nationalism  is  rooted  in  the  notion  of  ethnic  homogeneity,  which  inevitably  leads  to  feelings  of  separateness  and  a  sense  of  exclusive  ownership  of  a  particular  homeland.  Ethnic  nationalists  have  two  means  to  accomplish  ethnic  homogeneity  and  ensure  that  the  ethnic  homeland  remains  in  the  hands  of  sons  of  the  soil:    ethnic  cleansing  and  genocide.  The  first  has  raised  its  ugly  head  several  times  already  in  several  regions  of  the  country.  If  allowed  to  take  its  natural  course  this  evil  is  likely  to  escalate  and  lead  sooner  or  later  to  a  campaign  of  genocide.  Drawing  ethnic  boundaries  on  mixed  populations  as  has  been  done  in  Ethiopia  is  often  a  recipe  for  the  commission  of  such  crimes.  The  break-­  up  of  a  common  state  is  the  other  major  circumstance  which  often  leads  to  the  same  result. This  is  a  risk  that  we  can  ignore  at  our  own  peril.

                                                              What  to  do?  

What  must  Ethiopians  who  care  about  the  welfare  of  their  compatriots  and  the  unity  of  their  country  do  to  reverse  the  political  tendencies  that  encourage  these  evils?  Figuring  out  the  answer  to  this  question  is  the  hardest  part.  Nonetheless,  let  me  offer  a  few  thoughts  in  this  vein.  I  believe  that  the  first  and  most  important  lesson  we  can  glean  from  our  political  history  of  the  past  40  years  is  to  recognize  the  wrong-­headed  and  flawed  manner  in  which  the  so-­called  “national  question”  was  formulated  and  propounded.    Many  of  us  considered  this  foreign-­inspired  formula  as  the  panacea  for  our  problems  of  ethnic  inequality  without  ever  bothering  to  undertake  seriously  a  sober  study  of  our  own  history  and  political  situation.   Unlike  the  ex-­Soviet  Union  and  Yugoslavia  which  were  a  patchwork  of  previously  independent  national  communities,  Ethiopia’s  historical  trajectory  was  one  of  organic  growth  around  a  common  nucleus.  We  all  know  that  before  the  Woyane  came  to  power,  there  was  no  notion  of  an  Amhara  or  Oromo  community  each  with  its  own  defined  region.  Contrast  that  with  Ukraine,  Georgia  or  Russia  with  their  defined  boundaries  even  in  Czarist  times.  It  is  the  failure  to  appreciate  this  crucial  distinction  that  has  led  us  to  repeat  the  canard  that  “nations,  nationalities  and  peoples”  have  the  right  to  secession.  But  does  the  seceding  unit  have  title  to  the  territory  it  seeks  to  take  with  it?  Has  the  population  that  now  inhabits  a  specific  territory  always  controlled  such  territory?  Raising  these  questions  is  enough  to  indicate  the  answer:  we  must  reverse  course  and  cleanse  our  politics  of  ethno-­nationalist  debris. A  related  mistake  concerns  the  fact  that  little  or  no  thought  was  given  to  the  need  to  preserve  Ethiopia  and  Ethiopiawinnet.  To  the  contrary,  the  task  of  defending  the  danger  facing  these  values  was  left  to  the  government  of  the  day,  both  in  the  imperial  period  as  well  as  under  the  military  regime.     Those  faint  voices  which   raised   concerns  regarding  the  negative  consequences   of  overemphasizing  the  national  question  to  the  detriment  of  the  unity  of  the  country  were  castigated  as  “chauvinists”  and  “neftegnas.”  The  ruling  government  and  some  ethno-­nationalists  in  the  camp  of  the  opposition  continue  to  find  these  labels  serviceable  even  to  this  day.  Sadly  the  overwhelming  majority  of  us  was  cowed  -­  and  continues  to  be  so  today-­by  these  epithets  and  proved  to  be  bystanders  as  the  country  hurtled  down  a  dangerous  path  of  national  destruction. It  is  essential  that  we  rectified  this  mistake  and  repaired  the  damage  by  standing  up  forcefully  for  Ethiopia’s  survival  as  a  country  and  the  right  of  all  our  people  to  live  and  work  anywhere  in  the  country  and  to  be  treated  as  equal  citizens  under  law.  We  can  do  that  only  when  we  come  together  by  bridging  minor  political  and  personal  differences  and  when  we  no  longer  allow  ethnic  movements  to  dominate  the  country’s  politics.  After  all,  the  two  main  social  problems  of  the  country  –  an  inequitable  land  tenure  system  and  ethnic  inequality  –  which  might  have  served  to  justify  the  ethnic  movements  of  the  1970s  and  1980s  do  no  longer  justify  ethnic  separatism.  Whether  they  do  or  not,  however,  the  most  urgent  and  central  task  of  all  who  believe  in  Ethiopiawinnet  is  the  need  to  build  a  powerful  constituency  to  uphold  the  rights  of  Ethiopia  as  a  country  and  the  equal  treatment  of  its  citizens.  Unlike  in  the  past,  this  task  cannot  be  left  to  the  government  of  the  day.  This  is  what  makes  the  task  doubly  urgent  and  overwhelming. It  is  also  important  to  recognize  that  all  the  talk  by  all  and  sundry-­  individuals  and  political  parties  alike-­  about  democracy,  human  rights  and  the  rule  of  law  is  empty  sloganeering  unless  Ethiopia  and  Ethiopiawinnet  are  preserved.  Indeed  a  major  precondition  on  the  road  to  the  realization  of  these  values  is  national  unity  and  territorial  integrity.  This  point  is  so  basic  and  so  obvious  it  needs  little  or  no  elaboration. Finally,  it  must  be  pointed  out  that  Ethiopia  and  Ethiopiawinnet  are  unlikely  to  endure  so  long  as  the  constitution,  which  is  the  source  of  many  of  the  problems  briefly  identified,  is  either  scrapped  or  greatly  revised  to  do  away  with  the  pernicious  notion  of  ethnic  homelands.  This  is  not  the  place  to  go  into  the  details  of  constitution-­making  or  revising.    One  idea  that  must  occupy  a  prominent  place  in  such  an  effort,  however,  would  be  to  guarantee  that  all  inhabitants  of  a  region,  however  defined,  shall  be  entitled  to  all  the  privileges  and  rights  enumerated  in  the  constitution  on  an  equal  and  non-­discriminatory  basis.


