Monday, April 22, 2013

The Audacity of Evil in Ethiopia

    
Jailed Ethiopian journalist Reeyot Alemu named winner of 2013by Alemayehu G. Mariam
Triumph of Evil?
Imprisoned Ethiopian journalist Reeyot Alemu has been named the winner of the 2013 UNESCO-Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize.
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing”, said Edmund Burke. But what happens when evil triumphs over a good young woman journalist named Reeyot Alemu in Ethiopia? Do good men and women turn a blind eye, plug their ears, turn their backs and stand in silence with pursed lips?
In an extraordinary letter dated April 10, 2013, the Committee to Protect Journalists pled with Berhan Hailu, “Minister of Justice” in Ethiopia, on behalf of the imprisoned 32-year old journalist urging that she be provided urgent medical care and spared punishment in solitary confinement at the filthy Meles Zenawi Prison in Kality just outside the capital Addis Ababa.
Prison authorities have threatened Reeyot with solitary confinement for two months as punishment for alleged bad behavior toward them and threatening to publicize human rights violations by prison guards, according to sources close to the journalist who spoke to the International Women’s Media Foundation on condition of anonymity.CPJ has independently verified the information. Reeyot has also been denied access to adequate medical treatment after she was diagnosed with a tumor in her breast…
Last week Reeyot was declared winner of the “UNESCO / Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize 2013.” That award recognizes “a person, organization or institution that has made an outstanding contribution to the defence and/or promotion of press freedom anywhere in the world, especially when this has been achieved in the face of danger.” The $25,000 prize will be awarded on the occasion of World Press Freedom Day on May 3, 2013.
In May 2012, Reeyot received the prestigious International Women’s Media Foundation “2012 Courage in Journalism Award for “her commitment to work for independent media when the prospect of doing so became increasingly dangerous, her refusal to self-censor in a place where that practice is standard, and her unwillingness to apologize for truth-telling, even though contrition could win her freedom.”
In December 2012, Reeyot, along with three other courageous independent journalists, received Human Rights Watch’s prestigious Hellman/Hammett Award for 2012 “in recognition of their efforts to promote free expression in Ethiopia, one of the world’s most restricted media environments.”
Reeyout Alemu is Ethiopia’s press freedom heroine
In May 2012, when Reeyot received the IWMF’s award, I wrote a commentary entitled, “Reeyot Alemu: Young Heroine of Ethiopian Press Freedom” recounting some of Reeyot’s courageous acts of journalism and denouncing the abuse she received at the hands of those in power in Ethiopia. In June 2011, Reeyot and her co-defendant journalist Woubshet Taye were arrested on trumped up charges of “terrorism” and held incommunicado in the infamous Meles Zenawi Prison. Reeyot’s arrest occurred just after she had written a column in a weekly paper criticizing the late Meles Zenawi’s harebrained fundraising campaign for the so-called Grand Renaissance Dam over the Blue Nile. That column seemed to have angered the cantankerous and irascible Meles. Reeyot also skewered Meles’ sacred cow, the half-baked “five-year growth and transformation plan” (which I critiqued in “The Fakeonomics of Meles Zenawi in June 2011) . In September 2012, Reeyot and Woubshet were charged with “conspiracy to commit terrorist acts and participation in a terrorist organization” under Meles Zenawi’s cut-and-paste anti-terrorism law.
Reeyot’s trial in Meles’ kangaroo court was a template for miscarriage of justice. She was held in detention for three months with no access to legal counsel. She was denied counsel during interrogation. The kangaroo court refused to investigate her allegations of torture, mistreatment and denial of medical care in pre-trial detention. The evidence of “conspiracy” consisted of intercepted emails and wiretapped telephone conversations she had about peaceful protests and change with other journalists abroad. Her articles posted on various opposition websites were “introduced” as “evidence” of conspiracy.
Human Rights Watch was confounded by the idiocy of the terrorism charges: “According to the charge sheet, the evidence consisted primarily of online articles critical of the government and telephone discussions notably regarding peaceful protest actions that do not amount to acts of terrorism. Furthermore, the descriptions of the charges in the initial charge sheet did not contain even the basic elements of the crimes of which the defendants are accused….”
