Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Interpol: 38 suspects arrested in Ethiopia, 328 victims of human trafficking rescued

 
Human, drugs and arms traffickers targeted in operations across Eastern and Southern Africa
KENYA/ZIMBABWE - An operation across Eastern and Southern Africa targeting a range of cross-border crimes has resulted in the rescue of human trafficking victims, the seizure of drugs, guns and stolen vehicles and the recovery of smuggled goods including ivory and diamonds.
Codenamed Usalama – which means ‘safety’ – the operation was led by the Eastern Africa Police Chiefs Cooperation Organization (EAPCCO) and the Southern African Regional Police Chiefs Cooperation Organization (SARPCCO) with support from INTERPOL.
Among the initial results was the rescue of more than 300 victims of human trafficking and 38 suspects arrested in Ethiopia, with a further 28 human trafficking victims rescued and 15 suspects arrested in Uganda. The operation also resulted in the identification of hundreds of illegal immigrants.
AK-47s were among the guns recovered in Tanzania and Uganda with weapons also seized in Burundi and Swaziland. Thousands of checks against INTERPOL’s stolen vehicle database resulted in a series of matches for vehicles reported stolen from countries including Japan, Malaysia, South Africa and the United Kingdom.
Other results include the recovery of 12 elephant tusks in Mozambique and Tanzania, the arrest of a woman in possession of six kg of heroin at Nairobi’s international airport, the destruction of some 100 acres of cannabis plantations in South Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda, and the identification of a suspected diamond smuggler in Botswana.
“My experience as a police chief is that ultimately every crime is transnational and cross-border in nature. This calls for the need to work together more than ever to solve national and transnational crimes,” said General Kale Kayihura, Inspector General of Police and Chairperson of EAPCCO.
“The success of operation Usalama shows that we can and must work together, not only at EAPCCO/SARPCCO regional level, but also at pan-African level if we are to succeed,” concluded Mr Kayihura.
Saidi Ally Mwema, Inspector General of Tanzania Police and SARPCCO Chairperson said: “The unique joint SARPCCO/EAPCCO Operation Usalama was a clear success with its impact shown by the results.
“The operation brought together law enforcement officials from customs, immigration and the Tanzania Intelligence Security Service with the police as the lead agency. We can look forward to repeating operations of this nature in the future which show that together as regions we can combat crime even more effectively,” added Mr Mwema.
Supported by INTERPOL’s Regional Bureaus in Nairobi and Harare, a series of pre-operational briefings were held to share intelligence on national and regional crime issues, identify trends and provide training on INTERPOL’s global tools and services used during the three-day (16 – 18 July) operation.
“Operation Usalama was a strong, coordinated response from law enforcement to tackle the serious challenges posed by transnational crimes in Eastern and Southern Africa,” said Francis Rwego, Head of INTERPOL’s Regional Bureau in Nairobi.
“Hundreds of human trafficking victims have been saved, drugs and guns taken off the streets and serious criminals arrested through this operation, made possible through the leadership of EAPCCO and SARPCCO,” added Mr Rwego.
“The dedication of all the law enforcement officers who took part in Operation Usalama led to its success and demonstrates the effectiveness of national and regional cooperation,” said Chilika Simfukwe, Head of INTERPOL’s Regional Bureau in Harare.
“INTERPOL stands ready to provide its continued assistance and support to law enforcement across the region and beyond,” concluded Mr Simfukwe.
Investigations are continuing with updated results to be reported during the forthcoming EAPCCO and SARPCCO meetings.
Participating EAPCCO member countries: Burundi, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Rwanda, Seychelles, South Sudan, Sudan, Tanzania and Uganda.
Participating SARPCCO member countries: Botswana, Malawi, Mauritius, Mozambique, Swaziland, Tanzania and Zambia.