 
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Posted by on December 19, 2013 in ENGLISH, POLITICS

 
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Ethnic segregation and fascism of TPLF the woyanes

 

 Ethiopian politics. Mr.Endalkachew guluma

Ethnic segregation idea was first sowed in the land of Ethiopia by fascist Italians. The country dividing and hate mongering ideology was defeated with the fascist Italians. Later on in 1991 this Ideology was re-introduced by TPLF the bandits of forest. The re-introduced language based segregation was been used by the regime past 23 years. The neo-fascist woyane successfully divided the country by language, culture and history. More over the hate mongering history lessons propaganda advanced to academic areas which teach completely false, clueless and evidence less lessons to the generation. This has created ethnic based racism aggression among the students, people and ethnics of Ethiopia. The well-known dictator regime of Ethiopia is the post-messenger and follower of fascist Italians. There are many similarities between the Tigrian liberation front and the invaders of 1936- 1941. The fascist dictator of Italy, during its occupation of Ethiopia, it partitioned the country in to six governorates. The governorates were as follow

Governorate

capital

Amhara

Gondar

Tigre and Eritrea

Asmara

Oromo-Sidama

Jimma

Bale and Harari

Harar

Shoa

Addis Ababa

Somalia-Ogden

Mogadishu

The Neo-fascist TPLF, Partitioned Ethiopia in to nine language based regions and two chartered cities. The regions are mainly based on the language and partially geographical regionalization. Language based includes Amhara,Tigray , Oromia ,Somalia, Benshangoul goumuz and Afar regions. The remaining regions seem to be divided according to their geographical location. Gambella region has more than one language. Anuak, Nuer OPO denka and Mezhengir are the languages of the region. In south Ethiopia there are many ethnicity and languages. So the regionalizers gave them the name SNNP and compressed them in to one region. The regions further divided in to zones, woredas (districts) and kebeles.To identify the individual’s ethnicity, individuals are registered according to their region, language and ethnicity. Their identity card or any legal documents required to fulfill these standards. This documentation provides strong base for discrimination of individuals during employment and public benefits. For instance an individual from Amhara or Afar region cannot work in public offices in Oromia region or cannot be elected as a public officer. The employment opportunity, owning land and property rights of the individuals are limited to their regions. This method of discriminating citizens based on their ethnicity comes from non-Ethiopian origin.  The technique of limiting the right of individuals to their regions and ethnicity was first devised by the Apartheid leaders of South Africa

During the apartheid segregation of races in South Africa, the ruling white party segregated and tried to eliminate blacks’ from areas where whites live and the parliament. Blacks were deprived South African citizenship and limited to their Ethnic based regions called Bantustans. Blacks were forced to live In the Bantustans and forcibly removed from their homes and property. South Africa’s black population was subjected to a massive program of forced relocation. This brings us to the implementation of Apartheid Bantustans in Ethiopia. The recent eviction of Amharic speaking Ethiopians from south Ethiopia and Benshoungoul gomouz is strategic Bantustan system applied on Amhara’s by TPLF. Ever since, the Ethiopian Bantustan system created, citizens deprived their right to employment, residence, access to common benefits and the associated things. In turn this resulted in a massive flow of young men power out of the country. The ethnic politics, hatred between ethnics, tribalism and chaos between ethnics are the results of Woyane Bantustan system. During the fascist Italian invasion Ethiopia was regionalized in to six governorates and in reign of TPLF the country is regionalized in to nine regions based on their ethnicity and languages. The chaos mongering regionalization of the country has created hatred between people, made a gap to misunderstand past political history of the country, reduced common sense, common value and caused underestimating unity in diversity. The TPLFs government main scheme to elongate its life span is destroying the