Amnesty International denounced the judgment of the kangaroo court: “There is no evidence that [Reeyot and the other independent journalists] are guilty of any criminal wrongdoing. We believe that they are prisoners of conscience, prosecuted because of their legitimate criticism of the government. They must be released immediately and unconditionally.”
PEN American Center “protested the harsh punishment handed down to” Reeyot and Woubshet and demanded their “immediate and unconditional release.” PEN asserted the two journalists “have been sentenced solely in relation to their peaceful exercise of their right to freedom of expression, in violation of Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and Article 9 of the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights, to which Ethiopia is a signatory.”
The International Women’s Media Foundation saw the kangaroo court trial as an intimidation tactic against all independent women journalists: “The fact that the Ethiopian Government pursues and persecutes courageous, brave and professional women journalists does not bode well particularly for young women who may be interested in journalism. As a result, women’s voices (as reporters, editors, journalists, decision-making chambers) are rarely heard and women’s issues are often relegated to secondary position.”
Following Reeyot’s kangaroo court conviction, her father told an interviewer his daughter will not apologize, seek a pardon or apply for clemency. “As a father, would you rather not advise your daughter to apologize?”
This is perhaps one of the most difficult questions a parent can face. As any one of us who are parents would readily admit, there is an innate biological chord that attaches us to our kids. We wish nothing but the best for them. We try as much as humanly possible to keep them from harm…. Whether or not to beg for clemency is her right and her decision. I would honor and respect whatever decision she makes… To answer your specific question regarding my position on the issue by the fact of being her father, I would rather have her not plead for clemency, for she has not committed any crime.
Meles offered Reeyot her freedom if she agreed to snitch on her colleagues and help railroad them to prison. She turned him down flat and got herself railroaded into solitary confinement. Even in prison, Reeyot remained defiant as she informed IWMF: “I believe that I must contribute something to bring a better future. Since there are a lot of injustices and oppressions in Ethiopia, I must reveal and oppose them in my articles.”
The problem of evil in Ethiopia
Over the hundreds of uninterrupted weekly commentaries I have written over the years, I have rarely strayed much from my professional fields of law and politics. I make an exception in this commentary by indulging in philosophical musings on evil, a subject that has puzzled me for the longest time (and one I expect to ruminate over from time to time in the future) but one I never considered opining about in my public commentaries. I am mindful that there is the risk of sounding pedantic when one reflects on “Big Questions”, but pedantry is not intended here.
My simple definition of evil is any human act or omission that harms human beings. For instance, convicting an innocent young journalist on trumped up “terrorism” charges, sentencing her to a long prison term and throwing her into solitary confinement is evil because such acts cause great physical and psychological pain and suffering. Ordering the cold-blooded massacre of hundreds of unarmed demonstrators is evil because that act arbitrarily deprives innocent people of their God-given right to life. Forcibly displacing indigenous populations from their ancestral homes and selling their land to outsiders is evil because that act destroys not only the livelihood of those people but also their history and social fabric. Trashing the rights of individuals secured in the law of nations is evil because it is a crime against humanity and an affront to human decency and all norms of civilization. Discriminating against a person based on ethnicity, language and religion is evil because it deprives the victims of a fundamental right of citizenship. Albert Camus argued evil is anything that prevents solidarity between people and disables them from recognizing the rights or values of other human beings. Stealing elections in broad daylight and trying to deceive the world that one won an election by 99.6 percent is evil because such an act is an unconscionable lie and theft of the voice of the people.