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1. መግቢያ:
ካለፈው ሁለት አመት ግድም ጀምሮ “መንግሥት በዲናችን ጣልቃ አይግባብን” በሚል ሰፊ ማእቀፍ ውስጥ በሰላማዊ መንገድ በኢትዮጵያውያን ሙስሊሞች እየተደረገ ያለው ትግል፤Ginbot 7 movement chairman Dr. Berhanu Nega በኦርቶዶክስ ቤተክርስቲያን ውስጥ ደግሞ ሁለት አስርት አመታትን ያስቆጠረ ከቀኖናው ውጭ መንግሥት የቤተክርስቲያኑን መሪ አይምረጥብን በሚል በመሰረታዊ ሀሳቡ ከሙስሊሙ ጥያቄ ጋር ተመሳሳይ በሆነ ጉዳይ በተነሳ ውዝግብ ቤተክርስቲያኒቱ ለሁለት ተከፍላ ያለችበት ሁኔታና በዚህም ምክንያት በመንግሥት የተገፋው “ስደተኛው ሲኖዶስ” በራሱ ላይ የደረሰውን ሁከት በመቃወም የሚያደርጋቸው እንቅስቃሴዎች ተዳምረው ምናልባት ለመጀመሪያ ጊዜ ጤነኛ የሆነው የሀይማኖትና የፖለቲካ ግንኙነት ምንድን ነው? ወይንም ደግሞ የመንግሥትና የሀይማኖት ግንኙነት ምን መሆን አለበት? የሚለውን ጥያቄ ጉዳዩ በቀጥታ ከሚመለከታቸው የሀይማኖቱ ተከታዮች አልፎ ያጠቃላይ የፖለቲካ ማህበረሰቡ (የሀገሩ) ትልቅ የመወያያ አርዕስት እየሆነ ነው:: ይህ ጉዳይ ግን ጥቅል ከሆነ ያመለካከትና የንድፈ ሀሳብ ጥያቄ በተጨማሪ ጥልቅና አስቸኳይ የሆነ የተግባር ፖለቲካ ጥያቄም ነው ይዞ የመጣው::
ሙሉውን ለማንበብ እዚህ ይጫኑ…