national sense of Ethiopians and the feeling of being Ethiopian from the people. For this purpose ethnic politics based on language has become the target instrument. The national feeling of young generation has decreasing over half percent in compare to the past generation. Now days in the most part of the country the idea of being Ethiopian and Ethiopia considered as a Neftegna system followers, especially in Oromia, Somalia and Afar regions. Followers of ethicized politics often get their history education from the worst writers of history and ethnocentric politicians. They have a mission of making battle grounds between the ethnics of the country. I know the fact that there has always been ethnic marginalization, injustice and inequality in Ethiopia. But what happened in the past should not be used as an excuse to cause division and hatred now.

The ruling regime intentionally reduced national feeling from the generation. The generation taught to not value their country but their ethnicity. The increased hatred stress among different ethnics has doubled many times in recent years that were never known before in the history of Ethiopia. The year 2012, conflict between Gharri and Borena ethnics in south Ethiopia caused over 20,000 people to flee. Several pastoral tribes in south Ethiopia get in to conflict every year. Tribal zone conflict of the Suri and Dizi and others were the fruits of the woyanes language based ethnic policy. The separation of people is not only in a social and cultural area but also it is further penetrated in to spiritual environments too. Since recent years depending on the church language many different churches were built. Often it’s observed that members of churches with the same religion but different church language quarrel and fight with each other because of their language differences. So far I have been comparing the ruling regime of Ethiopia with fascist Italians and racist apartheid government of South Africa. It’s obvious that woyane Government copied and implemented the policy of Apartheid and fascists. For these governments their policy was right and honored. The same is true for woyanes, their ethnic centered policy is holy and sanctified for them. The current segregation policy of woyane is daily fueled up to the people through media stating the segregation is for freedom, equality and justice which the people deprived in the former political systems. The repeated false propaganda of woyane brainwashed the people. The woyanes context of freedom, is sustaining its power and eradicating any opponent and Equality is dividing the country in to tribes and creating hatred among these ethnicities. To continue divide and rule strategy, TPLF every year celebrates “ye bihereseboch qen”. Millions of dollars spent on the occasion and the main goal of the celebration is not to promote the unity in diversity or increase our bond but it’s aimed to pleasure the junta leaders. It’s illogical for woyane to celebrate the nations and nationalities day and make segregation among the people. Also it makes no sense since tens of thousands of our people killed and left on the land of Arab’s but back home the TPLF having party for diversities. Which comes first, saving lives of the abandoned citizens or having fake diversity party? The confused government of Ethiopia with self-contradicting policy kept on ethnic apartheid leading system. Consequently, I cannot see unified peaceful country as long as TPLF exists. If the situation is left to continue in this manner, there is no doubt that soon or later civil war would occur or Ethiopians would be abandoned and become stateless people. To combat the woyane from act of country destruction, all Ethiopians should become patriots like their forefather who defeated fascists and turned them in to ashes.  As the South African blacks struggle was not a question of political power, our struggle is not an interest of political supremacy but it is a fight for survival of our country, keeping it or losing it forever. Our forefathers did not fight fascist for the sake of political power but it was a question of existence, sovereignty, keeping our land or losing it forever. That was the spirit which gave power to our forefathers and black South Africans to defeat their enemies. Our invincible Ethiopiansim power should come out of us. Our arms should be heavy up on woyane. There should be no more suppression, killing and segregation. We should stand together to build our country’s unity in diversity.