Thousands of Ethiopian refugees held for ransom in Saudi Arabia

Thousands of Ethiopian refugees are being held captive for ransom in the border regions of Saudi Arabia and Yemen, according to Mohammed Najad, a Yemeni security official.

Making the situation worse are Saudi news channels who have aired a series of documentaries in late February that depict Ethiopian refugees as gangs involved in illicit activities.

As a result, many Saudis and Yemeni vigilante groups have sprung up near their common border, under the guise of defending their territories but in reality, most are there to take Ethiopian migrants captive for ransom.

Fleeing from economic hardship and a repressive dictatorship in Ethiopia, the Middle East is seen as a place where young Ethiopians can earn a higher standard of living to support their families back home.

Despite the dangerous risks involved, over 84,000 Ethiopian refugees cross the traitorous waters of the Gulf of Aden each year, according to the United Nation’s refugee agency.

Once in Yemen, most Ethiopians head straight for the Yemeni-Saudi border, where bandits, vigilantes, and smugglers frequently hold migrants captive and demand thousands of dollars in ransom for their release.

A recent report by UNHCR reveals thousands of Ethiopian men, women and children are being held captive for extortion on both sides of the Yemeni-Saudi border by armed criminal gangs and vigilantes.

The gangs use rape and torture against their victims to make their families pay for their release. Those who fail to have their ransom paid are killed and their organs harvested for sale on the black market.

“It was horrible. If your ransom wasn't paid, they tortured and raped you,” recounted one of the victims, who requested anonymity. “I am lucky I was able to flee. My friends who came with me were killed."




Ethiopian refugee tied to a tree by his Arab captors in Saudi Arabia

Meles Zenawi's Legacy: A failed Ethiopian State

Following the death of the late Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, western columnist, analysts, and diplomats weighed in on how to define his legacy. Unfortunately, within a matter of hours of his death, it became apparent the truth of his destructive legacy was being buried in a pile of lies.

Notwithstanding his diminutive size, Meles was your typical African bigman. Since coming to power in a military coup on May 28, 1991, Meles proclaimed an Albanian-style administration and promised "three meals a day" in a country ravaged by successive man-made famines.

Did he deliver? No.

After 21 years of his administration, millions of Ethiopians are still starving; there is no democracy to speak of; human rights abuses, including torture and extrajudicial killings have become the norm, as a result, over 320,000 Ethiopians flee the country annually — the highest figure in Africa.

In the end, for all Meles' pretensions of ideological revolution and professed commitment to ruling within democratic and institutional frameworks, his regime became an old-fashioned ruthless dictatorship, who only handed out key security posts to his kins and trusted loyalists.

Instead of bombarding readers with a long-winded explanation on why Meles' tenure was so destructive, we thought it would be more insightful to use credible data to best sum up his legacy. After all, numbers never lie, people with opinions do.


Meles' legacy on Health and Education

1) A staggering 70% of Ethiopian adults can not read or write.

2) Life expectancy in Ethiopia remains at a dismal 54 year average, according to the World Health Organization (WHO)

3) According to the WHO, 15% of Ethiopian adults (12 million people) suffer from mental illness. Yet there is only one psychiatric clinic in the country.

Meles' Legacy on Addis Ababa:


4) According to the UN, Addis Ababa has one of the highest densities of slum dwellers in the world.

5) One in twelve women in Addis Ababa (150,000) are involved in prostitution, according to the government's own statistics.

6) 150,000 children in Addis Ababa live on the streets, according to UNICEF

Meles' Legacy on Telecommunication and Press

7) In order to suppress dissidents, only 1.1% Ethiopians have access to the internet, the lowest figure in Africa.

8) Less than 17% Ethiopians have a mobile phone, the second lowest rate in Africa.

9) Since 2001, at least 79 journalists have been forced to flee Ethiopia the highest figure worldwide according to the Committee to Protect Journalist.

Meles' Economic legacy:

10) Contrary to its claim of having a runaway double-digit GDP growth rate for a decade, the United Nations ranks Ethiopia as the second poorest country in the world.

11) As a result of Ethiopia's high employment figures, over 320,000 Ethiopian refugees flee the country each year the highest figure in Africa.

12) Since 2001, Ethiopia lost over 3.3 billion to corruption, bribery and kickbacks, according to the latest Global Financial Integrity study.

Meles' notorious human rights violations:

13) In 2003, Meles ordered the massacres of over 400 people belonging to the Anuak ethnic group in Ethiopia's Gambella region.

14) In 2005, after Ethiopians came out to demonstrate the rigged elections, Meles security forces shot and killed 193 citizens, wounded 763 more and detained 50,000 people.

15) Since 2007, the Meles-led regime is responsible for the deaths of at least 100,000 civilians in the Ogaden region of Ethiopia, making it the world's largest ongoing genocide.
Dictator Meles Zenawi - 1956-2012 (57) - Photo: AFP
Meles Zenawi's legacy: a failed Ethiopian state


Meles' Legacy: over 150,000 Ethiopian children sleep in the streets of Addis Ababa

Study Finds Ethiopian Government Extremely Corrupt

Ethiopia lost nearly 3.3 billion dollars to corruption     Ethiopia lost nearly 3.3 billion to corruption, bribery and kickbacks in 2009, according to the latest Global Financial Integrity study.