Adoptive parents on trial in Ethiopian girl’s death

The trial of Larry and Carri Williams in Skagit County has revealed details of alleged child abuse, and highlighted gaps in protection of adopted children in Washington
Seattle Times staff reporter
Immanuel Williams’ face barely showed over the witness stand.
Many in the courtroom could see only the top of his chair swivel slightly and his eyebrows scrunch up in confusion.
Sign-language interpreters relayed questions to the deaf 12-year-old boy, and the answers flashed from his fingertips.
“Very often that happened,” he signed, “that I went without food.”
Immanuel’s adoptive parents, Larry and Carri Williams, of Sedro-Woolley, are on trial in Skagit County Superior Court, charged with homicide by abuse, manslaughter and child assault for allegedly abusing Immanuel and their adoptive daughter, Hana, and causing her death. They have entered pleas of not guilty.
The couple adopted both children from Ethiopia in 2008. Three years later, Hana was found dead of hypothermia, face down in the mud, in the family’s backyard, her malnourished body covered in scratches and bruises. She was about 13 years old.
The case has highlighted the gaps in oversight of adoptions in Washington and drawn attention to the challenges that some Ethiopian adoptees and their new parents may face. Parents and leaders in Washington’s adoption system are closely following the trial, as are Seattle-area Ethiopians, who have attended proceedings every day, almost as a vigil.
After China, most children adopted into the United States from abroad now come from Ethiopia, according to the State Department. Disease, poverty and fraud have increasingly brought children to Ethiopian orphanages and eventually to American homes — from a little more than 100 adoptions in 2002 to more than 1,500 in 2012.
Many of these children are 5 to 12 years old and may have lived in an orphanage for years. For some, past traumatic experiences, coupled with language and cultural differences, can bring challenges within a family.
Defense lawyers have sought to portray Carri and Larry Williams as misguided but well-intentioned parents, saying she worked to make the house peaceful and home-schooled their seven biological and two adopted children while he worked from noon to midnight as a millwright at Boeing.
Hana and Immanuel’s health problems, including their scars and a stomach condition that hastened Hana’s death, existed before the children were adopted, defense attorneys have said.
Neither side disputes that the couple harshly disciplined their children — and the defense says both regret certain parenting decisions. What jurors must decide is whether their parenting amounted to criminal behavior.
Family’s home life
Skagit County Prosecutor Rich Weyrich has charged that the Williamses engaged in a pattern of abuse that left permanent physical scars and was tantamount to torture, harming Immanuel and causing Hana’s death.
The maximum penalty for each of the charges of homicide by abuse, manslaughter and child assault — Class A felonies — is life in prison without the possibility of parole and/or a $50,000 fine.
Since the trial began July 26, experts, adoption workers, relatives, acquaintances and law-enforcement officers have answered questions about the family’s home life, Hana’s death and the details of the adoption.
Immanuel has told the court that he and Hana were beaten, made to eat outside or deprived of food altogether. Hana was made to sleep in a closet, bathe outside with a garden hose and relieve herself in a portable toilet instead of the family bathroom.
Five of the Williams’ biological children have also testified, describing details of the punishments their adopted siblings received.
The evening of May 12, 2011, was rainy and cold when Carri Williams called 911 and told dispatchers that Hana was unconscious and face down in the mud after refusing to come indoors. The biological children have testified Hana was in the cold for hours as punishment, and that their mother had told Hana to do jumping-jacks to stay warm.
When Hana stopped, her brothers were instructed to hit her legs with a plastic switch, according to court testimony.
An autopsy showed that Hana, 5 feet tall and weighing 78 pounds, was covered in scratches and bruises and that her hypothermia was hastened by malnutrition and a stomach ailment.
Defense attorney Laura Riquelme has told the court that Carri Williams tried repeatedly to get Hana to come inside that night but she refused. Riquelme also said that Immanuel did not suffer marks and scars at the Williams’ house but rather had them when he came into the family.
Larry Williams’ defense attorney, Rachel Forde, has presented him as unaware of Hana’s condition on her last night and that “certainly he cared about whether Hana lived or died.”
After the state rests its case, perhaps this week, the defense lawyers are expected to call just a handful of witnesses, possibly including acquaintances of the family to testify that the couple were loving and affectionate toward their children.
Hana’s age will continue to be an issue, as the charge of homicide by abuse applies only to children under 16.
No one knows for sure when Hana was born because proper documentation is often missing in adoptions from Ethiopia.
Better oversight needed
The case of Hana and Immanuel is an extreme example of the gaps in Washington’s adoption system.
A variety of agencies oversee the fate of adopted children, whether the child was adopted through a private organization, the courts or the state’s welfare system.
In general, adoptions go very well, said Mary Meinig, director of the Office of the Family and Children’s Ombudsman, an independent agency housed in the governor’s office and charged with protecting children from harm in the child-welfare system.
“I wouldn’t say it’s a failed system in any way,” she said. “I think it can be improved.”
The biggest need is better oversight, whether by the state or a private agency, she said. The state has laws to protect adopted children, but its authority is limited in private adoptions, such as that of Hana and Immanuel.
“They don’t have the power or responsibility to oversee all these adoptions,” she said.
In 2012, a committee of private and public child-welfare agencies, led by the ombudsman’s office and by the Children’s Administration in the Department of Social and Health Services, highlighted 15 cases where an adoption agency or court had “scrutinized and approved” a family for internationally and domestically adopted children who later suffered at the families’ hand.
The families showed a common pattern of physical and emotional abuse, including isolating and depriving children of food.
“In many of these cases, it just continues to spiral to a point where the discipline practices get way out of hand,” ombudsman Patrick Dowd said.
Another problem is that there is no way to track the rates of abuse and neglect in adopted families, he said.
The committee reported that responsibility for the problems is diffuse, with shortcomings at every step in the adoption process — assessing a family, identifying red flags and following up.
“It’s not like we identified a smoking gun,” Dowd said.
Meanwhile, the committee, comprising representatives of the Children’s Administration, Child Protective Services, private adoption agencies and others, is plodding forward, figuring out how to put recommended changes in place, DSHS spokeswoman Chris Case said.
Stronger laws are needed, the committee found, but a bill before the Legislature foundered last session after it was proposed by Rep. Mary Helen Roberts, D-Edmonds, to improve the adoption process.
“These things grind ponderously slow sometimes,” Case said.
Parents following the trial have been shocked by Hana’s death and have tried to understand what went wrong at the Williams’ house.
“We do not do enough to prepare adoptive parents,” said Maureen McCauley Evans, a Seattle-based mother of Ethiopian adoptees and former executive director of three child welfare and adoption organizations on the East Coast. She has been observing the trial since the beginning.
U.S. adoption agencies accredited under an international treaty known as The Hague Convention require parents to undergo at least 10 hours of pre-adoption training that can be completed online — which McCauley Evans called inadequate.
The Ethiopian Community Center in Seattle has tried to help families with adopted children from Ethiopia, offering parenting classes, cultural camps and a welcoming ceremony based on Ethiopian traditions.
“We want others to know that we’re here as resources for them,” outreach-committee member Metti Mulugeta said.