From Ethiopian politics. Endalkachew gulma

 
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Posted by on December 18, 2013 in ENGLISH, POLITICS

 

ሌ/ጀነራል ገዛኢ አበራ ቤተሰቦቻቸውን ሰብሰበው ስዊድን ገቡ!!

ዘ-ሐበሻ) የጦር ሃይሎች የሎጂስቲክስ ዋና ሐላፊ የነበሩት ሌ/ጀነራል ገዛኢ አበራ ቤተሰቦቻቸውን ሰብስበው ስዊድን መግባታቸውን አብርሃ ደስታ ከመቀሌ ባስተላለፈው መረጃ አመለከተ። አብርሃም ገዛኢ ከሃገር የወጡት በጡረታ ለተገለሉ በኋላ ነው በማላት ”የህወሓት ሃላፊዎችማ የያዙትን ይዘው ከሀገር እየወጡ ነው። የተቸገሩ ታችኞቹ ካድሬዎች ናቸው። እንደ አለቆቻቸው ወደ ዉጭ በመኮብለል የግል ደህንነታቸው መጠበቅ አይችሉም።” ሲል ትችቱን አስፍሯል። ጄነራል ገዛኢ አበራ በሱዳን አቢ ግዛት ሰፍሮ የነበረውን የኢትዮጵያ ሰላም አስከባሪ ሃይል የመሩ ናቸው። ከአንድ ዓመት በፊት የግንቦት 7 የኢትዮጵያ የጥናት ቡድን ባሰራጨው ምስጢራዊ መረጃ ወያኔ የአገዛዝ እድሜውን ለማራዘም የትግራይ ተወላጆች የሆኑትን የጦር አለቆች ከፍተኛ የሆነ ሃብት እንዲያካብቱና ዘረፋ እንዲፈጽሙ ሁኔታዎችን ማመቻቸት ለተለያዩት የጦር መኮንኖች ሟቹ ጠ/ሚ/ር በ1989 ለአ/አበባ አስተዳደርና ለመከላከያ ሚ/ር መ/ቤት ለ25 የወያኔ የጦር መኮንኖች፣ ለእያንዳንዳቸው በሽልማት በአዲስ አበባ ውስጥ 500 ካሬ ሜትር 1ኛ ደረጃ መሬት እንዲሰጣቸው ትእዛዝ በሰጡት መሰረት ይህን መሬት የተቀበሉት ሌ/ጄነራል ገዛኢ አበራ በወር 170 ሺህ ብር የሚከራይ ቤት ቦሌ አካባቢ ሠርተው እንደሚያከራዩ ተጋልጦ ነበር። Read the rest of this entry »

 
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Posted by on September 22, 2013 in AMHARIC, POLITICS

 

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