In its report titled, Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries over the Decade Ending 2009, over 11.7 billion dollars were lost through illicit practices between the years of 2000-2009.

The Washington-based research and advocacy organization revealed Ethiopia had more money siphoned away to illicit flow than it had earned through exports.

More troubling for western donors is the study finds the illicit flow out of Ethiopia has increased over the previous years. Due to the secretive nature of the regime's financial activities, the full scope of devastation may be underestimated, observers noted.

Compounding the situation for the average citizen is mismanagement and overspending on construction and military hardware by an increasingly belligerent despot has created a situation where inflation levels have stayed in the 25-40% range for two consecutive years.

Moreover, the latest Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index published in 2010 ranks Ethiopia among the most corrupt governments, giving the Horn of African state a dismal score of 2.7 out 10.

It is to be recalled, in 2008, the central bank of Ethiopia exposed its incompetence after it purchased 10.6 million dollars worth of gold bars that turned out to be steel and stone painted to look like gold.




Dictator Meles Zenawi's Corruption

የሕወሓት/ኢሕአዴግ መንግሥት ከፍተኛ የዘር ማጥፋት ዘመቻ እያካሄደ ነው


ከኢትዮጵያ ዴሞክራሲያዊ ኃይሎች የጋራ እንቅስቃሴ አስተባባሪ ኮሚቴ የተሰጠ መግለጫ
Ethiopian flag, Green, yellow and red
ሚያዝያ 12 ቀን 2005 ዓ.ም. (April 20, 2013)
ኢትዮጵያ የብዙ ብሔረሰቦችና ሀይማኖት ተከታዮች ሀገር ናት። እነዚህ ብሔረሰቦች ለብዙ ዘመናት በአንድነትና በሕብረት ተደጋግፈው፤ ተጋብተውና ተስማምተው ኖረዋል። ከውጭ የመጣባቸውን ጠላትም በተባበረ ክንዳቸው መክተው በመመለስ በዓለም ታዋቂ ታረክ አስመዝግበዋል። በአሁኑ ወቅት ከመሀከላቸው የበቀሉ ተንኮለኞች ለፓለቲካ ሥልጣንና ለግል ጥቅም ማራመጃ ሲሉ የሚያካሂዱትን የመከፋፈል እርምጃ የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ በተከታታይ እያከሸፈው ቢሆንም፤ በአሁኑ ወቅት በጦር ኃይል እያስገደዱ በአንድ ብሔረስብ ላይ ያተኮረ አስከፊና አደገኛ የዘር ማጥፋት ተግባር እያከናወኑ ይገኛሉ።