Eritrea's unique architecture under threat

       By Jenny Vaughan | AFP     
Eritrea's capital Asmara boasts buildings unlike anywhere else in Africa, a legacy of its Italian colonial past, when architects were given free rein for structures judged too avant-garde back home.
Modernist architectural wonders in this highland city include a futurist petrol station mimicking a soaring aircraft and a funky art-deco bowling alley with checkered, coloured glass Windows.
"The city is a living museum of architecture," said Medhanie Teklemariam, an urban planner in Asmara's city administration.
Yet while many of the buildings survived a decades-long liberation war from Ethiopia that ravaged settlements elsewhere, preservation and restoration projects have been hampered, threatening to erode the country's rich cultural heritage.
Medhanie said money remains a critical obstacle, along with a lack of local technical expertise required for specialised restoration projects.
"To undertake a major restoration of all these buildings is very, very challenging because of one, the funding issue and, second, technical capacity," he said, sitting before a map of central Asmara.
But Medhanie is pushing for change. He is lobbying for the historic city centre to be included on the United Nations World Heritage list and working to renew a European Union-supported project to restore a market building and the Capitol, an Expressionist-style cinema.
He sees the preservation of Asmara's precious buildings -- mainly from the first half of the 20th century -- as a matter of maintaining the country's national fabric.
"This heritage... it is very important for Eritrea's identity," he said.
World Heritage status would also be a rare opportunity for Eritrea to win positive international exposure. The Horn of Africa nation normally makes headlines only for its raft of repressive policies.
"The international reputation... would be boosted," said Edward Denison, a photographer and co-author of "Asmara: Africa's Secret Modernist City".
Most of the buildings in the former Italian colony were constructed between 1936 and 1941 as part of Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini's plan to expand his foothold in Africa.
Asmara used to be known as Piccola Roma, or "Little Rome". In the 1939 census, more than half the city's inhabitants were Italian -- 53,000 out of a total of 98,000.
Italian architects were brought over and encouraged to experiment with innovative designs that were frowned upon in conservative Europe.
Asmara gained a reputation as an "experimental playground" where wacky designs were welcomed.
Today, Eritreans have a deep appreciation for the buildings -- even though many were built by compatriots carrying out forced labour under colonial rule -- and are proud of their unique city.
While some buildings sit unused, such as the Teatro Asmara, with its high arched awnings and Roman-style pillars, many of them remain functional.
Tables are busy at Cinema Roma, as regulars sip macchiatos on the terrace beneath the marble facade. Inside, dated American movies and Eritrean shows are screened to visitors who watch from plush red seats.
According to Denison, the buildings could be a major boost for the sagging tourist industry.
"The opportunities are boundless, and Eritrea is very aware of that with the various other cultural and natural attractions that it has. I think architecture is a key component of that," he said.
Luckily, the city's slow development has preserved many of its old buildings, most of which have been left untouched since Eritrea's war for independence kicked off in 1961.
Dennis Rodwell, architect and author of "Conservation and Sustainability in Historic Cities", describes Asmara as a "time warp".
But preservation efforts have been held back in part by Eritrea's staunch principle of self-reliance. Rodwell said that outside support is sometimes seen as "a threat rather than an opportunity".
The $5-million (3.75-million-euro) World Bank-funded Cultural Assets Rehabilitation Project ended in 2007 as funding dried up and relations between the World Bank and Eritrea soured.
EU funding earmarked for architectural restoration projects remains frozen for review.
Denison, the photographer, agrees that preservation efforts could be improved through greater collaboration with outsiders, but notes Eritrea's rebel-turned-politician leaders have long struggled to balance "self-reliance and collaboration internationally".
Yet despite stalled progress in recent years, he says he is hopeful that Eritrea's rich architectural heritage can be preserved.

Year After Leader Dies, Ethiopia Is Little Changed

By Kirubeal Tadesse, AP     
Mr. Zenawi
The late dictator

Residents in Ethiopia's capital awoke to the sound of a 21-gun salute Tuesday to mark the first year anniversary of the death of long-time ruler Meles Zenawi.