ይህንን ሰላም ወዳድና በሰላም የኖረ ሕዝብ እርስ በራሱ በማጋጨትና አንዱ በአንዱ ላይ እንዲነሳሳ የትግራይ ሕዝብ ነፃ አውጭ ግንባር/ሕወሓት መሪዎች ከፅንሳቸው ጀምረው በፖሊሲ ደረጃ ነድፈው እስካሁን በማስፈጸም ላይ ይገኛሉ። ወደፊትም በሥልጣናቸው ለመቆየትና ከሕዝብ የሚዘርፉትን ንብረት ካለምንም ተቃውሞ ለማካሄድ ወገኖቻችንን በዘርና በቋንቋ በመለያየት ለዘመናት ከኖሩበት አካባቢ ጭካኔ በተመላበት ሁኔታ ሆን ተብሎ በተቀየስ የዘር ማጥራት ፖሊሲ አማካኝነት ለጊዜው ከተወሰኑ ክልሎች በማፈናቀል ላይ ናቸው።
የትግራይ ሕዝብ ነፃ አውጭ ግንባር ከአመስራረቱ ጀምሮ በተለይም በአማራው ኅብረተሰብ ላይ ያነጣጠረ የዘር ጥላቻ ፓሊሲ በተለያየ መልኩ ሲያስፈጽምና ተግባራዊ ሲያደርግ ቆይቷል። ይህም ድርጊቱ በአጭሩ ካልተቀጨ በቀር በደቡብ አፍሪካና በሩዋንዳ ሀገሮች ከተካሄዱት የዘር ማጥፋት ዘመቻዎች የማይተናነስ ዕልቂት በአገራችን ሊደርስ እንደሚችል መገመተ አያዳግትም። በቅርቡ ከቤንሻንጉል-ጉሙዝ ክልል ወደ 8000 የሚሆኑ ኢትዮጵያውያን የአማራ ተወላጆች በመሆናቸው ብቻ ከሚኖሩበት አካባቢ ለቀው እንዲወጡ መደረጋቸው የዚህ አንዱ ማስረጃ ነው። ከእነዚህ ውስጥም በርካታ ሕፃናት፣ እርጉዞችና አዛውንቶች እንደሚገኙበት ታውቆአል። ተፈናቃይ ወገኖቻችን ያፈሩትን ንብረት እንኳን ሳይሸጡና ሳያሰባስቡ በመሣሪያ ኃይል ተገደው እንዲባረሩ በመደረጉ ብዙዎች ለከፋ አደጋና እስከ ሞት የሚያደርስ ጉዳት ተዳርገዋል።
ባለፈው ዓመትም እንደዚሁ በተመሳሳይ ሁኔታ ብዛታቸው 20,000 በላይ የሆኑ የአማራ ተወላጆች ከደቡብ ክልል ጉራ ፈርዳ ወረዳ ተፈናቅለው በከፍተኛ ችግር ውስጥ ወድቀው በያሉበት ከተበታተኑ በኋላ፤ በአሁኑ ወቅት የት እንዳሉና በምን ሁኔታ ላይ እንደሚገኙ በትክክል አይታወቅም።የተፈናቃዮቹን ስቆቃ ለኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብም ሆነ ለዓለም ኅብረተሰብ ለማሳወቅ ጋዜጠኞችም ሆኑ የተቃዋሚ ድርጅት ተወካዮች ተከታትለው እንዳይዘግቡ በአካባቢው በሚገኙ ካድሬዎቹና ታጣቂዎች አማካኝነት ከተፈናቀሉት ተጎጅዎች ጋር ግኑኝነት እንዳይኖር ዘረኛው መንግሥት ከልክሏል። በአንድ ሕብረተሰብ ላይ ይህንን የመሰለ አረመኔያዊ ግፍ ሲፈጸም ዝም ብሎ መመልከት በታሪክ ተወቃሽ ከማድረጉም በላይ፤ በተለይ ግን በማወቅም ሆነ ባለማወቅ የድርጊቱ ተባባሪ የሆነ ሁሉ ወደፊት በሕግ ተጠያቂ እንደሚሆን ሊታወቅ ይገባል።
የኢትዮጵያ መንግሥት ተብዬውም ሆነ የተባበሩት መንግሥታት በአንድ ሕዝብ ላይ በዘር ቆጠራና በቋንቋ ምክንያት ነጥሎ ጥቃት ማድረስ በሕግ የሚያስጠይቅ መሆኑን የሚደነግግ ጠንካራ ሕግና የማስፈጸሚያ ደንቦች አሉት። በተለይም ኢትዮጵያ ይህንን የተባበሩት መንግሥታት ሕግ ተቀብላ በፊርማዋ ያጸደቀች በመሆኑ፤ የሕወሓት/ኢሕአዴግ መሪዎች በቀጥታ በዘር ማጥፋት ወንጀል ተጠያቂዎች ናቸው። ለጊዜው በጉራ ፈርዳና በቤንሻንጉል-ጉሙዝ አካባቢዎች የተፈጸሙት አረመኔያዊ ተግባራት በአጋጣሚ ይፋ ሆነው ወጡ እንጂ፤ በሌሎች አካባቢዎች በስውር የተፈናቀሉ ከነቤታቸው በእሳት የተቃጠሉ፤ ገደል የተጣሉ፤ በየጫካው ለዱር አራዊት ቀለብ የተደረጉ እንዳሉ የታወቀ ነው። በአንድ ወቅት የሕወሓት መንግሥት የሕዝብ ስታቲስቲክስ መ/ቤት ዲሬክተር በ2000 ዓ.ም. በተደረገው የሕዝብ ቆጠራ ከ2 ሚልዮን በላይ የሚሆኑ አማራዎች መረጃው ከሚያሳየን ውጭ የት እንደገቡ አናውቅም በማለት ለፓርላማ ተብዬው ቀርበው አስረድተዋል። በዚህ መረጃ ላይ መንግሥት እስካሁን ይህን ያህል ብዛት ያለው ወገኖቻችን የት እንደገቡ የሰጠው መግለጫም ሆነ ማብራሪያ የለም።
ሕወሓት/ኢሕአዴግ ይህንን በአማራው ላይ የሚያካሂደውን የዘር ማጥፋት ተግባሩን በዚህ ብቻ ያቆማል ብሎ ማሰብ የዋህነት ነው።የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ እነኝህን የሕዝብ ጠላቶች በቃኝ ብሎ ከሥልጣን እስካላስወገደ ድረስ፤ ዘመቻው በተጠናከረና የተለያዩ ዘዴዎችን በመጠቀም እንደሚቀጥል የተረጋገጠ ነው። ከአማራው ቀጥሎ የኦሮሞው፤ ከኦሮሞው ቀጥሎ የወላይታው እያለ ይቀጥላል። ምክንያቱም የዘረኛው መንግሥት ዕድሜ የሚራዘመው ወይንም የመኖሩ ምሰሶ የተመሠረተው ወገንን ከወገን በማናቆርና በማጋጨት ላይ በመሆኑ ነው። ይህን አስከፊና አረመኔያዊ ተግባሩን ለማስቆምም ሆነ ለመግታት የሚቻለው የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ የተነሱበትን የጥፋት ሴራ በሚገባ ተገንዝቦ ይህንን አደገኛና ጠባብ የዘረኛ ቡድን ከሥልጣን አስወግዶ በምትኩ በሕዝባችን ፈቃድና ሙሉ ፍላጎት ላይ ብቻ የተመሠረተ እውነተኛ መንግሥት ሲያቆም ብቻ ነው።
ይህ ጉዳይ የሚመለከተውም ሁሉንም የኢትዮጵያ የሕብረተሰብ ክፍል በመሆኑ ሁላችንም በቋንቋ፣በጎሳና በሃይማኖት ሳንለያይ በአንድነት ተነስተን በመቆም በተባበረ ኃይል የሕወሓት/ኢሕአዴግን አምባገነናዊ ሥርዓት በማስወገድ በፍትሐዊና ዴሞክራሲያዊ ሥርዓት ለመተካት በጋራ መሥራትና መታገል አለብን።
ለዚህም የኢትዮጵያ ዴሞክራሲያዊ ኃይሎች የጋራ እንቅስቃሴ አስተባባሪ ኮሚቴ በሚቻለው ኃይሉ ሁሉ የዘረኛውን ቡድን እኩይ ተግባራት ለማጋለጥና የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ መሠረታዊ ዲሞክራሲያዊ መብቶቹን ተጎናጽፎ በአሸናፊነት እንዲወጣ የበኩሉን አስተዋፅዖ ማድረጉን ይቀጥላል።
ኢትዮጵያ በክብር ለዘላለም ትኑር!
የኢትዮጵያ ዴሞክራሲያዊ ኃይሎች የጋራ እንቅስቃሴ አባላት፥
ጥምረት ለነፃነት ለእኩልነትና ለፍትህ በኢትዮጵያ
ብሩህ ኢትዮጵያ ሕዝባዊ ንቅናቄ (ብሩህ)
የኢትዮጵያ ድንበር ጉዳይ ኮሚቴ
የኢትዮጵያ ብሄራዊ የሽግግር ምክር ቤት
የኢትዮጵያ ሕዝብ የጋራ ትግል ሸንጎ (ሸንጎ)
ኢትዮጵያዊነት፤ የዜጎች መብት ማስከበሪያ ጉባዔ
ዓለም አቀፍ ሕዝባዊ ንቅናቄ ለለውጥ በኢትዮጵያ (በቃ)
የኦሮሞ ነፃ አውጪ ግንባር (በጀ/ል ከማል ገልቹ የሚመራው)