The ritual underscores the approach Meles' successors have employed during the last year: a continued lionization of the late prime minister, whose portrait still appears in every public office across the country.
Candlelit vigils and the launch of over two dozen parks were organized across the country for the late leader. In the capital a cornerstone for the Meles Zenawi Memorial Museum was laid in a televised ceremony.
 During the ceremony, attended by regional leaders such as the presidents of Somalia and Sudan, Meles was praised as "Africa's voice." His successor Prime Minister Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn praised Meles as a "champion of the poor."
"Meles did a remarkable endeavor in the green economic development. He also led a successful party and government to establish a widely defined democratic system that has recognized and observed rights of individuals and groups at the same time," Hailemariam said in a speech.
Meles became president in 1991 after helping to oust Mengistu Haile Mariam's Communist military junta, which was responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of Ethiopians. Meles became prime minister in 1995, a position he held until his sudden death last year.
The United States long viewed Meles as a strong security partner and gave Ethiopia hundreds of millions of dollars in aid over the years. U.S. military drones that patrol East Africa — especially over Somalia — are stationed in Ethiopia.
David Shinn, the U.S. ambassador to Ethiopia from 1996 to 1999, says he hasn't detected any changes in the U.S.-Ethiopian relationship since Meles' death.
"From the U.S. side, the policy seems to be one of maintaining cordial but not excessively warm relations. This situation varies somewhat from topic to topic. There continues to be especially close collaboration on issues such as counterterrorism and regional conflicts in Sudan, South Sudan and Somalia. At the same time, there are significant concerns about the future of democratization and human rights practices," said Shinn, now a professor at George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs.
Ethiopia is increasingly looking to China as a model. Chinese companies are behind the country's drive to expand infrastructures such as road and telecom networks. In recent months Chinese companies have signed two billion-dollar deals with state companies to expand the country's telecom and power lines.
Thought credited for advancing Ethiopia's economy, Meles was accused of killing and jailing opposition members and rigging elections. Rights groups say the oppression carried out under Meles has continued in the East African nation. Meles was responsible for the closure of 72 independent newspapers, according to the press freedom watchdog the Committee to Protect Journalists.
"At the time of Meles' death, there were eight journalists in prison in Ethiopia. Today, there are nine," said Mohamed Keita, advocacy coordinator for CPJ's Africa Program.

Some marched for freedom but some gathered for condominium

by Sadik Ahmed
Ethiopians and Ethiopian Americans held a joint rally in front of US state department today. Amid government’s massive propaganda to divide the nation, the participants were adamant to uphold their mutual values not as people who share a land but as a people who have shared blood.
The demonstrators have uncovered what they call it a plot to occupy the diaspora airwaves through corruption and cadres; however, they have stated clearly, those who collaborate with this dictatorial regime will be isolated and held accountable before each and every community.
Sheik Khalid Omer is an Imam for an Ethiopian Muslims prominent organization called First Hijrah; on his motivational speech during the demonstration “we chose peaceful struggle not because of our fear for Ethiopian government, but due to its effectiveness on this generation, we will protest peacefully till the dictatorial regime replied for our demands” the Imam declared adamantly.
“The Ethiopian regime has lost everything, all attempts to divide the nation have failed miserably, the regime has remaining only one item, only ETV , they want to dispatch the same ETV propaganda through their puppets in DC airwaves by wasting tax payers money, dollar is good for those who work on it, but dollar is very bad for those who happen to be enslaved by it, some of the DC radios possibly sold their integrity for fear mongering but the wisdom of Ethiopians will diminish their evil plot through love and unity” said Yohannes Takele, a distinguished activist in Washington DC metropolitan area.
Officials and state department representatives from African desk have received a letter from the demonstrators. The enthusiastic slogans in English and Amharic were unwavering, poems narrated, words of commitment and unity declared till noon.
“All prisoners of conscience in Ethiopia could have different cases but they have one destiny, surely their destiny is ours, their pain inside notorious Ethiopian prisons is ours, we don’t have boundary due to our religion or ethnic background, we will struggle for freedom and justice for our beloved motherland, until the malicious minority authoritarian regime surrender the power for the people or deposed” the demonstrators declared in unified consensus at the end of the rally.
Amid this demonstration in front of state department, some people were gathered inside Ethiopian embassy, not to demonstrate but to register their names for condominiums in Ethiopia; our sources have confirmed.
Ethiopians and Ethiopian Americans held a joint rally in front of US state department