Bewketu Seyoum: Collection of poems

 

Bewketu Seyoum is a young Ethiopian writer from Gojjam, northwest of Addis Ababa. He studied psychology at Addis Ababa University and published his first collection of poems, Nwari Alba Gojowoch (Unmanned Houses) in 2000, a year after graduating. (ESAT video) Read more…

Since then, he has published two further poetry collections and two novels, and has narrated short stories on CD. In 2008 he received the best young writer award of Ethiopia. Some of his poetry has appeared in Modern Poetry in Translation (The Big Green Issue, 2008) and Callaloo (2011). Read more…
Source: Poetry Parnassus

I am an Amara “ene Amara negne”

by Yilma Bekele
Ich bin ein Berliner. - “I am a Berliner” Those words were spoken by President John F. Kennedy on June 26, 1963 in West Berlin. He said that to show solidarity with the people of Berlin after the East Germans with the approval of the Soviet Union erected the Berlin Wall to prevent their captive citizens from fleeing to the west.
Tell me my fellow Ethiopian. What do you see in the picture above? The passage I like the most is when he said “Two thousand years ago, the proudest boast was civis romanus sum ["I am a Roman citizen"]. Today, in the world of freedom, the proudest boast is “Ich bin ein Berliner!”… All free men, wherever they may live, are citizens of Berlin, and therefore, as a free man, I take pride in the words “Ich bin ein Berliner!”
Tell me my fellow Ethiopian. What do you see in the picture?
Today it feels me with so much pride to say all Ethiopians where ever we live say in unison “ene Amara negene” Injustice against any of Ethiopia’s children is injustice to all of her children. We feel each other’s pain. When one Ethiopian is marginalized, when a single Ethiopian is put in harm’s way it is an affront to each one of us and we all suffer. It was none other than Martin Luther King Jr. who took injustice to heart when he declared “he who passively accepts evil is as much involved in it as he who helps to perpetrate it. He who accepts evil without protesting against it is really cooperating with it.”
Tell me my fellow Ethiopian. What do you see in the picture? It is a picture of people huddled together. It must be night time, what are they doing outside in the cold? Why are they sad? There is no mistaking that they are our people. I can tell that Ethiopian face from a mile away. Look at that slender chiseled face, kind eyes and welcome demeanor. They are our sisters, brothers, mothers or fathers sitting on bare soil, with no chairs and it is difficult to tell whether it is outdoors or inside. There is no question they seem to be confused, tired, and sad. Notices the young girl on the left with barefoot and looking resigned and observe the father on top right holding his chin and just seeming to wonder about the dire situation. I want you to see the child on his mother’s lap looking sad and his mother looking straight at the photographer not for pity but seems to be saying ‘take a good look,

The Audacity of Evil in Ethiopia

by Alemayehu G. Mariam
Triumph of Evil?
Imprisoned Ethiopian journalist Reeyot Alemu has been named the winner of the 2013 UNESCO-Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize.
Jailed Ethiopian journalist Reeyot Alemu named winner of 2013“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing”, said Edmund Burke. But what happens when evil triumphs over a good young woman journalist named Reeyot Alemu in Ethiopia? Do good men and women turn a blind eye, plug their ears, turn their backs and stand in silence with pursed lips?
In an extraordinary letter dated April 10, 2013, the Committee to Protect Journalists pled with Berhan Hailu, “Minister of Justice” in Ethiopia, on behalf of the imprisoned 32-year old journalist urging that she be provided urgent medical care and spared punishment in solitary confinement at the filthy Meles Zenawi Prison in Kality just outside the capital Addis Ababa.
Prison authorities have threatened Reeyot with solitary confinement for two months as punishment for alleged bad behavior toward them and threatening to publicize human rights violations by prison guards, according to sources close to the journalist who spoke to the International Women’s Media Foundation on condition of anonymity.CPJ has independently verified the information. Reeyot has also been denied access to adequate medical treatment after she was diagnosed with a tumor in her breast…
Last week Reeyot was declared winner of the “UNESCO / Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize 2013.” That award recognizes “a person, organization or institution that has made an outstanding contribution to the defence and/or promotion of press freedom anywhere in the world, especially when this has been achieved in the face of danger.” The $25,000 prize will be awarded on the occasion of World Press Freedom Day on May 3, 2013.
In May 2012, Reeyot received the prestigious International Women’s Media Foundation “2012 Courage in Journalism Award for “her commitment to work for independent media when the prospect of doing so became increasingly dangerous, her refusal to self-censor in a place where that practice is standard, and her unwillingness to apologize for truth-telling, even though contrition could win her freedom.”
In December 2012, Reeyot, along with three other courageous independent journalists, received Human Rights Watch’s prestigious Hellman/Hammett Award for 2012 “in recognition of their efforts to promote free expression in Ethiopia, one of the world’s most restricted media environments.”
Reeyout Alemu is Ethiopia’s press freedom heroine